Plus: A fifth term for Putin, health insurance headaches, and more
March 18, 2024 [View in browser]( Good morning! March Madness is here. Did your team make it in? Whether they did or not, whether you even have a team or not, the country â and particularly the nation's sports betters â are psyched. Producer Hady Mawajdeh is here to walk us through the year's biggest mainstream betting event. âCaroline Houck, senior editor of news [michigan state vs purdue basktetball game] David Berding/Getty Images What you should know when betting on a Cinderella this March Madness The 2024 NCAA menâs and womenâs basketball tournaments are here. That means itâs time to fill out a bracket, to suddenly become the biggest fan of a school youâd never heard of before this week, or to coat your body in team colors before every game (depending on your obsession level, of course). For many Americans, itâs also time to place some bets. This is âthe most mainstream betting event of the year,â says David Forman, vice president of research at the American Gaming Association (AGA). âIt used to be office pools and squares contests.â Now, with the explosion in [legalized gambling]( across the US he says, âpeople in almost 40 states have the ability to bet on the tournament legally, and we think they're going to bet about $2.7 billion on the menâs and womenâs tournaments.â If that estimate has you staggering, you obviously donât watch all that much live sports. Because if you did, you would have already heard from a slew of celebrities, like [Jamie Foxx]( and [Rob Gronkowski](, selling you on the virtues of major sports books like BetMGM, FanDuel, and DraftKings. You also mustâve missed the headlines around the Super Bowl last month, when the [AGA estimated]( that 67.8 million Americans would bet roughly $23.1 billion. Sports betting is bigger than ever, and 2023 was the [biggest year yet](. But as more states legalize gambling, effective regulation hasnât always kept pace. And itâs left some bettors [wondering]( whether their bet [will be honored](. Tournament betting is going to be wild One of the reasons March Madness is such a big-time event for sports betting is the number of games being played â sometimes at the same time. In just the first four days of the tournament, there will be 48 games. âThe thing that makes it very bettable is the structure of the tournament,â says Jack Andrews, co-founder of Unabated Sports, a subscription service that purports to help sports bettors increase their chances of winning. âOn the East Coast, the tournament starts at noon on Thursday [March 21]. And then you have game after game after game after game after game. It's basically a betting bonanza for sports bettors from noon to midnight.â In-game betting and [prop bets]( are other forms of wagering that are very popular during the tournament, âespecially betting the over/unders,â says David Vinturella, an instructor at the University of Nevada Las Vegas who developed and taught the schoolâs first ever semester-long course in sports betting this year and who previously worked for a major sports book. He explains over/under bets like this: Betting the over is wagering that a team will score more than sports booksâ predicted figure. Betting the under is the opposite. Another well-liked prop bet Andrews describes is betting on the first team to score 15 points. âThat is hugely popular in Vegas," he says. "That's not really betting on the game, you know â instead you're just betting on which team gets off to a hot start.â [A mascot stands in front of crowd at a Houston basketball game.] Jon Shapley/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images If you win, will your bet be honored? With millions of people expected to place bets with sports books throughout the tournament, can bettors be sure theyâll be paid out if their long-shot bet wins big? The answer to that question was a bit murky in the days before legal sports betting, when offshore sports books were the only game in town, says Andrews. âThat's the difference between the US and offshore sports books. If you have a problem offshore, the offshore sports book says, âI'm judge, jury, and executioner, and you're out.â Whereas in the states with regulated sports betting, [regulators] are supposed to make sure itâs a fair bet.â Still, there have been stories recently about [sports books]( in the US [voiding bets]( that wouldâve paid out big to bettors. The sports books use a clause in the fine print of their regulations saying that if there's an obvious error with the odds in the bet (a.k.a. âpalpable errorâ), they can cancel your bet. Critics say this is unfair because the sports books have multiple chances to prevent a soon-to-be-voided bet from ever happening. âThe bet is offered by the sports book, the bettor offers a wager to the sports book, and then the sports book accepts the wager,â says Andrews. âThey had three chances to stop the bet from ever happening.â Vinturella says that voided bets definitely happen, but that they are rare. âThe process of getting a license and securing the license for a mobile sports betting company is not easy or cheap. So sports books don't want to do anything that would jeopardize that license.â Andrews agrees that most bettors will never have an issue with a sports book over a palpable error. âNinety-nine percent of the time, sports books just eat the loss,â he says. But Andrews thinks regulators often have a âpro-operatorâ approach because âtheyâre funded by the operators,â and âthey don't want DraftKings to lose $1 billion because of something that should have never been out there.â Thatâs why regulators should have clear sets of rules for determining what is and isnât a clear mistake. A good example is New Jersey, where the Division of Gaming Enforcement has a two-step process for [deciding whether the error was palpable](. Step one: Was the bet legal to begin with? If so, good. If not, the bet doesnât count. Step two: Was there a risk of losing? If so, the wager stands. If thereâs no risk, then the bet is voided because it mustâve been a mistake. Itâs that sort of easy-to-follow process that will let bettors trust regulators and confidently participate in the fast-growing billion-dollar industry â ultimately benefiting the sports books, too. [âHady Mawajdeh, producer]( [Listen]( Hollywoodâs still not back Covid and last yearâs strikes delivered a one-two punch that the entertainment industry still hasnât recovered from. This is bad news for the people who make movies â and the people who watch them. [Listen now]( AROUND THE WORLD - Netanyahu says Israel will press on with Rafah assault: He acknowledged â and then dismissed â the building international pressure not to do so. [[Guardian](]
- One, two, three, four, five: Russian President Vladimir Putin will serve a fifth term, "after a brutally distorted election in which all serious challengers were wiped out before voting began." [[Politico](] CULTURE - In this house we support rom-coms: But decidedly not this new one from Netflix. [[Vulture](]
- Hollywood's silent crisis: "Industry pros sweat the possibility that many digital files will eventually become unusable." [[Hollywood Reporter](] [sugary food display] Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images SCIENCE AND HEALTH - How a health insurance headache that many of us have encountered can turn deadly: Some insurers require âprior authorizationâ for a procedure or treatment. Doctors say the policyâs increasing use ranks as âone of the top issues in health care.â [[NYT](]
- Do these popular tactics to counter obesity even work?: A decade ago, Chile implemented a raft of measures designed to fight obesity â sugar taxes, warning labels on food, and more. But obesity rates are up. Why? [[BMJ](]
- Climate change is reversing progress on global health: What a cholera outbreak in Zambia tells us about the ârapid emergence of climate-sensitive diseases.â [[CFR](] Ad
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