Our resident online sportsbooks & offshore sportsbetting
gambling expert, James Johnson, weighs in with his
articles on the status of the online gambling industry
and online sportsbooks. Be sure to check WagerOnFootball.com
every week for his next bit of amazing insight on
the world of offshore and online gambling. This
man knows gambling! This man knows his way around
a few sportsbooks too!!!!
Wednesday
January 6th, 2005 Page updated at 8:20pm
By:
James
J.
Analyst
For WagerOnFootball.com
Internet
Could Ruin Sportsbooks
For a sports fan bearing a
wallet packed with hundred-dollar bills, nothing
beats a weekend in Las Vegas during football season.
Ensconced in a sports book packed with television
screens the size of outdoor billboards, he can scream
over his $500 payoff on a garbage-time field goal.
With parlay cards scattered about and gusts of cigar
smoke hovering nearby, he can high-five a stranger
when Green Bay quarterback Brett Favre zings a touchdown
pass against Minnesota — even though, as a
die-hard Jacksonville supporter, he wouldn’t
care about the game any other weekend. But in decades
hence, the sports book may go the way of the XFL.
The reason? Despite the detritus
of failed dot-com companies and sputtering Web advertising
as the 21st century began, online sports betting
has marched on as a major Internet growth industry.
Some sites have doubled their wager intake since
2002. Though estimates vary, the worldwide industry
should lure at least $3 billion in sports bets this
year, surpassing the $2.5 billion or so raked in
by Las Vegas. Wagers are expected to increase exponentially
every year as more people in the world click on
to the Web.
“Once they try betting online, Vegas seems
a hassle,” says Rob Gillespie, founder of
the BoDog sportsbook at www.bodog.com. “If
you go to Vegas, books have from 5-25 windows, and
they cannot accommodate more people than that at
once. We can take thousands of simultaneous users.
Shopping for the best line for your play in Vegas
is difficult as you have to physically go from book-to-book.
Shopping for lines on the Internet takes seconds.
“Take those facts, plus not having to spend
time and money driving and parking to place your
bet and cash your tickets, and it is easy to see
why sports betting online is so popular.”
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The popularity
— especially among computer-savvy college
students — has continued in the U.S. despite
the fact Internet betting is considered illegal
by the federal government. Of course, that has
never stopped illegal sports gambling in general,
estimated to be at least an $80-billion-a-year
industry by the National Gambling Impact Study
Commission. |
While losing craps and blackjack business to states
that are approving new casinos at record rates,
Nevada remains the sole state in the U.S. to offer
legal sports gambling. Faced with relatively recent
sports book competition via the Web, how is Vegas,
the hub of sports betting, fighting back against
never-ending promotions (Sportsbook.com offers Half
Price Basketball Fridays) along with the frequent
rebates and bonuses offered by online sites?
The town, perhaps lulled to sleep by its monopoly
over the years, has remained hidebound. Rarely are
specials offered. Unknown blackjack players get
show tickets or a comped room for frequent play,
but not sports bettors. National advertising is
almost nil for sports books.
In the midst of a 14-hour day, Robert Walker, director
of the race and sports book at The Mirage, offers
a dour outlook for sports books.
“I’m pessimistic,” said Walker,
sitting in an office replete with eight TV screens
and three computers screens. “There’s
no growth, except when another (Steve) Wynn property
opens up. We’ve seen our handle (amount of
wagers) go down slightly every year, though our
hold percentage (wagers they keep) goes up.”
Aside from citing sports book consolidation and
the law against out-of-state phone betting as hindering
his business, Walker sees online sports betting
as a growing threat.
“I’m sure we’ve lost business
to offshore books. There’s no doubt about
it,” he said.
During the weekends, Vegas sports books are 100
percent dependent on tourists. Which begs the question:
Why would a wannabe bettor who owns a computer in
Schenectady, N.Y., endure a day-long trip to Nevada,
spend hundreds of dollars on airfare and a hotel,
and suffer stomach pains from the $5.99 buffet just
in order to place a $20 parlay on the Jets and Giants?
Aside from guaranteeing winning bets will be paid
(online sports books drop by the wayside weekly),
Vegas still boasts one advantage the Internet can
never replicate: the experience.
“There’s excitement. There’s
camaraderie,” Walker said. “The sports
book exemplifies what Vegas is all about.”
Later that afternoon at The Mirage sports book,
Walker’s words ring true. With less than a
minute to go and Oklahoma leading Nebraska 30-0,
a Cornhusker ballcarrier lumbers 60 yards into Sooner
territory. With one second left, the quarterback
spikes the ball to stop the clock, and the placekicker
trots on the field. Though few Nebraska fans at
the game applaud his meaningless three points, the
scene is different in Las Vegas, where cheering
erupts and a bettor jumps from his chair and lands
on his knees, exulting in the fact that he could
cash his ticket after beating the 30-point spread.
Actually, maybe online betting even wins in this
category: fewer hospital trips to fix broken kneecaps.
Gambling can be a great deal of fun. Make sure
to keep it that way by checking out the safety and
security of any given casino before you get started.
Moreover, know your own limits.Be sure to visit
our Sportsbooks
Ratings Guide for your friendly offshore
sportsbetting sportsbooks and bet a game or two.
They all have brand new state of the art Racebooks
as well for your gambling pleasure so check them
out. You'll enjoy their games that much more, and
you might just make a few bucks.
As always Check out my picks for the best offshore
sportsbetting Sportsbooks for wagering online.
NFL
Sportsbooks Ratings Guide
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