There was a point made here that touches upon how such an endeavor as this can be awkward, and it is worth breaking down a bit more. In order to be marketable, and to grow the fund, past results would seemingly need to be a part of the program. But while it was suggested that the bets should be made public right after each game begins as a part of that process, THAT IS THE VERY LAST THING THAT ANY ORGANIZATION THAT BELIEVES IT CAN WIN WOULD EVER DO. Sorry about the shout, but it is that important. The major groups that are in this day-in and day-out spend a significant amount of time making sure that their action is NOT made easy to track, so that the oddsmakers and others in the marketplace are not given any kind of heads-up.
Now for the difficulty of putting this together. In order for the necessary transparency to be in place, will the Nevada Gaming Control Board force registered groups to make all of their past action available, for anyone that wants to review before joining? That would seem like a reasonable thing to do from a legal standpoint. But does that mean merely the tracking of how successful the fund has been from a profit/loss standpoint, or does that mean making each of the actual wagers available? If it is the latter, then a fund has a significant hurdle to overcome, allowing oddsmakers and others in the betting markets an uncomfortable level of access.