Tag: betting

  • Craig Carton talks ‘normalized’ sports betting, being open with friends and family about gambling addiction

    Craig Carton talks ‘normalized’ sports betting, being open with friends and family about gambling addiction

    Each year, millions place bets on the Super Bowl, and sometimes bettors take things too far. 

    Thirty-nine states — Missouri just approved it to become the 40th — and the District of Columbia allow wagers to be placed legally. 

    Sunday’s Super Bowl between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles is the perfect time for Craig Carton, a recovering gambling addict and FanDuel responsible gaming consultant, to share his message about betting responsibly. 

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    Craig Carton, WFAN sports radio personality and an outspoken recovering gambling addict, tapes his weekly gambling show, “Hello, My Name is Craig,” in New York City May 22, 2022.  (Imagn)

    Carton, who is also the co-host of Fox Sports’ “Breakfast Ball,” has been open about his gambling addiction. He says it’s been seven years since he’s gambled, and his work with FanDuel, in its fifth year, has a message that has helped many.

    “I get people reaching out to me all the time now after hearing my story and hearing about the partnership I have with FanDuel asking how we can help,” he told Fox News Digital on Radio Row ahead of Sunday’s Super Bowl in New Orleans. 

    “Because there’s a small percentage of people that are going to need help that can’t unfortunately gamble responsibly and recreationally. I think we’re starting to see the fruits of the labor after the last four years where people are now aware. Like, ‘Hey, this is what it looks like, this is how it feels. These are the warning signs if someone in my life is gambling uncontrollably.’ 

    “I’m blessed that we’re together year five now, me and FanDuel, and to see that the messaging is working, people are signing up for the tools FanDuel has to offer, and it’s been very rewarding.”

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    Carton says this partnership doesn’t just help people who may be struggling with controlled gambling, it also helps him when he’s hearing stories from people being open. 

    “For a lot of people, (Gamblers Anonymous) is the only answer,” he said. “I went to GA, and it’s great for a majority of people. For me, getting to talk to new people I have not talked to for years about problem gambling and how to overcome it is absolutely therapeutic. 

    “When I do ‘The Comeback,’ a new show we’re premiering on FanDuel, or ‘Hello, My Name is Craig’ on Audacy and WFAN in New York City, that’s my GA. You’re getting to hear other people’s stories, share my story. 

    “It’s a good reminder for me, even though I’m almost seven years without gambling, so that will be smart. Hearing other people’s story of recovery, the worst moment of lives they’re willing to verbalize, is selfishly very healthy for me to hear.”

    Boomer and Carton

    Craig Carton and Boomer Esiason pose for a photo before calling a game between the New York Islanders and the Pittsburgh Penguins on WFAN at the Barclays Center Nov. 30, 2016, in Brooklyn.  (Mike Stobe/NHLI via Getty Images)

    Carton preaches responsible gaming because of how it has become so normalized throughout the country. And that means the next generation will be growing up in that world.

    “That’s the biggest target group of people we worry about because 21-year-old kids are kids,” he said. “They’re still immature and don’t really get the full value of a dollar. So, you want to make sure those kids have enough information as possible, especially when you have certain states … I was just talking to a radio show in North Carolina today. 

    “Huge college basketball, college football state. So, if you’re a college kid, it makes sense. ‘Oh, I’m going to wager on North Carolina, Duke, N.C. State,’ whatever it may be. Those are the kids that are now legally allowed to do it that we’re worried most about.

    “My kids, the next generation of gamblers, or just people that like sports, talking about gambling is now going to be a dinner table conversation.”

    Carton isn’t saying the dinner table conversation is a bad thing. He feels, because sports gambling is normalized, that talking to friends and family about your problem, or speaking to somebody you love who is showing signs of problem gambling, won’t be stigmatized. 

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    “A good part of that is, if it’s normalized, if it’s mainstreamed, now it’s a lot easier to ask for help. Because when I went through it, it wasn’t. There was a great deal of shame associated with being an addict,” he said. “Nobody wants to admit they’re an addict. Your ego kicks in, ‘Screw you, I’m fine!’

    “If you have a friend that you’re worried about, talk to them. That’s No. 1. You’re the first line of defense. Before family, it’s friends that will know their buddies are not themselves. They’re not acting normally. If you are gambling, it’s hard to win. 

    “So, do it, do it responsibly, earmark a responsible amount of money towards it like you would to go to the movies or a Broadway show. If you win, great. Put some of that money away. If you lose, don’t think the answer is, ‘Well, let me bet myself out of it.’ That’s when you start getting into trouble.”

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  • Young sports fans’ relationship with betting underscores unifying aspect, study suggests

    Young sports fans’ relationship with betting underscores unifying aspect, study suggests

    Sports gambling in the U.S. has ramped up since states began to implement their own laws and restrictions around the activity.

    Most sports are able to place a bet on their phone or mobile device without ever having to step into a casino or talk to a bookie in a dark alley. The easy access has made it so those of a younger generation, specifically Gen Z or those born between the late 1990s and early 2010s, can wager on nearly every sporting event in the world.

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    (PAUL ELLIS/AFP via Getty Images/File)

    Those young fans’ betting trends have underscored the notion that sports is one of the great unifiers in the world. 

    A survey conducted by Bookies.com and shared with Fox News Digital showed that 80% of more than 270 Gen Z respondents showed that they wagered with people of a different demographic. Additionally, 45% who wagered with friends who have a different ideology or presidential vote were three times more likely to listen to that person’s opposing viewpoint.

    “Sports is the last and ultimate unifier, and the Super Bowl is the greatest and last unifying event. It is the only time all year when everyone is watching the same event at the same time on the same platform,” Bookies.com senior betting analyst Bill Speros told Fox News Digital in a recent interview. “So, that unification just sort of runs downhill from there.

    “The interesting thing about the demographics that struck me was that when you pick a side on a bet, let’s say you’re in a chat group or in a Reddit page or something, and you pick a side, and you say, ‘I like the under in the Super Bowl,’ and everybody else who picks the under on the Super Bowl is going to agree with you. They don’t know who you are. They don’t know what your race is. They don’t know your nationality. They don’t know your politics. They just know that you’re in agreement with them on the under in the Super Bowl.”

    Speros added that if a young bettor is interacting with like-minded sports fans online, they weren’t necessarily seeing who the other person was on the other side of a username.

    Super Bowl LIX equipment

    “So, the reason why this sort of cuts across demographics is that when you come into contact with someone over betting per se, you’re doing it based on how you believe a game or an outcome is going to go, and you’re not seeing the person’s face. You’re not knowing who they are [politically],” he said. “Your first interaction with them is that ‘Hey, we agree on this, right?’ It’s a positive interaction.

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    “Any time you have a positive interaction with someone, you’re more likely to build a relationship. Nowadays in society, we see our differences first, and then we realize we have a lot in common. With this, everyone sees that commonality first and then later on down the line they might realize they have some differences.”

    The survey suggested that young people were building relationships through sports betting, with friends being the most common betting partner. About 55% of respondents said they made friends because of betting.

    The study also suggested young fans were more inclined to research a game and thus learn the history and geography of a particular team or city. About 41% of Gen Z bettors said they learned where a city, state or county is thanks to sports betting.

    The Super Bowl is routinely the biggest sports betting event of the year. The study said 74% of young people were most likely to bet during the game.

    With every high that comes from winning a bet, there’s the low that comes from losing. Gambling is fun for the split-second rush, but getting in over your head is a serious problem that scores of Americans deal with on a daily basis.

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    Super Bowl LIX will be streamed on Tubi. (Tubi)

    Speros told Fox News Digital he gives everyone the same piece of advice.

    “My first piece of advice is don’t bet,” he said. “My second piece of advice is, if you choose to bet, only bet what you can afford to lose. And that means set a budget. It’s a very simple way to figure out if you’re able to gamble responsibly or not.

    “You always have to go into gambling with [the mindset of], ‘OK, this is money that I may lose.’ So it’s not going to have an adverse effect on the rest of my life. So it has to be money that you can afford or are willing to part with.” 

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    Super Bowl LIX is set to be played between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles. The game will be broadcast on FOX and fans can live stream it on Tubi. Kickoff is set for 6:30 p.m. ET in New Orleans.

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  • Dave Portnoy out M after betting on the Buffalo Bills

    Dave Portnoy out $1M after betting on the Buffalo Bills

    Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy is out $1 million after Sunday night’s AFC Championship game between the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs.

    The Chiefs ultimately beat the Buffalo Bills, 32-29, ending the New York team’s playoff run and securing a place in their third back-to-back Super Bowl. 

    Halfway through the Chiefs-Bills game, Portnoy published an “Emergency Half Time Press Conference Update” on the social media platform X, writing that $1 million he had recently bet on the Bills to win Super Bowl LIX was “down the drain.”

    “My milly gone, gone,” the Barstool Sports founder said in the video, adding that the Bills had “absolutely no chance to win this game” and criticizing some of the team’s plays. 

    Dave Portnoy is seen before the Florida Atlantic Owls and Loyola Ramblers game in the Barstool Invitational on Nov. 8, 2023, in Chicago. (Michael Hickey / Getty Images)

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    That update came after Portnoy had earlier in the day disclosed a $1 million wager he placed on the Bills winning Super Bowl LIX. That bet, he said, had been placed prior to the Jan. 19 game between the Bills and the Baltimore Ravens. 

    The Barstool Sports founder posted his thoughts throughout the AFC Championship.

    KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - JANUARY 26: Quarterback Patrick Mahomes #15 of the Kansas City Chiefs scrambles out of the pocket during the first half of the AFC Championship football game against the Buffalo Bills, at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on January 26, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images)

    Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes scrambles during the AFC Championship game against the Buffalo Bills at Arrowhead Stadium on Jan. 26, 2025, in Kansas City. (Brooke Sutton / Getty Images)

    At one point in the last quarter of the game, he wrote on X that he was “quitting watching football.” 

    NFL FANS UNLEASH FURY AT REFS OVER BILLS’ QUESTIONABLE BALL SPOT IN AFC TITLE GAME LOSS

    “There is no other way to teach @nflcommish a lesson,” he said in the post, which used the hashtag “#nflrigged.”

    In that X post, he took major issue with the call that the referees made regarding whether the Bills had achieved a fourth-and-one down. 

    Portnoy in Vegas

    David Portnoy is interviewed at the Trackside Live Stage before the South Point 400 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series playoff race on Sept. 15, 2019, in Las Vegas. (Chris WIlliams/Icon Sportswire via / Getty Images)

    Earlier Sunday, the NFC Championship game took place between the Washington Commanders and Philadelphia Eagles. The Eagles came out on top, with the game ending 55-23.

    The Eagles and Chiefs will play each other in Super Bowl LIX for the championship title on Feb. 9. New Orleans will host that highly-anticipated game at the Caesars Superdome. 

    PATRICK MAHOMES THANKS GOD AS CHIEFS HAVE CHANCE AT NFL HISTORY WITH 3RD STRAIGHT SUPER BOWL

    Last year, when the Chiefs went head-to-head with the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl LVII, Portnoy said he put $500,000 on Kansas City winning.

    That bet panned out, with the Chiefs defeating San Francisco 25-22. 

  • Connecticut lawmaker introduces bill that would legalize sports betting on flights to, from state

    Connecticut lawmaker introduces bill that would legalize sports betting on flights to, from state

    A bill in Connecticut has been introduced that would allow sports gambling on flights that are set to depart or arrive in the state, despite other state’s laws on betting.

    State Rep. Christopher Rosario introduced the bill on Wednesday. Federal laws, however, could keep the bill from advancing, including the Gambling Devices Act of 1962, which prohibits the use of gambling devices on commercial flights.

    However, with bets being able to be placed at the tap of a finger, attorney Daniel Wallach does not see that as much of a hurdle.

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    Some of the more than 400 proposition bets for Super Bowl LI between the Philadelphia Eagles and the New England Patriots are displayed at the Race & Sports SuperBook at the Westgate Las Vegas Resort & Casino on Jan. 26, 2018 in Las Vegas. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

    “A cell phone is not a gambling device,” Wallach told Front Office Sports. “A cell phone doesn’t determine winners or losers; it’s just a means of communication. No different than a pencil writing your name on a betting slip and handing it to an agent. [The act] doesn’t prohibit monetary gambling; it prohibits gambling devices.”

    The largest issue, perhaps, is the fact that there are a dozen states that have kept sports gambling illegal. Thirty-seven states have made it legal in some capacity within the last decade. The Federal Wire Act of 1961 states that interstate gambling is prohibited.

    Delta Air Lines appears to be close to partnering with DraftKings, which has become a sports gambling powerhouse after starting off as a daily fantasy company.

    Mobile sports betting in North Carolina

    Connecticut is looking to make sports gambling legal on flights to and from the state. (Fox News)

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    Eilers & Krejcik, an independent research firm, conducted a new study showing sports betting would pay off for the state of Texas, where sports betting remains illegal.

    The study, “Legal Online Sports Betting In Texas: Revenue Forecast And Economic Impact Analysis,” estimates the market could generate over $360 million in direct tax revenue for the state, while adding over 8,000 jobs.

    Circa Sports in Nevada

    Guests watch Game Six of the World Series at the three-level Circa Sportsbook during the grand opening of Circa Resort & Casino on Oct. 27, 2020 in Las Vegas. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images for Circa Resort & Casino)

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    The report estimated Texas would benefit from over $2.6 billion annually in economic output, adding that non-gaming tax revenues generated from legal sports betting are expected to total $24.3 million per year.

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