Last week, officials in Nevada decreed that daily fantasy sports, or DFS, constituted gambling. DFS operators, therefore, were required to obtain licenses from the Nevada Gaming Control Board in order to operate, just like land-based casinos and sports books.

You might recall that Max Steinbergwon his seat to the World Series of Poker Main Event, and consequently a November Nine birth, after winning a $27 satellite on the DFS site DraftKings. This week, players in PocketFives’ New Jersey poker community noticed that WSOP satellites were absent from the DraftKings lobby.

PocketFives reached out to WSOP officials, one of whom responded, “In light of last week’s news in Nevada, DraftKings asked us to cease any sponsorship activities around the remaining few WSOP events of the year, and we complied.” The WSOP Main Event has been airing on ESPN weekly with a DraftKings sponsorship. The next new episode is Sunday, so we’ll have to see if DraftKings’ commercials and sponsorship mentions still appear, but it looks like they won’t.

DraftKings is also no longer part of the WSOP stream on Twitch, as the sponsorship was occupied by PlayWSOP.com in its most recent airing. In light of the comments made to PocketFives, it appears unlikely that DraftKings’ logos will appear on the table for the conclusion of the WSOP Main Event next month.

DraftKings and fellow market leader FanDuelboth pulled out of the Nevada market last week. A grand jury investigation is reportedly ongoing in Florida, while lawmakers on Capitol Hill have called for a hearing to discuss DFS, which out-spent every other industry in ad dollars in the month leading up to the start of the NFL season. The DFS site owned by the same parent company as PokerStars, called StarsDraft, withdrew from all but four states this week.

DraftKings continues to run qualifiers for the World Poker Tour’s event in Montreal next month. It’s a $5,000 package that includes the tournament’s buy-in, a hotel stay, and $1,200 for airfare and transfers. WPT is based in California.

On Wednesday, the NCAA barred FanDuel and DraftKings from advertising during championship events, including television coverage, according to ESPN. The NCAA also canceled a meeting with DFS representatives because “such a meeting is inappropriate at this time in light of the fact that your enterprises appear to be under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Congress and several states and their attorneys general appear to be looking into your business platform, offering, and policies for their compliance with the law.”

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