John Avello, manager Wynn sportsbook , on whether the odds are better on Wall Street or where he works...

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Friday, February 5, 2010
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Better odds on Wall Street or in Vegas?

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John Avello, who runs the sportsbook at the Wynn Las Vegas hotel, talks about whether the odds are better on Wall Street than where he works.


TEXT OF INTERVIEW

Tess Vigeland: It's pigskin party time! Get out the chips and guac, maybe some colorful beads and jambalaya if you're a Saints fan... Or something, um, blue and white if you're a Colts fan? If you're a betting fan, you know the Colts have been favored by line-setters in Vegas since the final playoff round a couple of weeks ago. The Super Bowl is the biggest one-day sports gambling event of the year.
So we thought we'd take this opportunity to find out what a Vegas pro thinks about the whole stock-market-as-casino analogy. We reached John Avello at the Wynn hotel in Las Vegas, where he runs the sportsbook, and asked whether he thought the odds were any better on Wall Street than where he works.
John Avello: Probably not. Probably the bettors may have a little advantage in our world, because you're laying maybe a little less of a juice, so to speak, vigorish. And...
Vigeland: What is it that you just said?
Avello: Juice or the vigorish. In the world of stock-up betting or buying, you know, you have to pay a commission on your stock, and we also charge that in the race and sports book. The vigorish, or the "juice," as we call it, that is a commission that the races' sports book takes for every $100 you bet, we charge 10 percent. So let's take the Super Bowl for instance, if two teams and you were going to take the favorite and lay six points, you would lay $110 to win a $100. And if you won that bet, you would get back $210. Well, the losers, we get to keep their money and the winners get it back and that's how we make our money in Las Vegas sports books.
Vigeland: So would that be like the fees in my 401(k)?
Avello: It's a lot less than those fees. You really should look at those close.
Vigeland: So do you invest in the stock market? Have any of your retirement money in there?
Avello: Yes, I do. And things were looking pretty good for a while, and all of a sudden, they're not looking as favorable.
Vigeland: Yeah. So what does a Vegas bookmaker invest in?
Avello: For me, it's not about trying to select individual stocks. For me, it's more the mutual funds for long term, and I've always been a believer on "let the money work and be spread out and don't have to worry about administrating individual stocks."
Vigeland: Well, could I ask you to lay odds on a couple of things that we here at Marketplace Money are watching kind of closely these days? I promise I won't hold you to it.
Avello: OK, let's do it.
Vigeland: All right, health care reform. The odds of it happening this year?
Avello: Health care reform, I'm going to say the odds of it happening this year are probably 6-5 against. Last year, I would have laid probably 1-2 that it would happen.
Vigeland: And what about financial reform, making sure we don't get into another mess with the banks. That ever going to happen?
Avello: This year, yes. Long term, I'm not so sure. So for this year, I'll make that a pretty good favorite.
Vigeland: And what about this credit card legislation that's going to go into effect in a couple of weeks. Wanna bet that it'll really have any long-term effect on the credit card companies?
Avello: In the short term, I would probably make it 8-1 to that it won't succeed, only because it's going to take a little while for everyone to get used to, the economy will still be weak, the consumers don't really have a lot of alternatives. In the long term, I would make it a favorite, 2-3 hopefully that we will have learned our lessons and things have stabilized -- and you know, that's certainly wishful thinking. And won't work at all, I'd probably make 2-1 and that's because we may just get complacent and go back to our old habits again.
Vigeland: And finally, have you put a line out yet on the Red Sox winning the World Series this year?
Avello: Oh yes, the Red Sox to win a World Series has been up -- let's see -- must've been three months or so?
Vigeland: Ah... So they're going to take it all, right?
Avello: Uh... Well, there's a team in the east coast that has something to say about that Tess.
Vigeland: Uh oh. You're from New York, right?
Avello: Yeah, yes I am. And the Red Sox to win the World Series next year are 7-1. And what that means for every dollar that you would put up, you would win seven. If you're interested, Tess, I'm here in Nevada with open arms waiting for ya.
Vigeland: All right, I think it's about a three-hour drive, so I'll see you in a bit.
Avello: OK.
Vigeland: And by the way, he's picking "Avatar" to win its title match at the Oscars next month.
 

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Thanks for posting, good read.

John and myself worked together side by side as supervisors/oddsmakers at the Sands for nearly three years.........love the kid.
 

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Vegas Bookies Amp Up Super Bowl Action

<ABBR class="published updated" title="2010-02-06 15:24:26
">Updated: 1 hour 37 minutes ago</ABBR>

Steve Friess Contributor

LAS VEGAS (Feb. 6) -- The most influential men in American sports this weekend may not be named Manning or Brees, don't have shows on ESPN and will be nowhere near Miami. Yet, these guys hold near dictatorial powers over untold millions around the world who are looking to make the game a little more interesting -- even if it's a blowout.

All hail the lowly Vegas bookie or, as they usually prefer, the "oddsmaker." Sunday is Christmas morning for the elves who concoct those betting lines used the world over as the basis for partaking in the single biggest gambling event of the year.
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Steve Friess
Jay Rood, oddsmaker for MGM Mirage, favored the Indianapolis Colts to win by 5 as of Friday, although he expected that to change by game time depending on how bettors wager.


"If it wasn't for the betting, the NFL's market share would be reduced by half because people watch games because they have action on them," said Johnny Avello, sports book director at the Wynn Las Vegas resort. "The teams are somewhat exciting," he conceded, "but they're that much more exciting if you have a bet on them."

Here's proof: Miami is expecting some 100,000 visitors for Super Bowl XLIV. Las Vegas, meanwhile, expects nearly three times as many -- 278,000, according to a projection by the tourism bureau. And they're not even allowed to use the words "Super Bowl" anywhere. Instead, party-throwers dub it the Big Game or the Super Party or, as they say at the sports books up and down the Strip, "professional football championship game."

As the media descends on the site of the Super Bowl immediately after the NFC and AFC championships are decided, the work commences in Vegas for the likes of Avello and Jay Rood, who sets the betting line for the 10 MGM Mirage casinos in Nevada, including the Mirage and Bellagio.

It is no overstatement that millions of dollars ride on their judgments. Indeed, Rood estimated Super Bowl revenues account for as much as 20 percent of the entire year's "handle."

What's surprising is how much absolute power these men have. There's no committee, nobody debating what the opening line ought to be. It comes entirely from their gut instincts and their sense of how the public will bet.

"People probably think there's something a little more involved in it than there is," said Rood, who can personally shift the betting lines across the country because MGM Mirage is the largest casino corporation in the only U.S. state where sports gambling is legal. "But really, you take a pencil, you take a pad of paper and you do a little research."

Rood, 41, was a volleyball player in college and took over this gig two years ago after years of setting the line for "insignificant sports" like Nascar and bull-riding. Avello, 57, came to Wynn after doing the job for 15 years at Bally's Las Vegas.

Avello opened at his line giving the Colts a 4-point edge, meaning that the Colts would have to win by more than 4 points for the bettor to win. Rood started at 3.5 points for Indy. As it turned out, bettors picked Indianapolis in droves, forcing the oddsmakers to raise the line to a high of 5.5 points, meaning Indianapolis had to win by at least six for the bettor to triumph.

"We're not predicting that the Colts are vastly superior to the Saints," Rood said. "What I'm trying to accomplish is when the guy comes to the counter, I want him to hesitate on betting the Colts maybe. If he's extremely confident, then I've probably got a bad number up there."

The lines have moved back down since then as more bettors have picked the Saints amid concerns about injuries for key Indianapolis players.

Another Vegas attraction are know as the prop bets, or unusual wagers that appeal to recreational gamblers. They can put their money on anything from whether both the Saints' Reggie Bush and Colts' Reggie Wayne will score to whether the Colts will score more points on Sunday than L.A. Lakers star Kobe Bryant on Saturday.

If history is any guide, more than $90 million may be bet legally in Nevada on the Colts-Saints game. This makes NFL brass, who have repeatedly denied Las Vegas even consideration for a possible football team, extremely uncomfortable.

For years, the NFL banned Las Vegas from advertising during nationally televised games including the Super Bowl. In December, they slightly reversed that rule, permitting the city to advertise so long as "specific hotels, casinos and other institutions that house gambling" are not represented in the ad. The tourism board declined, opting instead to spend $1.4 million on other programs encouraging tourism for Super Bowl Sunday.

With a 13.5 percent uptick in visitation expected this weekend, the strategy appears to have worked.

Reggie Hylton, 25, lives in Weston, Fla., just north of Miami. But even so, he wanted to be here.

"Without a bet, the Super Bowl is boring," Hylton said. "I probably wouldn't watch."
Filed under: Nation, Sports
 

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The difference is that the stock market lets you bet more than $500 without sweating you unlike the Wynn.
 

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