Originally Posted by
Dan Druff
In most of these cases, there really was an obvious and egregious error, and the bettors crying foul about it are simply trying to take advantage of the sportsbook's mistakes.
I don't blame bettors for tryig this, as the casinos are the ones posting the lines, but bettors can't cry when they don't get paid.
I agree that there needs to be a clear differential from other books in order to be judged a "obvious error". I see from the article you posted that the threshold is 100% in New Jersey. I actually think it should be higher than 100% -- maybe 200% or 300% error. Occasionally I have seen legit lines which are actually 100% better than the competition, just due to the books sleeping on a line change or stupidly setting the line.
Given that the situation described in the article shows a parlay in line with other books, 100% it should be paid.
It reminds me a bit of the pre-Obamacare individual health insurance situation. On one end, you had shady consumers not carrying health insurance, and then suddenly signing up and lying about their health when they get diagnosed with something big. So a person would suspect cancer, go to a doctor and pay cash, get diagnosed with cancer, and then quickly sign up for insurance. Then they would suddenly put in claims for cancer treatments a month later, claiming they just happened to learn about it weeks after signing up. This could cost the insurance company millions per person doing this.
In response, insurance companies started behaving in a shady manner themselves. They would find ANY excuse to cancel policies upon something expensive being diagnosed, even if the person had the coverage for 20 years without issue. So, for example, if you had coverage since 1990 and were diagnosed with cancer in 2010, they would dig up your 1990 application, and it was found that you didn't list anxiety disorder on your 1990 application when actually knowing about having anxiety, they wouldn't cover your present-day cancer either. Shady shit like that. They would actually give cash bonuses to employees for denying coverage to people with big claims, thus incentivizing shit like this.
So who was in the wrong here? Both sides. There were shady consumers cheating the insurance companies, and then insurance companies were cheating innocent consumers in response. I have a lot of criticism of Obamacare, but I will admit that it did put an end to this distressing problem.
The solution in this sportsbook case is for each gaming commission to set clear guidelines as to what consititutes an error.