Las Vegas Review-Journal

Kick hitting goal post solidifies nickname

Caesars bookie Kunovic: Gostkowski shanks give rise to ‘Frank the Clank’

- By Todd Dewey Las Vegas Review-journal

When Caesars Palace lost on the prop “Will a kick hit the goal post” in last year’s Super Bowl, sports book director Frank Kunovic was playfully dubbed “Frank the Clank” by his peers.

When Patriots kicker Stephen Gostkowski hit the post in the second straight Super Bowl on Sunday to again cash Caesars’ prop — which paid plus 330 — Kunovic’s phone lit up.

“No joke. I got like 20 texts immediatel­y with just one word: ‘clank,’ ” Kunovic said.

Caesars lost six figures on the prop, but reported a seven-figure win on the game after taking some big bets on New England shortly before kickoff.

Ham or turkey?

South Point oddsmaker Jimmy Vaccaro (@Jimmyvacca­ro) tweeted Sunday night that “We ended up winning a ham sandwich on the game.”

Likewise, MGM Resorts sports book director Jay Rood said Monday that his

10 locations on the Strip were a small winner on the day despite paying out a $3 million wager on the Eagles.

“We were able to fade most of the liability on the big bet. It was not great but we survived,” he said. “The props were ugly. The game was not good for us. The only thing that saved the day was we did well on the first half and we did well on halftime. It could’ve been a lot worse.

“(Vacccaro) might be talking about a Subway ham sandwich. We probably won a Capriotti’s Bobbie.”

No safety dance

New Orleans Saints Atlanta Falcons Oakland Raiders Dallas Cowboys Jacksonvil­le Jaguars Houston Texans

Los Angeles Rams Seattle Seahawks San Francisco 49ers

Historical­ly popular long-shot bets that there will be a safety and overtime were about the only props that bettors didn’t cash in a game that featured 74 points and an Nfl-record 1,151 yards of offense. But a South Point bettor won $4,000 on two bets totaling $29,000 that there would not be a safety or overtime. A William Hill bettor also won $2,428 on a $17,000 wager on no safety (minus 800).

placed at William Hill sports book, which took a multimilli­on-dollar loss.

The books’ win on the game took a huge hit from one high roller. The same mystery bettor who beat Las Vegas books out of an estimated $10 million on the World Series reportedly won more than $10 million on the Super Bowl. He had a total of at least $7.4 million in money-line wagers on Philadelph­ia, which closed at plus-170.

“He had a lot to do with it,” Holt said. “But people were just betting the Eagles, period, and the props were devastatin­g.”

The mystery man — who’s been called Bettor X and jokingly referred to as Biff Tannen and Nick Papagiorgi­o on social media — reportedly

Super Bowl LIII odds

The Westgate sports book has posted the AFC as a 1-point favorite over the NFC in Super Bowl LIII, which will be played on Feb. 3, 2019, in Atlanta. The total is 52.

The Patriots are the 5-1 favorites at the Westgate to win next season’s NFL title, followed by the Eagles and Steelers at 7-1, and the Vikings and Packers at 12-1. The Raiders are 20-1.

A Westgate bettor made a “decent-sized” wager Monday on Pittsburgh to win the AFC championsh­ip. The Steelers are the 7-2 second choice behind New England (5-2).

Patriots’ reign over?

Los Angeles Chargers 25-1 Kansas City Chiefs 25-1 Carolina Panthers 30-1 Denver Broncos 30-1 Indianapol­is Colts 40-1 Tennessee Titans 40-1 Baltimore Ravens 40-1 Detroit Lions 60-1 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 60-1

“That might be the end of the Patriots’ reign in the AFC,” Westgate sports book manager Ed Salmons said. “The only thing they have going for them is their division is just horrendous. There are a lot of teams in the AFC that look like they’re definitely on the come.”

Salmons singled out the Texans, Jaguars, Colts, Chargers and Chiefs as teams on the rise.

placed a $3 million wager at MGM Resorts, two separate $1 million bets at William Hill, a total of $1.2 million at CG Technology, a total of $700,000 at South Point and a $500,000 wager at Wynn Las Vegas.

“He’s on an unbelievab­le run,”

Holt said.

The Patriots trailed 29-19 in the third quarter before rallying to take a 33-32 lead on Tom Brady’s 4-yard touchdown pass to Rob Gronkowski with 9:22 left. But New England’s defense couldn’t stop the Eagles as Nick Foles hit Zach Ertz for the decisive 11-yard touchdown pass with 2:21 left.

With the betting public cashing most player props in the shootout, bookmakers weren’t exactly celebratin­g the record handle.

“The handle was unfortunat­ely Arizona Cardinals 80-1 New York Giants 80-1 Washington Redskins 80-1 Miami Dolphins 80-1 Cincinnati Bengals 80-1 Buffalo Bills 80-1 Chicago Bears 100-1 New York Jets 100-1 Cleveland Browns 100-1

Back to the futures

The day after the Super Bowl usually generates the largest betting handle for futures.

“All the tourists make futures bets on every possible sport on their way out of town,” Salmons said.

Winter Olympics

Lost money on the Super Bowl?

You can try to recoup it on the Winter Olympics, where the United States is a 15-1 long shot at the Westgate to win the gold medal in men’s curling and 10-1 to win the gold in men’s hockey.

Snowboarde­r Shaun White is the plus 125 favorite to win gold in the men’s halfpipe and the U.S. is the minus 150 favorite to win gold in women’s hockey.

The U.S. is the 9-2 third choice to win the most gold medals behind Norway (minus 160) and Germany (plus 120).

Contact reporter Todd Dewey at tdewey@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @tdewey33 on Twitter.

strong,” MGM Resorts sports book director Jay Rood said. “Every prop that could be bet over went over.”

In Super Bowl XLII, the books lost $2.5 million (negative hold of 2.8 percent) when New York spoiled New England’s bid for a 19-0 season as 12-point underdogs.

In Super Bowl XXIX, the books lost $396,674 (negative hold of 0.6 percent) when San Francisco covered as an 18½-point favorite.

The books won more than $10 million on three of the last five Super Bowls, winning a record $19.7 million (16.5 percent) in Seattle’s 43-8 upset of Denver in 2014.

Contact reporter Todd Dewey at tdewey@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @tdewey33 on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States