Famous Sports Gamblers
Posted : admin On 4/7/2022When looking to venture out into sports gambling, you are likely to find hundreds of online sports betting sites out there. When looking for the best sports betting sites, therefore, the most important issues to consider are the perks that come with the websites. This will ensure you enjoy the greatest sports betting online experience. These perks include signing bonuses and easy usability among others. In this article, we are going to review three of the best online betting sites, which are Bovada, BetOnline, and MyBookie.
#1 Bovada

Bovada.lv also known as Bodog.com in Canada is among the best sports gambling websites that has been in existence since 1994. The site’s domain is registered in Latvia. The platform provides access to sport, casino, poker, and racebook wagering.
First up is David Oancea, better known as Vegas Dave. This prominent sports bettor is renowned for boasting on his Instagram account about his big bets and even bigger wins on long-shot bets. James Butler Hickok, better known as Wild Bill, was something of a hero of the American Old West. He was a lawman, a gunfighter, and a gambler. He is one of a number of famous gamblers from that era, arguably the most famous of all. Poker was his game of choice.
Bovada has continually offered promotions and offers to its customers. For instance, first-time deposits for sports get bonuses of 50 percent for deposits up to $250, 100 percent for deposits up to $1000 for casino bets, and 100 percent for deposits up to $1000 as poker bonus.
Making a deposit or a withdrawal is easy and only attracts a small fee. For first-time deposits, the processing fee of 4.9 percent is waivered. Payouts are done using rapid transfer, otherwise known as money gram.
Bovada allows sports betting online on their user-friendly mobile interface or in their state of the art poker and casino gaming rooms. The minimum wager online is $1 and $50 for mobile bets. The only limitation to using Bovada is that the odds are posted late and that they have very low wager limits.
#2 BetOnline
Licensed and regulated in Panama, BetOnline offers sports, live, poker, casino, and live dealer types of betting. It offers a wide range of payment options and several accepted currencies, thus making it one of the most convenient sites for customers across the world.
You get a welcome bonus of 50 percent on deposits up to $2500. However, bonus levels are tiered for different types of wagering. The online game library is categorized into 3D slots, table games, slots, and video poker. Most of the bets are placed online since their mobile platform only allows sports betting.

Maximum and minimum deposits and withdrawals are different for different payment options that are offered on BetOnline. Its major shortcoming is that it has high rollover requirements that customers might find difficult to understand.
#3 MyBookie
MyBookie is one of the newest top online sports betting sites in the market. It was established in 2014 in Costa Rica and is fast growing to compete with other older bet staking sites. The minimum online wager on MyBookie is $10 and the maximum is $1000. For mobile wagers, however, there are no limits.
Wagering options for MyBookie include straights, totals, open wagers, action points, teasers, reverses, if bets, futures, and money lines among others. You can bet on games such as NFL Football, college basketball, NBA basketball, NHL hockey, soccer, golf, and horse racing among others.
With one of the highest bet bonuses in the industry, MyBookie gives you a welcome bonus of up to 50 percent for up to $1000 if you are a first time depositor. For reloads, they offer a 20 percent cash bonus. This makes it one of the best sports betting sites.
Its mobile platform has a user-friendly interface that makes it very easy to use. Their customer service is also highly efficient and offers top-notch customer service. This puts them among the best online betting sites today. MyBookie, however, only caters to recreational gamblers as opposed to other top sites that allow professional gambling. The site has also been said to lean more on the US sports market as compared to international sports.
Jimmy Snyder in 1971 | |
Born | September 9, 1918 Steubenville, Ohio, U.S. |
---|---|
Died | April 21, 1996 (aged 77) |
Resting place | Union Cemetery Steubenville, Ohio |
Nationality | American |
Other names | James George Snyder, Sr. Jimmy 'The Greek' Snyder |
James George Snyder Sr. (born Dimetrios Georgios Synodinos, September 9, 1918 – April 21, 1996), better known as Jimmy the Greek, was an American sports commentator and Las Vegasbookmaker. A regular contributor to the CBS program The NFL Today, Snyder predicted the scores of NFL games, which sports bettors used to figure out the point spread. Due to comments he made about breeding practices during slavery leading to blacks becoming superior athletes, CBS fired him in January 1988.
Early life and career[edit]
Snyder was born in Steubenville, Ohio. According to his New York Times obituary of April 22, 1996, Snyder's family roots were in the village of Tholopotami (Θολoποτάμι), on the island of Chios in the Aegean Sea. As a teenager in Ohio, he became acquainted with bookmakers.
According to his autobiography Jimmy the Greek, Snyder bet $10,000 on the 1948 election between Thomas Dewey and Harry S. Truman, getting 17–1 odds for Truman to win. In a later interview he indicated that he knew Truman was going to win because Dewey had a mustache and 'American women didn't trust men with a mustache'.[citation needed]
He invested money in oil drilling and coal mining, but when those ventures failed, Snyder moved to Las Vegas in 1956 and began a weekly pro football betting line.[citation needed]
The NFL Today[edit]
The sports line eventually led to a 12-year stint on the CBS Sunday morning show, The NFL Today, a pregame show for National Football League (NFL) games. Known simply as 'Jimmy the Greek,' he would appear in segments with sportscaster Brent Musburger and predict the results of that week's NFL games. While already famous in gambling circles, his rough charm made him into a minor celebrity. He had conflicts with Musburger (whom he once punched in the face at a bar when the show anchor insulted his intelligence) and Phyllis George (whom he once brought to tears before a show by making a comment about her husband, leading to Snyder taping his segments with Musburger in advance so that he and George were not on the set at the same time).
As sports betting was illegal in most of the United States, and was at the time a general social taboo, his segment would not overtly mention betting or gambling. Instead, Snyderwould predict the score of each game; for example, he would say the Los Angeles Raiders would beat the Los Angeles Rams 31-21. This allowed bettors who knew the line of the game to be able to deduce his selection when betting the point spread: If the spread in the example game was the Raiders by five, bettors would know Snyder was picking the Raiders to beat it. The NFL was adamant about avoiding any official connections between gambling and the league, but NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle was an acquaintance of Snyder and made it clear that his work on CBS was acceptable.[citation needed]
Racial comments and dismissal[edit]
On January 16, 1988, Snyder was fired by the CBS network (where he had been a regular on NFL Today since 1976) after making several questionable comments about African Americans during a lunchtime interview on January 15, 1988 with Ed Hotaling, a producer-reporter for NBC-owned WRC-TV, at Duke Zeibert's Washington, D.C. restaurant. Hotaling said that he had been doing interviews with various people in the restaurant for a program celebrating the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr. and what they thought the next step in civil rights progress for African Americans should be. He put the question to Snyder. 'It was all on the occasion of Martin Luther King's birthday,' Hotaling said. 'So I thought it was an appropriate, forward-looking question, and got a backward-looking answer.'
One of Snyder's more controversial responses to the question was that African Americans were naturally-superior athletes at least in part because they had been bred to produce stronger offspring during slavery:[1][2]
The black is a better athlete to begin with, because he's been bred to be that way. Because of his high thighs and big thighs that goes up into his back. And they can jump higher and run faster because of their bigger thighs. And he's bred to be the better athlete because this goes back all the way to the Civil War, when, during the slave trading, the big, the owner, the slave owner would breed his big black to his big woman so that he could have uh big black kid, see. That's where it all started![3]
According to the New York Times obituary, Snyder expressed regret for his comments: 'What a foolish thing to say.' His CBS coworkers publicly stated that they did not agree with Snyder's theories and that they did not oppose CBS's decision to fire him. Black former NFL player Irv Cross said in the 30 for 30 documentary about Snyder that he had worked alongside Snyder for a long time and did not consider him to be a racist at all. In the same documentary, Frank Deford sympathetically noted that Jimmy often tried to sound more educated than he actually was and that his comments were basically him trying to make a point about a subject on which he knew nothing.[citation needed]
In the same WRC-TV interview, Snyder, whose remarks were termed 'reprehensible' by CBS, also commented that the only sports realm in which whites then dominated was coaching and that if blacks were to 'take coaching, as I think everyone wants them to, there is not going to be anything left for the white people.' Snyder, during his remarks, emphasized he was not meaning to be 'derogatory' but said the only thing then that 'whites control are the coaching jobs — the black talent is beautiful, it's great, it's out there. The only thing left for the whites is a couple of coaching jobs.'[2][4]
In 1991, Snyder sued the CBS network for age discrimination, defamation, and breach of contract.[5] Snyder maintained that his firing aggravated his personal health problems, according to court papers.[5] Snyder's attorney, Jeffery L. Liddle, stated that by 'firing and repudiating Mr. Snyder, CBS quashed his dream, his dignity, and his spirit.'[5] Snyder lost the case.[6]
Famous Sports Gamblers Sports
In popular culture[edit]
Snyder appeared in a cameo in the 1981 comedy film The Cannonball Run as a bookie. In the movie, he offered 50–1 odds against Formula One driver Jamie Blake (played by Dean Martin) and gambler Morris Fenderbaum (played by Sammy Davis Jr.) winning the Cannonball coast-to-coast endurance race. Snyder and Dean Martin were childhood acquaintances in Steubenville, Ohio.
On November 10, 2009, ESPN aired a show in their 30 for 30 series titled The Legend of Jimmy the Greek, which was produced by Fritz Mitchell. Commentary was provided by, among others, Brent Musburger, Irv Cross and Phyllis George from The NFL Today, plus Anthony Snyder (Jimmy's son), as well as his brother Johnny and sister Angie. The show also acknowledges his role in the first sportscasts of poker tournaments.
Although Snyder was largely unknown outside of the United States, in 1974, his name achieved international renown. After beating George Foreman to regain the world heavyweight championship, Muhammad Ali, in the midst of an interview with David Frost, looked into the camera and addressed his doubters. 'All of you bow' he said. 'All of my critics crawl... All of you suckers bow... If you wanna know any damn thing about boxing, don't go to no boxing experts in Las Vegas, don't go to no Jimmy the Greek. Come to Muhammad Ali.'
He was parodied in sketches on Saturday Night Live and Second City Television, portrayed on the respective programs by Phil Hartman and John Candy.
Snyder is also parodied in an episode of The Simpsons titled 'Lisa the Greek', which was named after him. A character modeled after him named 'Smooth' Jimmy Apollo (once again played by Phil Hartman) is featured in the episode giving dubious predictions about football games.
Snyder was referenced in an episode of The Golden Girls titled 'And Ma Makes Three.' Rose asks Dorothy if she is really going to dump her mother in order to spend alone time with her boyfriend, Dorothy responds with 'Faster than CBS dumped Jimmy the Greek.'
Personal life[edit]
Top Gamblers In The World
Snyder and his wife Joan lost three of their five children to cystic fibrosis.[7]
Snyder suffered from diabetes in his later years and died of a heart attack on April 21, 1996 in Las Vegas, Nevada, at the age of 77. He was buried at Union Cemetery in his native Steubenville.

References[edit]
Famous Sports Gamblers Books
- ^Solomon, George (January 17, 1988). ''Jimmy the Greek' Fired by CBS for His Remarks'. The Washington Post. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
- ^ abSharbutt, Jay (January 17, 1988). 'Jimmy 'The Greek' Is Fired by CBS'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
- ^Quoted verbatim from ESPN's 30 for 30 series titled The Legend of Jimmy the Greek which originally aired on November 10, 2009
- ^Wilmington Morning Star, Jimmy 'The Greek' Dies of Heart Failure, p. 5C
- ^ abcThe Milwaukee Sentinel, Jimmy the Greek sues over firing, Part 1, Page 3
- ^Text of Snyder vs CBS Inc, 204 A.D.2d 252 (1994), 612 N.Y.S.2d 147 is available from: Leagle
- ^Jimmy the Greek faces his longest odds in a family fight for life; People, 26 October 1981
Famous Sports Gamblers
External links[edit]
Famous Sports Gamblers
- Jimmy Snyder at Find a Grave
- Pace, Eric, 'Jimmy (the Greek) Snyder, 76, Is Dead; a Sports Oddsmaker,' The New York Times, 1996-04-22.
- White, Jack E. (February 1, 1988). 'Of Mandingo and Jimmy 'the Greek''. Time. Retrieved 2008-05-21.
- Jimmy the Greek Comments that got him fired on YouTube