Betblog wrote:
Italy’s Serie A football league suspends 1xbet sponsorship deal
Italy’s top flight football league has suspended a sponsorship deal with a Russian online bookmaker following widespread protestations by government and regulatory voices.
Italy’s Serie A football league recently announced a deal with Russian bookmaker 1xbet’s Curacao-licensed online gambling operation in which the company would serve as the league’s international presenting partner (excluding Asian markets) for the 2017-18 football season.
However, since Italy has a regulated online gambling market and actively blocks the domains of online gambling operators not holding an Italian license – like 1xbet – the deal was met with howls of protest from the country’s Agenzia delle Dogane e dei Monopoli (ADM) gaming regulatory body and the usual crop of publicity-hungry politicians.
Infront, the sports marketing company that facilitated the betting partnership between 1xbet and Serie A, defended the deal, saying 1xbet’s lack of a local license was “of no relevance” to the deal as it only applied outside the country and thus no 1xbet marketing would be visible by Italian punters.
Despite these assurances, Serie A officials announced late last week that they had suspended the 1xbet sponsorship deal, meaning the 1xbet logo will not appear in Serie A promotions in the affected international markets. However, Serie A has so far been cagey as to whether the deal will be canceled outright.
Individual Serie A clubs have routinely inked betting partnerships with internationally licensed online gambling operators, including Philippines-licensed F66-com, which recently inked an Asian betting partnership with league champions Juventus. However, the club’s official gaming and betting partnership is held by Paddy Power Betfair’s Italian-licensed Betfair brand.
Italy’s ADM regulatory agency maintains a large and growing blacklist of international rogues who continue to serve Italian punters without local authorization. Last month, ADM added another 97 naughty names, bringing the total number of blacklisted domains to 6,720, of which at least a couple hundred are 1xbet mirror sites.
1xbet had a couple of its mirrors blocked by Bulgarian regulators this week, while Russia’s Roskomnadzor telecom watchdog generally adds a hundred or more 1xbet mirrors to its online blacklist each month. While 1xbet holds a Russian online sports betting license, its Curacao-licensed operation offers casino, poker and other products that Russian regulators don’t permit.
calvinayre-com/2017/11/1---spend-1xbet-sponsorship/
In an extract from Frankincense And More, The Biography Of Barry Hills, by Robin Oakley, the legendary trainer describes improving handicappers as “the joys of life”. In the first of a two-part extract, he reveals some of the secrets of his betting success
In his early days there was a sense of fun about training and betting that Barry Hills feels is missing today. "That's what racing is lacking these days – the sheer fun. You can't police it too heavily. They go overboard if anybody tells someone a bloody winner.
"I've always liked the lads to be punters. They work harder. They get more interested in what's going on, in looking for success. They need to get some money, don't they? What's the matter with tipping a winner if someone puts a tenner on for them? "Plenty of people used to put me a score on, like Lord Wigg or Sir Randle Feilden. Phil Bull used to talk about 'betting as the pursuit of pleasure'. Racing should be about pleasure, it's a fascinating, intriguing business."
Not all of Hills's bets, of course, were on little races. "I had £8,000 with Ladbrokes on Rheingold before he won the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, about ten days before the race.
"He did a bloody good gallop. Piggott came down and rode him. It was one of the times when it did go right when he came down to ride work. Normally when he came down it went wrong."
The only previous time Hills had backed Rheingold was when he ran in a maiden at Newcastle. Rheingold started at 13-8 but Barry had sent one of the lads round the Silver Ring with £50. "He got 7-1 and 6-1 and came back with bundles of readies."
Hills gets enormous pleasure out of having a successful bet, but warns: "You can't make betting horses, you come across them. All of a sudden you get a horse that improves, goes through the handicap and goes on to something better. They are the joys of life, the Duboffs of this world - she won nine of her ten races in 1974.
"Indian Trail was one of my favourites. He is the only horse since Frankincense that I knew exactly where he was."
Indian Trail, who won a series of handicaps, was a source of considerable profit for Barry and his great chum Robert Sangster, who also loved a tilt at the ring. With Steve Cauthen aboard, the Sangsterowned Indian Trail landed a massive gamble in the Extel Handicap at Goodwood in July 1981. It was the third time he had hit the bookies in a big way and one pressman recorded that day that he had been approached by the amiable Malcolm Palmer of Coral, who was visibly shaking as he inquired: "Did Barry Hills say where the horse was going next?" Sangster, says Barry, went off one day to Thirsk when Indian Trail was running. "For some reason the horse started to sweat and he didn't like the look of him, so he didn't back him. From then on when the horse ran we took particular notice of whether he was sweating.
"We took him to Newmarket in the July meeting and Robert had four men lined up from the paddock so that when he put a sign up, having satisfied himself that the horse wasn't sweating, it was like a chain link that went all the way down to the ring. There was an army of people standing about two strides off the bookmakers and when they got the signal they were to go in to each individual. Of course, when the bookmakers started laying off all the price had gone.
"Robert had a £2,000 double that day with a horse called End Of The Line, owned by Dick Bonnycastle, which won the July Stakes, and he won a lot of money."
Ebor winners Further Flight (1990) and Sanmartino (1995), Cambridgeshire winner Risen Moon (1990) and Goodwood Golden Mile winner Strike Force (1988) were other hugely successful gambles. Hills still has the confirmation slip from Victor Chandler on which he laid him £20,000 to £1,400 against Sanmartino.
Sanmartino, who started at 8-1 and was ridden by Willie Carson, won the Ebor as part of a 30-1 Hills treble on the day. He beat Midyan Blue by a short head. The contemporary reports said: "Hills had the smile of a man who has just netted £35,000 from the layers. He revealed: 'I backed Sanmartino at 16-1 and again at 14-1, and first approached Willie about the ride three weeks ago.'" Further Flight's win is described by Barry as "one of the biggest gambles I had, apart from Frankincense. The horse would have won the Melbourne Cup if he'd gone that year".
It was the old firm of Hills and Sangster who brought off what some layers said was then one of the biggest touches since the Second World War with Strike Force, the 8-1 winner in 1988 of the £75,000 Schweppes Golden Mile, then the richest handicap in Europe.
"I've had a nice little touch," said Hills at the time. "And I got 25-1, which makes it all the sweeter. There's no mystery about it. Strike Force is an improving three-year-old who had won well at York last time out."
Sangster told the press: "My sons nicked all the long prices, but I got involved in the action as well."
Geoff Lester reported in The Sporting Life: "Sangster said: 'I rang William Hill's from my car phone and asked for £2,000 for myself at 25-1, £2,000 for my wife and £1,000 for Barry. They came back and told me that my wife and I had the bet but that Barry would have to be content with £500'. With a wry grin, Sangster added: 'It's a case of the working man losing out'."
Barry complained to William Hill and still has a copy of a rather sniffy letter from the firm's Len Cowburn, which offers an insight into bookmaking practices. Cowburn concedes: "In view of the fact that the race was an extremely competitive handicap I feel that you should have been laid your bet in full." But after an apology, he adds: "This is a commercial operation and the management make their decisions based on their knowledge of the client, his type of bet and how often he favours us with his business.
"In your case, I believe that the person responsible was influenced by the fact that the last bet you placed with this office was on Bold Citadel. I feel sure, Barry, that as a businessman you realise that I cannot give you or any other client a guarantee that in future you will be laid your bet in full. This particularly applies when a price is requested."
Barry's reply stated: "I do not bet every time I go racing and I haven't had an ante-post bet since Bold Citadel [a Newmarket winner] ran in the spring, so there is nothing odd in that. I too run a commercial operation and enjoy a bet from time to time. But I don't intend over a long period to be giving my life savings away to bookmakers."
Barry says that, with Robert Sangster away in Australia, he had £5,000 on Bold Citadel without his patron knowing. But Risen Moon's victory in the Cambridgeshire was a truly bold stroke for both of the deadly duo.
Hills says: "We backed him to win the Cambridgeshire with Steve Cauthen riding him. About ten days before the race somebody offered a very big price for him and we sold him. The vet came and 'spun' the horse and said he had a hairline fracture of the cannonbone. I rang Robert and said, 'This horse has failed the vet. If you'll take my advice you'll have another thousand on it.' I had another thousand on. I don't know what he had on."
Risen Moon was backed down to 7-1 favourite and it did not worry Hills that the previous 21 favourites in the race had been beaten. He had £1,000 on Risen Moon at 16-1 and then another £1,000 at 8-1 the day before the race. It was one of those occasions, he believed, when everything had fallen into place.
Risen Moon was weak as a youngster and hadn't shown his form as a two-year-old. In August of his three-year-old season, when the stable had fancied him for the Bradford and Bingley at York, he ran too freely. But he had got himself well handicapped. "After that, I got Pat Eddery to hold him up at Doncaster and he flew home. From that moment he was a good thing in the Cambridgeshire, providing he stayed."
The 7-1 chance looked to be well out of it halfway through the Cambridgeshire, with Steve Cauthen right at the back and seemingly trapped behind a wall of horses. Many punters must have assumed that another Cambridgeshire favourite was doomed, but Hills was not worried.
He explained afterwards: "Risen Moon needs to be behind for as long as possible so I didn't start shouting until two out. Steve rode him perfectly and I was never worried."
The favourite threaded his way through his 39 rivals, passed the northern challenger, Mellottie, and won by a length and a half going away, in the process giving Barry his 100th winner of the season. Cauthen said it was difficult finding a way through with horses being blown around in the high wind, adding: "It's nice to win a good race for a good friend."
Sangster used to rave about Risen Moon's victory as a great training performance. It was hardly surprising. He won £300,000 on the result.
Barry had another couple of thousand on Further Flight to complete the Autumn Double by winning the Cesarewitch, a feat last achieved by Sam Darling in 1925. He came close, running second to Trainglot.
How successful a gambler was Sangster? Barry shrugs with the air of a man who does not want to criticise a friend but who would not have done it his way. "Because he had quite a lot of horses he would put them together in combinations and the bookmakers would take him on. Because they took him on he lost quite a lot as well.
"Robert loved to gamble. He had a horse one day at Newmarket called Observation Post. He ran in a maiden at the backend, a big field of runners. Michael rode him and I said to Michael in the paddock, 'If it's close you can just give him a couple [