#Play Daily Fantasy Sports in Wisconsin
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BettDraft WI | Play Daily Fantasy Sports in Wisconsin
Play Daily Fantasy Sports in Wisconsin at BettDraft. Win upto 125X the Payout amount & upto $100 matchup bonus!
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Another referral for you lol. This app is where you can play daily or weekly fantasy golf going on each week the pga tour is playing. There is an option to play for free or deposit any amount from $5 on up on different outcomes and if you pick correctly, you rake in a healthy profit. Also the first loss is free so you don't have to worry about losing any money then. If you live in these states:
Alaska, Arkansas, California, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, & Wisconsin you can play with real money
Check out the Chirp Fantasy app at the link below. Thanks for all the help! I get an easy $25 for people who sign up and deposit any amount so it is a good deal for everybody especially if you like to watch, play, or follow golf or you just bet on sports
https://chirpgolf.app.link/CZMUIruHOHb
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With big sports back, Colorado’s betting scene exploded with $59 million in pent-up wagers
#highschool🏀🏈⚾️ 🐰 🎓 🎓 🌏 💆♂️ 💛 🆘
get headlines https://thecherrycreeknews.com
When the coronavirus pandemic shut down major sports in the U.S. and around the world this spring, Peter Jennings felt the sting as more than just a fan. Entrepreneurial since high school and with a head for numbers that helped earn him a degree in finance, he parlayed his love for sports into an unconventional career.
The 32-year-old former stockbroker shifted his attention in 2012 from what he calls “the biggest casino in the world” — the stock market — to making big money playing daily fantasy sports, and then into developing data tools and services for other players. He’d been eagerly awaiting the legalization of sports betting in Colorado because it offered a much-anticipated chance to grow the industry for which he has offered online content while also making a good living with his own analytical approach to wagering.
Suddenly, just as Colorado’s new law went into effect, he found himself looking overseas and to relatively obscure competitions for action. Not that he was bored. There was still Korean pro baseball in full swing, though he could never bring himself to bet the high-level table tennis or darts that surfaced as wagering options. Golf came back slowly. The shutdown also opened his eyes to the possibilities of esports, the video-game competitions that, he notes, are by their very nature pandemic proof. He’s bullish on that market.
“It was a strange time, with so much uncertainty,” says Jennings, who now runs sports-related business ventures — including his personal bets — from an array of TV and computer screens in the home office of his Greenwood Village condo. “A lot of times during recessions, gambling goes up. And people always love sports, so it’s a great escape during bad times. But I didn’t project a pandemic.”
Now, with major pro sports returning, under a protective bubble in some cases and with fans socially distanced to their living room couches, Colorado’s foray into legalized betting has finally launched in earnest.
Sports bets officially emerged from the shadows on May 1, and like many other businesses suddenly pivoting during the shutdown, this one initially featured a limited menu. That first month, bettors laid down only $25.6 million before a surge to $38.1 million in June — nearly a 50% increase that, under the circumstances, encouraged state officials and supporters.
Still, early estimates of more than $1 billion in annual wagering seemed eons away.
But after July, that projection doesn’t seem so far-fetched. With major U.S. sports like baseball slowly returning to play, the action kicked up a notch.
The state Department of Revenue reported on Wednesday that more than $59 million was wagered in July, just over a 55% increase from June and more than double May’s relatively modest number. After payouts to winners, operators reported more than $2.4 million in net sports betting proceeds and almost $242,000 in taxes due to the state.
And that still doesn’t reflect the full schedule of hockey and basketball playoffs, at a time when the NHL and NBA are normally dormant, that got underway in August. Baseball, at 15.6%, accounted for the most betting on a single sport in July.
On Wednesday night, some sports halted again — this time in a powerful gesture seeking to draw attention to racial injustice. In the aftermath of a white police officer shooting Jacob Blake, a Black man in Kenosha, Wisconsin, players for the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks announced they would not take the floor for their playoff game.
The NBA playoffs already have been making strong statements on the issue of police violence, but this latest police incident — aggravated by the fatal shooting of two protesters by a civilian — prompted the players to take additional action.
“Despite the overwhelming plea for change, there has been no action, so our focus today cannot be on basketball,” the players said in a statement.
Within hours, all three NBA playoff games Wednesday night had been postponed, and players met to discuss possible further steps that could include additional postponements or even canceling the season. The Milwaukee Brewers also postponed their baseball game as the action by players continued to gain momentum by the minute.
Having already been buffeted by the pandemic, sports took a back seat to the pressing issue of police violence in a year unlike any in memory.
Rep. Alec Garnett, a Denver Democrat, pushed for Colorado’s sports betting referendum with big bipartisan support, though voters then narrowly approved it last fall. He notes that even with growing revenues, accurate projections won’t come for a while yet. The “handle” (total amount bet) and the tax revenue earmarked for future water projects should become clearer once the pandemic has passed and the sports schedule resumes some semblance of routine.
Tax revenue from May fell just short of $100,000, while June brought in $217,023. That money will go toward repaying $1.73 million in startup costs before any revenue starts flowing to the Colorado Water Plan. Through July, there were 10 online operators and seven retail, or in-person, operators licensed in Colorado. Many more have been approved but haven’t yet begun operations. Only six online operators took bets in May.
I don’t know who would’ve thought $25 million would be bet in May when no sports were available. It shows we captured the 21st-century model of sports betting.
Rep. Alec Garnett, supporter of legalized sports betting in Colorado
Meanwhile, pro football has so far stuck to its plans to play — think of all the Denver Broncos fans in orange-tinted glasses eager to put their money where their heart is — even as the college game remains divided on a fall season. Garnett figures that while the rollout has been challenging, it’s hardly a worst-case scenario.
“The worst case would’ve been if we’d abandoned the vision of where this market is going and followed the lead of some and did nothing online and just do (in-person) betting windows across the state,” he says. “If we’d done that model, we’d be looking at a market not delivering on any level the way people expected it to. I don’t know who would’ve thought $25 million would be bet in May when no sports were available. It shows we captured the 21st-century model of sports betting.”
While in-person sports books still play a role �� electronic signs tout them outside Colorado casinos in Central City, Black Hawk and Cripple Creek — the new model Garnett describes employs apps to make online betting easy from anywhere within the state. Turn on a television and you’re bound to see commercials for companies like DraftKings and FanDuel, two of the most popular sites, as they jockey to bring on new customers.
Together, those operators spent $1.5 million backing the ballot measure.
The temporary sportsbook at the Monarch casino in Blackhawk features two kiosks where bettors can place their wagers, with a more expansive space to come. Retail locations at the casinos so far have played a small role in Colorado’s betting action. (Kevin Simpson, The Colorado Sun)
With the major U.S. sports shutdown happening just as they were set to cultivate Colorado’s new market for betting, both needed to pivot quickly to provide alternatives. Spokesman Kevin Hennessy notes that because FanDuel is an international company, it had a relatively easy time setting up new betting markets for overseas sports.
“We’d been dealing with South American soccer because it’s popular, so it was just a matter of regulators approving it,” Hennessy says. “For a couple weeks, we had Korean baseball available. Darts we have on a regular basis, and table tennis is popular in some parts of the U.S., though ‘popular’ is relative in a pandemic.”
In May, table tennis actually accounted for the most money wagered on a single sport in Colorado at nearly $6.6 million, and did so again in June with $9.1 million. But in July some of that action was suspended by the Division of Gaming, which must approve all leagues and events for legal betting.
The state received “credible information” from its integrity monitoring organizations of potential match-fixing and inconsistent betting patterns in at least one foreign country on Ukrainian table tennis. Though there were no known betting issues in the U.S., the state Division of Gaming suspended betting on the Ukrainian matches.
“The division uses multiple sources of information, including data from integrity monitoring associations, along with some of the operators that have internal integrity monitoring departments, to monitor the sports betting market,” Suzanne Karrer, a Department of Revenue spokeswoman, said in an email. “Colorado is one of the first in the nation to set up a system of sports betting integrity and reporting, as established in our sports betting rules. We have an entire rule on this specific issue.”
Rule 8 in Colorado sports betting regulations requires licensed operators in the state to provide aggregate data as well as have internal controls in place to identify unusual betting activities. Operators must routinely report information on wagers including time, amount, odds, type of bet, winning payout and team to the Division of Gaming and the state’s independent integrity monitors, including U.S. Integrity and the Sports Wagering Integrity Monitoring Association.
Although table tennis had its moment in the Colorado spotlight, the return of major sporting events has been momentous. FanDuel’s Hennessy reports that ice hockey bets right now — in the sweltering middle of August — are four times what they were in February. And the NBA, as it begins its playoffs, ranks at the top of the list, which in a normal year would never happen as Major League Baseball dominates the summer schedule.
But this is no normal year. Not only has the usual sports schedule been rearranged by the coronavirus, but those sports once largely ignored by U.S. bettors haven’t gone away.
“We’re still offering the Premier League of Darts” says Johnny Avello, Las Vegas-based director of race and sportsbook operations for DraftKings. “KBO (Korean baseball), that’s still going. Cricket is going. That menu that we were using is still around. I learned a lot myself. As oddsmakers, we had to learn more about how to make offerings for it. And we got better at it.
“Some people have learned to like those sports.”
Peter Jennings’ first legal sports bet in Colorado did not go well.
On May 24, golf legends Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson paired with superstar NFL quarterbacks Peyton Manning and Tom Brady, respectively, for a charity match, with the pandemic-tinged telecast offering the intimacy of mic’d-up players and broadcasters delivering a running, often humorous, commentary.
Jennings, an avid golfer himself, couldn’t resist — he bets his highest volume on golf — and became one of the millions who made “The Match” the highest-drawing cable golf event in history.
“People were dying for something live with the lack of real sports,” he says. “It was a great concept. Peyton and Brady were a good dynamic.”
But strictly speaking, it was a low-stakes event. The only money on the line went to COVID-19 relief, and with various celebrities chiming in with side bets during the telecast, the total grew to $20 million. But while it was great entertainment and raised money for a good cause, how do you intelligently bet on the outcome when you can only guess at how seriously the participants take the competition?
“My thought was to get as much information as I could on Brady and Peyton, get their handicaps,” Jennings says. “But I think Phil Mickelson definitely wanted to win. He was so stoked about the match, talking trash. Tiger has a ton of pride, but I was thinking Phil was a little more motivated. But still, there was a randomness to it.”
Peter Jennings, co-founder of daily fantasy sports site FantasyLabs, is pictured at Cherry Creek Country Club on Sunday, August 16, 2020. (Andy Colwell, Special to The Colorado Sun)
Jennings bet the moneyline on the underdogs, Mickelson and Brady. That type of bet lays out how much he would win on a bet of $100, and Jennings shopped around and found a sportsbook that paid close to $200 for every $100 he risked.
“By no means did I deem that a wildly profitable bet,” he says. “But of course I was going to bet it. I fell into the camp where the best part of betting is that it makes any sporting event that much more entertaining. You’re that much more engaged in any sporting event you have money on.”
The match was, indeed, entertaining, as the viewership indicated. But the pair of Woods and Manning won.
“Yes, I lost my first bet,” Jennings chuckles. “One of many, many losing bets that I’ll make.”
He can smile when he says this, because unlike the occasional, recreational bettor, those who bank their livelihood on the outcome of their wagers tend to approach betting from a big-picture, analytical system that disregards distractions like fan allegiance and strips down the process to math and probability.
For Jennings, there were few better teachers of the analytical approach than online poker, which he started playing in high school. He continued to hone his game through college at Colorado State University, where he managed to win “in the low six figures, which at the time seemed like all the money in the world.”
“By no means was I the best poker player, but I was certainly good enough to win,” he says. “I was playing at a good time, working hard on my game, trying to take an analytical approach.”
In 2011, when the U.S. Department of Justice indicted the top online poker sites and froze their assets in what players dubbed Black Friday, he gave up his “entrepreneurial aspirations” with regard to poker and, armed with a degree in finance and his Series 63 license, found work as a stockbroker at Charles Schwab. But the same federal law that shut down online poker created an opening for daily fantasy sports.
I’d front load, be on the phone early in an effort to free up time to play daily fantasy sports — basically take a long dinner break ahead of the sports schedule. That started to become more lucrative than my job.
Peter Jennings, on his decision to leave his job as a stockbroker
“You had to be on the phone a good percentage of the day at Schwab,” Jennings recalls. “I’d front load, be on the phone early in an effort to free up time to play daily fantasy sports — basically take a long dinner break ahead of the sports schedule. That started to become more lucrative than my job.”
Daily fantasy sports is a variation on traditional fantasy leagues, in which groups of fans draft teams in various sports and usually compete against each other through a point system over the course of a season, with the winners taking various shares of a prize pool. The daily version operates online and with a drastically shorter timeline — as short as a single day to determine winners and losers and provide quicker payoff.
Because daily fantasy sports is considered skill-based, playing it for money is not gambling under federal law, although a handful of states consider it illegal. Colorado passed a law that explicitly designated it legal in 2016. Fans can still play a free version of daily fantasy sports that often features prize money but carries no risk for the player.
Garnett didn’t carry Colorado’s bill to legalize pay-for-play daily fantasy sports, but he was involved with amending it and got to know Jennings along the way. They still interact on Twitter and share an occasional text.
“The amendments I put on were all for consumer protection,” Garnett says, “making sure skilled gaming operators identify who are the ‘whales’ and the ‘fish,’ so there are spots for beginners to play each other. I shouldn’t feel like I have to play Peter Jennings. A lot of the work I did was to carve out space for people like me who just do this on the side for fun.”
Companies like FanDuel and DraftKings emerged to take advantage of the growing popularity of daily fantasy sports. FanDuel’s Hennessy says the company noticed that its daily fantasy sports customers throughout most U.S. states were looking to place legal wagers. So when it goes into a new state like Colorado, it already has a database of potential customers.
A DraftKings.com billboard is pictured through the overpasses of the 6th Avenue Freeway near Osage Street in Denver on Thursday, August 20, 2020. (Andy Colwell, Special to The Colorado Sun)
Jennings’ methodical approach to daily fantasy sports led to enough success that he quit his job as a stockbroker in 2012. Two months later, he qualified for a FanDuel championship and won $150,000, the first six-figure prize. Three years later he banked $1 million in a fantasy baseball tournament. But it was that first big win that he calls “a life-changing moment” that led him to pursue a career in the industry.
For him, that meant becoming involved in aspects other than betting on sports outcomes. He was co-founder of a company called FantasyLabs, a one-stop site for sports analytics and tools for playing daily fantasy sports that attracted investment from Mark Cuban, owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks and an investor on the show “Shark Tank.” That and his other ventures now exist under the umbrella of the Action Network.
Jennings appears on podcasts and live stream interviews, including a weekly look at the PGA Tour, and also does business development to grow the industry, including some current planning for products to assist the serious bettor. But the new sports betting landscape in Colorado means that even recreational bettors among his friends and acquaintances often seek his counsel.
He shies away from telling people what to bet. He prefers the “teach a man to fish” approach and offers advice on how to make smart bets that may not yield a quick windfall, but can keep the recreational bettor from courting disaster.
“What people need to talk about is price — helping people find the best price,” he says of shopping sportsbooks for the best terms, such as odds or point spread. “I’m not saying that’s a guaranteed winner, but make sure you check everywhere you can bet and bet at the best price. That’s going to help a lot of people go from very bad bettors to maybe slight losers or even break-even bettors.
“And anyone who’s taking it more seriously, working hard at it and talented, it can make them a winning bettor. The majority of professional bettors, 99%-plus, are taking advantage of line shopping.”
Jennings contends that Colorado has some of the best legislation from both the operator and bettor standpoint, which is why he says so many operators have come here.
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“Multiple options are fantastic for the bettor,” he explains. “The biggest advantage you have as a bettor is you get to choose when to bet. If you have multiple operators, you get the best price. Having options, the ability to line shop, is paramount and Colorado is set up well for that.”
Jennings’ income is weighted toward his own plays — in daily fantasy sports and now regular sports betting. Generally speaking, he’s able to invest six figures on specific sporting events — particularly golf tournaments or NFL Sundays — through those two avenues in anticipation of a 5% return on investment.
“The power of betting, playing daily fantasy sports relative to other investments, is that you have shorter time horizons for compounding, which can be really powerful,” he says. “Results are up and down, but the goal is to have that trend, and historically that’s been able to play out in my favor.
“If you can win 55% of your bets, you’re doing great,” he adds. “High 50s you’re doing amazing. Even if you’re winning 58%, you’re losing the other 42%. So there’s a lot of losses.”
Virtually all of Jennings’ plays happen online.
Garnett says that part of the reason Colorado’s law paid such attention to the online model had to do with the proliferation of marijuana dispensaries “that have overtaken some communities.” To avoid that with sports betting, the proposed legislation focused on an online model that would protect consumers, “geo-fence” the state so that online bets could only be placed within its borders and foster competition so that one or two operators wouldn’t dominate the market.
But in-person betting still has its place. At this point, the state’s monthly report doesn’t reflect the volume of bets that happen online vs. in person because of the relatively small number of operators. But casinos like the Monarch in Black Hawk have plans to expand their sports betting space considerably from the current pair of kiosks tucked into a corner by an exit.
The kiosk at the Monarch casino in Black Hawk churned out a ticket earlier this month betting the Denver Nuggets to win the NBA title. The “futures bet” gave 22 to 1 odds, which means that on a $20 bet it would pay $460. (Kevin Simpson, The Colorado Sun)
Erica Ferris, director of casino marketing for the Monarch, says the pandemic pause provided time for the company to perfect its mobile app, even as it completes what it touts as a state-of-the-art sportsbook space.
“I think what is great about an app is it allows you to bet from absolutely anywhere in our state,” she says. “I don’t think it diminishes how people enjoy coming to a sportsbook from time to time. And I think as we get into big fantasy drafts and things like that next year people will still be interested in coming to a sportsbook. Watching a great game is watching a great game, and being able to place a sports wager with knowledgeable professionals is the goal.”
Still, in relative terms, she describes the sportsbook as “an add on. It’s a delightful amenity that we can offer our guests in conjunction with the other slots and table games that we already offer.”
DraftKings’ Avello, noting “big plans” for what’s now a temporary sportsbook at the Mardi Gras casino in Black Hawk, echoed that physical spaces are important for lots of bettors who like the camaraderie of a retail location.
“Mobile and digital is the future, but bricks-and-mortar is important for people who want to make a bet or talk to a ticket writer about a bet,” he says. “Those places are still important.”
Garnett contends that the future may actually be in giving sports bars a “face lift,” with amenities that let fans enjoy the group dynamic, have relevant information at their fingertips, watch multiple events at once and place their bets through the apps on their phones.
For serious bettors like Jennings, the only time he might place a bet at a retail sportsbook is “a total one-off, if I’m ever in Blackhawk and want to bet in cash. But the online conveniences, that’s my business. Cash is just a nuisance more than anything.”
And on those very occasional times when he makes an entertainment bet — like say, if his CSU Rams were playing the University of Colorado — and he wanted to go with his heart rather than his strategic model, he would at the very least shop around for the best terms, whether it be odds, point spread or moneyline.
“I don’t really need that in my life,” he says of betting sports just for fun. “I’m betting all the time. In the instance I do, I’d feel better and justified if I find an outlier price.”
Whether the bettor is a professional like Jennings or one of the many recreational bettors willing to put a few bucks on the home team, one principle applies. Gambling, like investing, is all about risk tolerance. Jennings figures he probably has higher risk tolerance than the average person, but when it comes to protecting his assets in the market, he calls himself a “buy and hold” kind of guy.
Once he got married and started to build a financial foundation, he says, he’s become “hyperaware” of managing what he has, and suspects his risk tolerance will recede as he gets older. That said, he’s excited to see where sports betting goes in Colorado.
“I couldn’t be more bullish on this space,” Jennings says. “Part of the legalization that’s great is the stigma around being a sports bettor or ‘gambler’ is being eroded. The stock market is the biggest casino in the world. It’s just a different value proposition. The majority of the collective value of group betting is entertainment.”
Retail sportsbooks like this one at the Ameristar casino in Black Hawk are the brick-and-mortar locations where bets are taken. They’ve started ramping up as pro sports have gradually returned to play, but online bets far outpace the retail action at this point. (Kevin Simpson, The Colorado Sun)
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August 15, 2018: Columns
John Cashion
By KEN WELBORN
Record Publisher
I remember a couple of years ago this month, spending a good part of a Sunday and Monday on the phone trying to get in touch with friends and acquaintances to let them know that we had lost a man who was truly a one of a kind friend and co-worker, John Cashion.
Some of these folks had known John for many years, others not so long, but they all had stories to tell. I said several times on those days that each phone call was like having a short memorial service for John — most all of them knew this day was coming, all were sad, but to a person they quickly perked up and told me of some way John had made them thankful to have known him. Even in death, John’s uncanny ability to make whatever circumstance he was involved in better, shined through.
At about 2 a.m. on Sunday, August 14th, 2016, John Cashion died.
He had been in declining health for a number of years, and had many previous brushes with death, but always managed to turn it around and bounce back amazingly well. In the past year when his health issues were clearly taking a heavier toll, folks would remark that he just didn’t look well. I would usually brush them off by reminding them we had buried John six times already, and that he just wouldn’t stay down.
John was a diabetic for over 50 years and that complicated everything else, and clearly, health issues were a dominant factor, but, for the most part, he stoically toughed it out. Never have I seen a man with such faith in the medical profession. Even with all he had against him, he never lost hope that somewhere there was another doctor or another pill that would help. To that end I was amazed at the medicines he kept up with, and, for that matter, how he functioned so well after taking them. I would kid him that Secretariat would have never left the gate of the Kentucky Derby after taking John’s daily medications.
I met John Cashion over 40 years ago when I worked in advertising for his uncle, Paul Cashion, at WWWC Radio. Then, 3WC was a Top 40 station, and Paul had asked John to come on board as the station manager. I was very impressed with his sales training and willingness to impart that to others, but most of all, his ability to work through the personnel problems he was handed at the time with an attitude that wasn’t judgmental, but nonetheless managed to get across the “shape up or ship out” facts of life. Through the years after the radio station, John was in one activity or another, but for the past 20 or so, he worked with me, first at Thursday Magazine and then for The Record.
But he was not just part of my work, he was part of my life, the life of my wives, and clearly the lives of my children; who regarded him as another wonderful uncle. He was as thoughtful as anyone could be, never forgetting a birthday, anniversary or anything else for that matter. When The Record’s offices burned in 2004, I made the remark that an old book my father had given me was one of the few things I had from him, and really regretted losing it. In no time there was a copy of that very book on my chair at work with a note, “Hope this helps.”
When he felt good enough to come to work, he was always the company man. He sold advertising, collected, gave us story ideas, even made it a point to scout out new locations for our newspaper boxes. His desk was near the front of the office and he was usually the first person our visitors would see and speak to, and he always made them welcome. In the past few years, as his health continued to deteriorate he still came to work whenever possible. I used to say he could sell more advertising by accident than most could on purpose.
I have been acquainted with his son, Matt, and his, mother, Georgia (Puddin’ to most), for many years. Matt is a college professor in Wisconsin, is an often published author, and John was proud of him beyond words. Often I was present when Matt would call and John’s smile would light up the room as he always started his conversation with, “Well, hello young son.” I have to note that John Cashion was the only known Cashion Republican in captivity, and, it is a measure of Matt’s love for his dad that he, a flaming liberal, took John to the polls to vote in March of this year knowing he was going to vote for Donald Trump.
Georgia Erwin is not your average ex-wife either. Many times John has told me of the uncounted kindnesses she had shown him though the years, long after they weren’t married, saying she “…pulled me out of the ditch” many times. When Matt and Georgia came together to visit last year, John laughed and told me “…they must think I’m going to die.” Well, he did, but in true John Cashion form, he put it off to the very last minute.
John was computer literate long before I ever sat down in front of one, as noted by his very early e-mail address, [email protected]. He wrote his own obituary every day with his cheerful way and kind treatment of others. Among the things I am most thankful for today is my long and storied friendship with John — he was my bud John, too.
John Fred Cashion
October 9, 1940 – August 14, 2016
Rest in Peace
Risk taking
By LAURA WELBORN
Last week I attended a seminar at the Summer Institute titled “Stacked Deck.”
The seminar was on gambling addiction in teens and young adults. I was astonished that 80 percent of 12-year olds have already gambled. This is even before they have experimented with alcohol or drugs.
These children have bet (gambled) on sports teams, playing cards or the lottery. They have used scratch off tickets, gambled on the internet, or bet on a game of personal skill such as a video game.
So often we view gambling as going to a casino or playing poker as an adult. To me, it is very surprising that gambling can start at teenage or younger. When I discovered that fact, then this did not surprise me: when the lottery came to North Carolina, $1 million a year was allocated towards prevention of problem gambling.
What is gambling? It is risking something of value on an activity in which the outcome is uncertain in the hopes of winning something of value. When it is defined this way, I can see the many ways we gamble every day.
How does it get to be a problem? What I learned is that children have a brain vulnerable to risk taking. Once they start participating in high risk situations they have a better chance of developing a gambling addiction (much like alcohol and drug experimentation). College is a particularly vulnerable point for gambling especially with sports and internet betting. Lottery tickets, scratch off tickets, Xbox 360 online (video games that require you to pay to get to the next level), and poker for money are all examples. Games like Monopoly are not considered gambling.
It is amazing to me to find out how many games are considered gateway games to gambling. Candy Crush is training the brain for risk taking and the need to keep trying to win. I think about my friends who have said jokingly “I am addicted to Candy Crush.” Now I know it is a gambling activity the same as many Xbox games (for example, “Grand Theft Auto San Andreas” has embedded gambling).
The key is how the brain is being trained to keep going, keep pushing buttons to win. Even scratch off tickets are particularly dangerous as they require a hand movement to scratch off the silver material and there is an instant result. When you must wait on a result it is less likely you will develop an addition. Fantasy Football, where you win at the end of the season, makes it somewhat less dangerous for our brains.
How hard is it to win, that is, what are the odds? it is important for young people to recognize what “odds of winning” means. I liked the example of Jackpot Powerball. Your odds of winning are equal to one blade of grass on a football field. If you buy one ticket in the Millionaire Game your probability of winning is 1 in 12,271,512. If we do win at an early age, we are more likely to continue gambling and lose more than we win. This is almost always the case. If we know someone who has won we are more likely to risk money.
How do you know if you have a problem? The website “morethanagame.com” has several questions you can ask to see if gambling has become a problem and not a recreation:
Have you ever tried to stop, cut down, or control your gambling?
Have you ever lied to family members, friends or others about how much you gamble or how much money you lost on gambling?
Have there ever been periods lasting 2 weeks or longer when you spent a lot of time thinking about your gambling experiences or planning future gambling ventures or bets?
Any one of these questions should be taken seriously and evaluated as to how much control gambling is having on your life.
If you do gamble, what is your “best bet”? In general, good bets have at least two of these three attributes:
What you could win is of significant value.
What you could lose is something you can afford to lose.
The odds of winning are in your favor.
Everything we do is a risk or gamble, and, in a way, we gamble every day. What differentiates everyday risks from risk in casino-like gambling is that the odds tend to be in your favor (in a casino the “house odds” are always in their favor).
Plans are being made to offer a free seminar to middle schoolers and high schoolers at the Wilkes County Library this fall. Contact me at [email protected] for more information.
Freedom of the Press By HEATHER DEAN JOURNALIST/PHOTOJOURNALIST
The first amendment to the United States Constitution was passed by Congress on Sept. 25, 1789, and then ratified Dec. 15, 1791. (The first 10 Amendments form the Bill of Rights) “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
The reporting world is a perilous place these days, especially so for those who travel, like our guest columnist Earl Cox, who is in the fray more often than not in Israel. The more I watch worldwide news, and see fellow reporters from other countries gagged, beaten, imprisoned, tortured and sometimes even killed, I am thankful to be protected by the laws of the land- the United States Constitution that grants me the freedom to state my opinions, report on the state of the union, and to stand in solidarity with the aggrieved when the situation call for it. Or am I?
Granted, not much happens here in our quaint little town, as far as rioting and fear mongering in the streets, or burning and looting businesses. But across our beloved land, what America stands for, as well as our rights as Americans are being ravaged. Since when is being a reporter or cameraman in the United States a job that requires a flak jacket and next of kin identification around our necks? We are not trained to be combat ready; we are simply here to report the facts. But how can anyone in the field be taken seriously when the words “fake news” and “enemy of the people” are being hurled in our direction? And who is to be held responsible when the frenzy takes hold of a crowd and we the journalists are the ones that are accosted, or worse?
An attack on fellow Americans exercising their right as a free and independent press is indeed an attack on the First Amendment. It is one of the most sacred principles enshrined in the Constitution and this behavior, this “dirty war” against those reporting is unacceptable. Several high visibility reporters across networks have received death threats and get physically harassed at events because they have been singled out by those in Washington and the current administration. Our elected officials have a duty to the American people to uphold the Constitution, no matter what side of the isle they are on.
Call your local representatives and tell them to take a stand for their constituents and the Constitution.
If you want to fight back against something, fight the neo-nazis; fight inequality; fight injustice; fight homophobia; fight religious intolerance; fight HATE. Do not fight those doing their job as a reporter. We are not the enemy of the people.
For a complete list of elected officials in NC go to
https://vote-nc.org/Officials.aspx?State=NC&Report=NC
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Second Draft of Bio
I am a student at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. In the spring semester of 2018, I will graduate. I am currently working at Noodles and Company where I am a shift manager. This past summer I was a Kohl’s Design It Intern at Discovery World in Milwaukee. My experience at Discovery World was my first professional experience. This helped me pinpoint my passions in design. Designing is a passion of mine that lives beyond my schooling. I enjoy designing, creating and innovating people through material that makes a difference in the world. Growing up I had a unique experience. I am from a small town in the middle of Wisconsin’s Dairyland and now I live in Milwaukee. Both experiences helped me become a better designer. Trust is important to me because I trust my employees to be productive and honest daily. Trust helps me share my passions with you through design. Outside of design, I have a passion for sports. In my free time, I watch which ever sport is in season. Though my favorite sport is baseball which I played for eight years. I also enjoy playing fantasy sports. Each task I do feeds my competitive side. I have a love for sports that could never be broken. I will use my love for sports to strengthen my life with design. A Design is about innovation. Without innovation, a design would be static.
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Golden Knights' jersey reveal; Harding at peace; NBA vs. NHL (Puck Headlines)
Here are your Puck Headlines: A glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media. Have a link you want to submit? Email us at [email protected].
(Getty Images)
•Fans try to get the attention of Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby as he warms up before a game at the Buffalo Sabres. [Getty]
• The Vegas Golden Knights plan to unveil their jerseys prior to the NHL expansion draft in late June. [NHL]
• Former Minnesota Wild goaltender Josh Harding is at peace after his pro career ended in 2014 because of multiple sclerosis. [Pioneer Press]
• The NBA has proven a better fan product than the NHL this season. [Toronto Star]
• The Golden Knights will have full control over hockey operations of their minor league affiliate and that team is likely to be the Chicago Wolves. Originally it was believed the Golden Knights would share affiliation of the Wilves with the St. Louis Blues but the Blues reportedly will not be involved. [SinBin Vegas]
• The Detroit Red Wings are likely to miss the playoffs for the first time since 1990. It’s also the last season of Joe Louis Arena. A look at the Red Wings’ streak and the history of Joe Louis Arena. [Sports Illustrated]
[Follow Puck Daddy on social media: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | Tumblr]
• Unless a miracle takes place with the Red Wings, the Penn State men’s hockey will be the last team to win a championship at Joe Louis Arena. The Nittany Lions beat the Wisconsin Badgers, 2-1 on Saturday night in the Big Ten tournament. [Onward State]
• Bell and Rogers, the twin conglomerates of the sports-media landscape in Canada, have decided to remove their main sports channels from the bundled packages available to businesses that have a liquor license. They will then offer TSN and Sportsnet — and their various regional feeds — as standalone packages at significantly increased fees. [National Post]
• Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Duncan Keith discusses his fulfillment in playing his entire NHL career with the team. [ESPN]
• The Columbus Blue Jackets are 47-18-6. They have 100 points. With just a few weeks left in the season, they’re in the thick of the race for the NHL’s Presidents’ Trophy, awarded to the team with the best regular season record. Step back. How insane is this? [The Comeback]
• Trying to find a bright spot in the Colorado Avalanche’s terrible season. [Vice]
• How soccer helped kickstart the careers Los Angeles Kings defensemen Drew Doughty and Jake Muzzin. [Los Angeles Times]
• The New York Islanders rivalry with the New York Rangers will get another new face when the two sides square off on Wednesday at Madison Square garden. Josh Ho-Sang, who was called up from AHL Bridgeport twice during the week of February 28, will make his first appearance in a game between the two clubs. [Islanders Insight]
• NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said he could see the league eventually hosting an eSports hockey league competition. [Sport Techie]
• On Jan. 28, the Boston Blades of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League dedicated one of their last regular-season home games to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, which supports people living with multiple sclerosis while raising money for research. [Excelle Sports]
• Anaheim Ducks defenseman Brandon Montour has turned into an excellent hockey player, but the blue liner’s best sport may actually be lacrosse. [Orange County Register]
• Forwards Charlie Coyle and Nino Niederreiter need to find their games to stop the Wild’s slide [Fanrag Sports]
• A fantasy hockey cage match between Dallas Stars defenseman John Klingberg and Calgary Flames blue liner Dougie Hamilton. [Dobber Hockey]
[Sign up for Yahoo Fantasy Baseball: Get in the game and join a league today]
• Buffalo’s Rasmus Ristolainen will have a hearing Thursday afternoon for interference on Pittsburgh’s Jake Guentzel in their Tuesday game. [NHL Player Safety]
• The Boston Bruins are again finding themselves in a late season swoon that could knock them out of the playoffs. [Bruins Daily]
• Finally, looking back on a missed high-stick call in Game 6 of the 1993 Stanley Cup Playoffs between the Los Angeles Kings and Toronto Maple Leafs.
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First Draft of My Bio
At this time I am a student at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. I am in the fall semester of my senior year in which I will graduate in fall. I am currently working at Noodles and Company where I am a shift manager. This past summer I was a Kohls Design It Intern at Discovery World in Milwaukee. My experience at Discovery World was my first professional experience. This helped me pinpoint my passions through design. Designing is a passion that lives beyond my schooling. I enjoy designing and creating innovative material that makes a difference in the world. Growing up I had a unique experience. I am from a small town in the middle of Wisconsin’s Dairyland and now I have lived in Milwaukee for three years. Both of these experiences helped me become a better designer. Trust is important to me because I trust employees to be productive and honest on a daily basis. This trust will help me share my passions with you through design. Outside of design, I have a passion for many sports. In my free time, I watch which ever sport is in season. Though my favorite sport is baseball which I played for eight years. I also enjoy playing fantasy sports. I play fantasy football every season. I have a love for sports that could never be broken. I will use my love for sports to strengthen my life with design. A design is about innovation. Without innovation, design would be static.
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