Game, sports book tour live up to hype

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Copyright ? Las Vegas Review-Journal




No event in sports is preceded by more hype than the Super Bowl. Some years, the buildup leads to a big letdown and a blowout. Early in the morning, I'm sensing this game will be a good one.

One aspect of the Super Bowl that never disappoints is the scene at Las Vegas sports books. This is the biggest betting day of the year, bringing out all the characters. It's a combination of New Year's Eve and Christmas with the Griswold family.




So my plan is to hit 15 sports books in the five hours before kickoff to survey the scene.

The Indianapolis Colts are 5-point favorites over the New Orleans Saints. The total is 561/2. The hundreds of proposition wagers have been picked apart like chicken wings.

It's Peyton Manning against Drew Brees, two of the NFL's elite quarterbacks. Brees is one of the best. Manning should be a little better. Will this matchup live up to the hype?

Here's a pregame play-by-play blog from Super Bowl Sunday (in order of sports books visited):

BELLAGIO

It's a standing-room-only crowd, and there's not much standing room. A guy wearing a No. 18 Colts jersey is drinking a Bud Light and exuding confidence.

"I think the Colts win big," he says, winking. "What do you think?"

"Colts by seven," I say. "It could be closer. But the Colts should win."

(In hindsight, have you ever regretted saying something, such as, "Will you marry me?")

LAS VEGAS HILTON

Flipping through his prop sheets, a bettor asks which one I like the most. He says Saints running back Reggie Bush over 471/2 receiving yards is his favorite. I point out the actual total is 281/2, and say I agree Bush should top that total.

(Bush finished with 38 yards on four receptions.)

BINION'S

The short drive downtown is worth it, because big-breasted girls wearing referee shirts and cowboy hats are dealing blackjack. There's something very attractive about a healthy girl in a cowboy hat, whether she's wearing a referee shirt or not.

Three bettors are in line, and the ticket writer says business has been "slow" all day.

GOLDEN NUGGET

I walk next door, and about 30 bettors are lined up, so business is not quite as slow. Three guys from Minnesota are sitting at the bar, one wearing a No. 4 Vikings jersey in honor of Brett Favre, who also might be sitting at a bar somewhere waiting to watch the Super Bowl.

"I think Favre has another year left in him," the Favre fan says.

"Give him another six months to think about it," his friend says.

They planned trip their trip to Las Vegas thinking the Vikings would be in the Super Bowl. It could be worse. They could be Detroit Lions fans.

PLAZA

Jimmy Vaccaro, director of operations for Lucky's sports books, reports the betting has been "pretty steady, nothing crazy." There are no girls in cowboy hats dealing blackjack, so I leave.

"It's like a juiced-up NFL Sunday," Vaccaro said, adding that money on the Saints is starting to show up.

During a drive to the west side of town, Boomer Esiason is on ESPN Radio predicting the game.

"I think both teams are going to score at least in the upper 20s, maybe in the early 30s," Esiason said. "I believe in my heart it's going to be a final-series type of game. I'm going to go with Peyton Manning, although I think Brees can match him score for score. It's going to come down to a fourth-quarter drive, and there's something magical about Peyton's year. I think it's 34-31 or something like that."

RED ROCK

It's raining, and the skies are gray. An angry would-be bettor storms out the front door while talking on his cell phone. "I was going to make a (bleeping) bet, but the (bleeping) line to make a (bleeping) bet is ..."

I see what he means. About 200 people form a (bleeping) line that snakes around the sports book bar to the (bleeping) casino floor.

At the back of the line, a young man in a No. 16 Joe Montana jersey says he plans to bet on the Colts. "Manning is too good," he says.

Another guy is wearing a Brady Quinn jersey, and you have to wonder what the (bleep) he's thinking.

More from ESPN Radio. Dan Marino, Bill Cowher and Shannon Sharpe are making their predictions.

"It's hard to go against Peyton Manning," Cowher says. Marino picks the Colts in a close one, and Sharpe picks the Colts, 34-24.

"If we all go with the Colts, that means the Saints are going to win," Marino says, as all three laugh.

M RESORT

It's kind of a long drive south to the M, which sits somewhere within sight of the California line, but it's a great new property. The limits on prop bets ($5,000) are the highest in town, The Vig Deli is the best sports book deli around, and the cocktail waitresses are fine.

SOUTH POINT

Twenty-three people are waiting in line for 75-cent hot dogs. I like hot dogs, but I have a rule that I never wait in a line more than five-deep for a hot dog. So I buy a $4 Italian sausage. The upstairs ballrooms are packed for the "Big Game" party.

PALMS

The shoeshine guy is not real happy. He's standing by the sports book and getting little or no business. I ask which side he bet in the game. "Colts," he says.

(The day is not going to get any better for him, unfortunately.)

GOLD COAST

The Jagermeister Girls are strutting around, the game is about to kick off, and no one is waiting at three open betting windows.

I remember what Hilton sports book director Jay Kornegay said: "I always tell people, 'If you want to bet the Super Bowl, bet it two minutes before kickoff.' " That is good advice.

I like the Gold Coast, partly because when I was living out of hotels last summer, I stayed two nights at the Gold Coast for $5.45 per night through a deal on Hotels.com.

SAHARA

Brian Blessing of Las Vegas Sports Consultants is hosting a party at the NASCAR Cafe. He raffles off a Miller Lite grill and Manning and Brees replica jerseys. Blessing holds a microphone and works the crowd with charisma, resembling a white-haired Wayne Newton.

LAS VEGAS HILTON

The Colts lead 10-0 after the first quarter, and an adjusted line on the game is posted. It's called "in-progress" wagering. The Colts are 10-point favorites, the total is 51, and Indianapolis is minus-500 on the money line. That means the Saints are plus-400.

It would have been a great bet. I wish I had made it.

And I only had time to visit 11 sports books. Things don't always go as planned, including the outcome of this Super Bowl.

But for the Saints and their bettors, the game exceeded the hype.
 

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Sports books expected to post win on Super Bowl
Big bets on Colts cancel out losses on props




Las Vegas sports books didn't score a monumental victory in the New Orleans Saints' 31-17 victory against the Indianapolis Colts in Super Bowl XLIV Sunday.

But most of them didn't lose, either. Although the Nevada Gaming Control Board won't release the official figures until later in the week, sports book directors around the Las Vegas valley reported a small win Monday.

"Overall, I was pleased with the result," said John Avello, race and sports book director at Wynn Las Vegas. "I can say that much."

Avello did say, however, that the Wynn didn't have as much success with prop wagering. That was a trend around town.

A play that particularly hurt sports books occurred in the fourth quarter when Saints quarterback Drew Brees connected with receiver Lance Moore for a 2-point conversion.

Almost every sports book offered at least +400 (risking $1 to win $4) odds on a two-point conversion happening in the game. That's the type of play public bettors love to take a shot and wager "yes" on, said MGM Mirage race and sports book director Jay Rood, which puts sports book in a vulnerable situation.

"That two-point conversion prop hurt everybody," Rood said. "When you are giving those prices, you have a lot of offsetting money that cleans out some of your profit."

The two-point conversion might have served as a jab to the sports books, but they were able to evade a potential haymaker.

With four minutes left in the game, the Colts were driving and threatening to tie the score at 24. The game would have likely gone into overtime, which would have proved disastrous for sports books.

Most books priced the "yes" prop bet on overtime, which has never happened in a Super Bowl, at +800 (risking $1 to win $8) odds. Like the two-point conversion, it was a wager the public loved to bet on for the chance of a big payout.

Avello started to worry when the game became close. He even retreated to his office to look up the numbers on the overtime bet.

"I pulled that up with five or six minutes left and said, 'Oh, that would not be good,'" he said.

At that point, the damage was already done at the Las Vegas Hilton. Jay Kornegay, executive director of the Hilton SuperBook, said the Hilton lost on Super Bowl wagering.

The props didn't help. In addition to the two-point conversion, Kornegay said the Hilton lost significantly on Colts quarterback Peyton Manning going "over" most of his totals and Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey scoring a touchdown.

"Some of the things that took place during that game looked pretty innocent to the naked eye," Kornegay said. "But those things had a big effect on us."

Kornegay couldn't remember the last time the Hilton lost money on props. But they were far from the only problem.

He said the Hilton lost just as much on halftime wagering, where a few major players parlayed the Saints and over, which cashed. The Hilton also didn't get as much money on the Colts moneyline as other properties.

"It comes down to this: If you were one of those books that took a big Colts money-line bet, you came out on the winning side," Kornegay said. "We certainly didn't decline any. Just no one asked."

Many professional sports bettors opted for a Colts money-line play. Adam Meyer, who sells his picks at adamwins.com, confirmed his plan to bet $1 million on the Colts before the game on this radio show. MGM Mirage also took at least one bet that exceeded $1 million on the Colts.

Kornegay said he thought those plays were enough for some books to profit overall.

"It's not a home run or anything," Rood said. "But we're going to post a win."
 
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