I’ve been playing video poker promotions for almost 30 years, and before that exploited blackjack promotions for about five years. I’ve absorbed a lot of “how to do things” over the years that are now second nature to me. When a new promotion comes along, I have enough experience, usually, to get the most out of it.
Recently, though, in another gambling game where they were giving away money, I was really out of my element.
In mid-September, Captain Jack Andrews and Rufus Peabody came on our podcast to promote their new website, www.unabated.com This site contains a lot of information useful to a wide variety of sports bettors. Right now it’s free to download and use. Someday they’ll start charging to use it, but right now they want bettors to come in, poke around, and see if it’s useful to them.
One of the things Captain Jack mentioned was that Arizona had just opened up sports betting, and through the end of September several sports books were giving away free money. “There are no free lunches,” Captain Jack said on the air, “but this is about as close as it gets.”
There were a variety of free bets — two for $5,000 and three for $1,000 — at various books. I didn’t know what a free bet was, but I learned. Doing away with the house vig for a moment, the way a $1,000 free bet works is as follows: Let’s say I’ve chosen the Kansas City Chiefs – Baltimore Ravens bet in week two, where the Chiefs are favored by 3.5 points. To me this was a no-brainer bet. The Chiefs were one of the favorites for the Super Bowl. The Ravens had a lot of injuries and had lost the previous week to the relatively lightly-regarded Las Vegas Raiders.
If I bet the $1,000 on the Chiefs and they cover, I get $2,000 back. The $1,000 I bet and the $1,000 I win. If Baltimore wins, or loses by 3 points or less, I get a $1,000 free bet in the future. On this free bet, I just keep the winnings and I don’t get the original bet back.
So, a buddy and I decided to do this in a way that minimized variance. The first week we bet, we’d both take the Chiefs on $7,000 worth of bets. That could be Caesars $5,000, BetMGM $1,000, and FanDuel $1,000. We’d also both take the Ravens for $6,000 worth of bets. In this example, it would be DraftKings for $5,000 and WynnBet for $1,000. If the Chiefs covered, we’d have $14,000 (minus the house vig) which would cover the $13,000 we put up, plus $6,000 of free bets. On the free bets the following week, we could bet the free bets on opposite sides. We’d end up with $6,000 in profit (minus the vig), split two ways.
I’m well-aware that betting these on even-money bets (actually -110 on both sides) is not the optimal way to bet them. If this is of interest to you, there’s an article about it on unabated.com you should check out. But this was our first time. We wanted to get our feet wet as safely as we could.
Not bad for two drives into Arizona. We both live in Vegas, the border (Boulder Dam) is 30 miles away, and we wouldn’t have to drive too far over the border to find a place with Internet reception. We’d drive over there before noon on Sunday and get our bets down easily before the 5:15 p.m. kickoff time. Piece of cake!
Oh, what we didn’t know!
I thought I could fund the sites by using my credit card. My card could easily handle $13,000 worth of charges, I figured. Well, no it couldn’t. I had never used my card for cash advances, and each card is limited to 10% or 20% of your available credit (depending on the card.) Yes, I could apply for a higher balance, but the decision makers aren’t there on Sundays.
Next choice was online banking. I have some accounts set up, but I’ve never used them. I still take checks to the branch office to deposit them. I wasn’t sure of my online banking login ID or the password. I had my cellphone with me, but not my laptop. Bonnie wasn’t at home so I couldn’t call to ask for her to look some stuff up.
Another problem was that one of the sites couldn’t verify that I was in Arizona. Some setting on my iPhone. My friend took my phone, fiddled with it, and this became fixed somehow. I don’t know what he did.
Still another problem was that one of the sites wanted to verify my address. They wanted me to send a photo of my Driver License (no problem) and a copy of a utility bill, bank statement, or one of a few other things addressed to me within the past 60 days at the address I was using to sign up. All such bills were back at the house, some 50 miles away.
In addition, there was no one address I could use. I use a post office box for all my mail, but in Nevada, they require you to put your home address on your Driver License. Fortunately, I was successfully able to explain this away and my name and address were accepted. My friend didn’t have this problem. He used his home address, and the sports book can find enough references to him there that they didn’t need the proof.
I drove back home, figured out my online banking login info, picked up a bank statement, and headed back to Arizona. I got some of the bets down, but not all of them. And this time, I wasn’t with my friend, who had been able to get most of his bets down. He’d need to put more funds into his online banking account so he’d get the rest of his bets down the following week. I ran into more problems that I wasn’t able to solve before the kickoff. So, we were unbalanced, but still had a significant edge so we should be fine. I passed numerous Nevada casinos with sports book and could have balanced my bets, but it was too late for that. The Sunday night game had already started.
It turned out Baltimore won the game outright. Mostly we were still fine, but we still had to go down and make our free bets. We coordinated who was going to bet on what and went down separately the next week.
I got one bet down, couldn’t figure out where Caesars kept the free bet, and couldn’t get my Arizona location verified at the third place. So, I came home, waited for my friend to get off work, and together we went down there again. My two trips had now turned into four!
Yes, we ended up making money. Several thousand dollars apiece, in fact. But it was an unpleasant struggle. I think of myself as an experienced gambler in a variety of games, but here I was clearly a fish out of water. While this would all have been an easy walk-in-the-park for experienced bettors (but who wouldn’t have been eligible for all of these signup bonuses), for a newcomer there were a significant number of ways things could go wrong.
We’ll probably go to other states to try this. Several states have big enough initial signup bonuses to make it worthwhile to fly to an airport in the middle of another state, make the bets while at the airport, and then fly home or fly to another state that has such deals. We’ll probably run into another bunch of problems, but at the same time we now know more about what to expect.
And free money is free money.

This story just goes to show that many times we understandably make reasonable assumptions about various things in life, but things nonetheless often are different than we thought they would be. Thus, we need to ask questions and get answers if we don’t want to be negatively surprised. And the more limited and vulnerable we will be (like Bob D. and his buddy after they traveled to Arizona), the more we need to find out those answers before we get into the related situation. At least some of the problems or obstacles that they encountered after arriving in Arizona could’ve been avoided if they had asked more questions and gotten answers to them. We shouldn’t have to do extra work to get reasonable results; but the fact is that we do have to do the extra work because things so often are not structured ideally. The extent of the prevented downside makes a little extra work worthwhile.
You should have used a lesson from your years of computer work! Test, test and more testing before going live!
The marketing of the new sports betting craze sweeping the country is very interesting, the new theme is “the bookie is your friend”, when the actual fact is the bookie wants to soak you… Look at the advertising, it’s all unicorns and sparkle ponies, in fact come on down for some freebie betting action in sunny Arizona, where we gave bookie franchises to billionaire sports team owners… Go get em Bob, go get um savvy gamblers, I root for the little guy. This crap they are selling about sports betting saving the schools or the economy is a bunch of hooey, if it was true they would let the school boards open up sports books, not the owner of the Phoenix Suns…
Similar strategies worked out just fine some 20 years back when the internet casino boom was overwhelming the market. Sign-up bonusses that hat fairly easy impediments to get through at the beginning of that era made it easy for us to get some extra cash. Over the years these online casinos started implementing even higher restrictions, some casinos made it so complicated that you only knew later that the money you have been winning from your freeplay cash was money that would probably never ever be available for withdrawals. I remember when Pokerstars, Partypoker, Ultimatebet and all the other sites handed out reload money on a regular basis and it was not hard to play through the requirements until we could cash out (which was free of charge then).
With all these sports betting shops to be open all over the U.S. I am curious what kind of an impact this will have in terms of odds and V.I.G. There will surely be some sports books offering better odds than others and some have different odds for the same games so arbitrage betting could be the next big thing over there.
From Switzerland
Boris
You should have used a lesson from your years of computer work! Test, test and more testing before going live!
Easier said than done. Some of the apps wouldn’t let you fund your account unless you were actually in Arizona. If I could have opened and funded while still in Nevada, I would have. But it wasn’t allowed — and/or I couldn’t figure out how to do that.
Agreed that it’s not so easy. Depending on how many operators you choose to open accounts with, there is usually a hassle with about half. Some always want verification (ID, selfie with ID, utility bill, etc.). And the approval of your verification submissions are not always instant. Could take a day or more. Some don’t ask for verification until you withdraw funds. Also, some operators don’t allow you to claim sign-up bonuses across different states once you’ve established an initial account (DraftKings and FanDuel are both like this). Many more details on this matter, but one major point is to pay attention to whether or not your “risk-free” bonus comes in the form of a free bet or bonus money. There’s a huge difference in the value since bonus money (usually) is returned with the winnings, whereas the free bet value is not.