While roughly 70,000 fans will pour into Indianapolis to watch the New
York Giants face off against New England Patriots for the Super Bowl,
almost five times that many will be heading to Vegas.
The gaudy neon-lit oasis in the Nevada desert -- 1,600 miles away from
Lucas Oil Stadium where the Super Bowl XLVI will be hosted -- becomes
the biggest and glitziest man cave during Super Bowl weekend. Swanky
hotels and nightclubs with beautiful lounges hosting enormous flat
screen TVs put fans in the lap of football-watching luxury.
But the biggest reason football fans flock to Vegas is because Nevada is
the only state where betting on big games is legal. Jimmy Vaccaro, one
of the most influential sports bookies in Sin City, said he has been
setting the odds on sports for more than 30 years.
"Football is king," he said. "Basketball is a distant second and
baseball. Put it this way, football you write about, 45 percent of the
whole year's handle is on the football."
The handle is the total amount of money bet, and the Super Bowl has the
biggest handle of any sporting event, with up to $93 million in the pot
in previous years and bookies are expecting a bigger pool this year.
"We all know there's a recession going on. We all know it's not been
good the last few years," Vaccaro said. "Sports betting handle has kept
up from year to year. People find money to bet on football. We have not
taken any nosedive whatsoever. Matter of fact we're going to write more
this year than we did last year. It's in our blood."
Lisa Marchese, chief of marketing at the Cosmopolitan hotel, said that
in Vegas the only thing bigger than Super Bowl weekend is New Years Eve.
One reason it draws out so many people is that sports betting is a bit
more accessible than some of the other casino games.
"They've got all those ancillary bets, like who's going to get the first
touchdown, and who's going to get the most yardage. Those are the bets I
always fall for. They're the absolute worst bets," she said.
The sports book is unlike any other game in the casino. The odds, for
everything else, are mathematical. The casinos know, with precision,
how likely it is that the dice will roll a lucky seven or the next card
will make blackjack.
That's where the genius of sports bookmakers come in. It's their job to
set the odds -- from the overall point spread in the game to the
countless so-called "proposition bets," for example, "Will the Patriots
score more points than Lebron James does for the Miami Heat Sunday?"
Bookmakers say it's more of an art than a science.
"It's on you," Vacarro said. "You're pulling your cash out of your pocket. I think I'm a little smarter than you at times."
Vacarro said the biggest loss of his career was a proposition bet made
back in 1985 when the Chicago Bears played the Patriots in the Super
Bowl. Bears defensive lineman William "The Refridgerator" Perry scored a
touchdown.
"I can still see Refrigerator Perry crossing the goal line when it was
about 100-to-1 that he would score a touchdown in the game," he said.
"We paid dearly. I can still feel the sting 26 years later. It resonated
through the whole strip corridor. When he went across the goal line I
could hear a groan."
This year bookies are facing another possible heart-stopping moment,
because the Giants were never expected to make it to the Super Bowl this
season.
"If you're a better and you're sitting with the Giants at 100-to-1 for
$200 that's to win $20,000," said Wynn sports bookmaker Johnny Avello.
"There's quite a few out there. At the beginning of the season they were
about 20 to 1. They were as high as 100-to-1 and everywhere in between,
so there's a lot of Giants money out there."
Vegas has plenty of ways to hedge the bet, and plenty of 49'ers and Packers fans have already lost their wagers.
"The most I can do is book the game and that's it. I cannot play the
game. I can't decide the outcome. And wherever the chips fall, they
fall," Avello said.
http://abcnews.go.com
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