Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fine print costs bettor huge payday

$609,000 Derby win at non-pari-mutuel book reduced to $35,000

- By Todd Dewey Las Vegas Review-journal

When is winning $35,000 on a horse race considered a bad beat? When the bettor thought he had won $609,000.

That’s what happened to Steve Friedlande­r, a Reno ophthalmol­ogist,

Watching the race at home, Friedlande­r thought he had lost his bets when the 7 horse, Maximum Security, crossed the finish line first. But when the favored colt was disqualifi­ed for interferen­ce after a 22-minute inquiry and the results were reset, Friedlande­r realized he had hit both bets and began to celebrate.

Country House (20), a 65-1 long shot he played in honor of his fiancee — Monica House — was declared the winner. Code of Honor (13) was second and Tacitus (8) third.

When Friedlande­r went to cash his tickets two hours later, a writer told him there’s a cap on exotic wagers and pointed to a placard on the wall that Friedlande­r hadn’t noticed. It read “This William Hill Race and Sports Book is a NON PARI-MUTUEL LOCATION” and referred bettors to the house rules regarding payout odds limits.

Friedlande­r’s heart sank.

“I was pretty sick,” he said. “It’s one of those things where I watched the race and thought I won all this money, yet I thought ‘this is too good to be true.’ And I went down there and ‘yeah, that’s right.’”

Had Friedlande­r placed his bet at a pari-mutuel location — where all wagers are placed in a pool and gamblers bet against one another rather than against the house — he would have been paid in full.

“It’s somewhat ironic how the story goes, because if my son’s track meet was on the north side of town, I almost certainly would have stopped at Grand Sierra, where William Hill has pari-mutuel,” he said.

William Hill declined comment but said in a statement :

“Because of the requiremen­ts of the gaming regulation­s, there are significan­t costs involved to offer pari-mutuel wagering in Nevada. Unfortunat­ely, it doesn’t make economic sense to offer pari-mutuel wagering at all of our 115 Nevada locations.

“William Hill has 17 pari-mutuel locations in Nevada. At a number of additional William Hill locations, we offer booked wagering on the five major race days (Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, Belmont Stakes, and Friday/saturday of Breeders’ Cup) as a convenienc­e to our customers in a manner consistent with the gaming regulation­s.

“At the locations where we book these select races, we pay official track prices, subject to certain caps that are prominentl­y displayed. … The capping of booked race payouts has been industry standard for decades and allows race books to book without taking on unlimited liability, which no one would want to do.”

William Hill said Friedlande­r “has the right to appeal to the Nevada Gaming Control Board, but we are confident that we have fully complied with the relevant gaming regulation­s and had prominent signage alerting customers to the payoff caps.”

When Friedlande­r learned about the caps, he declined to cash his tickets and made an appeal to the Gaming Control Board, which told him they would make a decision within 45 days.

Friedlande­r said he hopes his story will serve as a cautionary tale as legal sports betting spreads across the country.

“I want new bettors to hear my story so they’re aware what house rules are,” he said. “And to make sure they do their research before they make a bet.”

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

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