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Category Archives: Gambling

Online Gambling and the betting Market Globally Expected to Drive Growth through 2021-2031 ChattTenn Sports – ChattTenn Sports

Posted: March 21, 2022 at 8:56 am

Global online gambling and the betting market was valued US$ 47.2 Bn in 2017 and is expected to reach US$ 107.2 Bn by 2026, at a CAGR of 9.54% during a forecast period.The objective of the report is to present a comprehensive assessment of the market and contains thoughtful insights, facts, historical data, industry-validated market data and projections with a suitable set of assumptions and methodology. The report also helps in understanding global online gambling and betting market dynamics, structure by identifying and analyzing the market segments and project the global market size. Further, the report also focuses on the competitive analysis of key players by product, price, financial position, product portfolio, growth strategies, and regional presence. The report also provides PEST analysis, PORTERs analysis, SWOT analysis to address questions of shareholders to prioritizing the efforts and investment in the near future to the emerging segment in the global online gambling and betting market.

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Gambling can be defined as risking money or anything of material value for uncertain results. The initial intent is to win additional money or material goods. Online gambling, more usually known as Internet gambling, is typically betting on casino or sports type games over the Internet.

Constant development in the internet infrastructure along with the strong penetration of mobile devices, rising urbanization & disposable incomes, increasing usage of the internet is driving the growth of the global online gambling and betting market. Virtual reality headphones are created a better environment for online gambling and betting. Crypto-currency and increased adoption and popularity of Internet-based devices are growing the market of online gambling and betting. Easy convenience of these games and the lure of easy money are the key factors powering global online gambling and betting market growth.

However, incorporation of live streaming with online gambling and development of online gambling & betting sites with innovative technology as per requirement of end-users are expected to generate new opportunities in the market.

Sports betting is estimated to hold the largest share of the market during the forecast period. Rising the popularity of sports and followers of sports among the globe will boost the market. Increased craze regarding sport in youth is growing the market of sports betting. Mobile is estimated to hold the largest share of the market during the forecast period. Rising usage of the smartphones and penetration of internet is a growing share of the market. Rising trust being online operators, as well as an increase in mobile gaming.

Software segment is projected to hold the largest share of the online gambling & betting market during the forecast period owing to the availability of various online payment options. Additional, the online gambling & betting market is divided on the basis of gaming type into poker, casino, sports betting, bingo, lottery, horse race betting, and others. Poker segment is expected to hold a notable share during the forecast period.

Legalization for online gambling and betting in Europe region is estimated to hold the largest share of the market in this region. The UK is the first country which one is legalized for online gaming and betting and also various countries are legalizing for online gaming and betting such as Italy and Spain. However, Asia Pacific is estimated to generate the highest CAGR in the forecast period as increasing penetration of internet and relaxation of regulations regarding online gaming and betting in this region. Also, North America is estimated to grow at a substantial rate in the global online gambling & betting market meanwhile it is the most technically developed region. The U.S. is expected to be a key contributor in the region.

Scope of the Global Online Gambling and Betting Market

Global Online Gambling and Betting Market by Gaming TypePokerLotteryBingoSports BettingFantasy SportsOthers

Global Online Gambling and Betting Market by Device TypeDesktopMobileTab

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Global Online Gambling and Betting Market by ComponentHardwareSoftwareService

Global Online Gambling and Betting Market by GeographyNorth AmericaEuropeAsia PacificMiddle East & AfricaSouth America

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Key Players in Global Online Gambling and Betting Market888 Holdings plcThe Stars GroupPaddy Power Betfair plc.Fortuna Entertainment Group,GVC Holdings Plc.PlaytikaSciGamesZyngaBet365 Group Ltd.Betfred Ltd.Paddy Power Fortuna Entertainment GroupThe Betway GroupWilliam Hill PlcKindred GroupRank GroupPlaytechHong Kong Jockey ClubMybet HoldingKindred Group

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Online Gambling and the betting Market Globally Expected to Drive Growth through 2021-2031 ChattTenn Sports - ChattTenn Sports

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DC bar bets big to cash in on sports gambling – FOX 5 DC

Posted: at 8:56 am

DC bar betting big to cash in on sports gambling money

In the District, there's only one local business that is allowed to have its own sportsbook. FOX 5's Katie Barlow reports from Grand Central in Northwest D.C.

WASHINGTON - March Madness kicks off this Thursday and with sports betting now legal across the DMV, restaurants, and bars are looking to cash in. But in the District, there's only one local business that is allowed to run its own sportsbook Grand Central Restaurant in Northwest.

If everyone is trying to get in on the sports betting action, why is Grand Central the only one?

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Well, it's pricey to run a sportsbook in the D.C. area. You have to apply for a license with the office of lottery and gaming, and just the application alone will cost you $100,000. The amount is non-refundable, so if the business is not approved, they're out of cash. A spokesperson for the D.C. government said they try not to let that happen.

"I think $100,000 is a lot for any small business," said Brian Vasile, the owner of Grand Central. "But youre getting access to something that should be a large revenue stream. It should help you in the long term. Its a marathon, not a sprint. And were the first to do it in the country, so its hard to tell whether $100,000 is worth it or not because we dont have a lot of data and no one does. Were the first."

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Currently, there are three different ways to bet on sports in D.C. Gamblers can go to a major sports venue like the Capital One Arena or Audi Field, or stop by Grand Central.

The District also offers its own sports betting via the GameBetDC app and select kiosks.

"We are not trying to be Vegas.," said Nicole Jordan, spokeswoman for D.C. Office of Lottery and Gaming. "We are building sports betting in the District in a responsible way. And so we don't want to have lounge parlors, and you know a strip. That's not the District's model."

There's one more application for a sportsbook in process at the moment, but for now Grand Central is the only shop in town gamblers can place bets at. They say they're ready for a St. Patrick's Day tip-off on Thursday.

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States Where Gambling Revenue Is Skyrocketing (and Plummeting) – 24/7 Wall St.

Posted: at 8:56 am

Following a 2018 Supreme Court decision that lifted a federal ban on sports betting, many states have rushed to create new laws to allow sports betting. There are now 32 states with at least some form of legal gambling an increase of five states from two years earlier.

With new forms of wagering that people can access without having to go to a casino, gaming revenues are hitting all-time highs in the U.S. In nearly every state with legal wagering, revenues are up well above what they were two years ago, just before the COVID-19 pandemic hit more than doubling in a few states.

To determine the states where gambling has grown the highest, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed The American Gaming Associations Commercial Gaming Revenue Tracker. Adult population figures came from the U.S. Census Bureau. States were ranked on the change in gaming revenue from January 2020 to January 2022.

In highest of the states with some form of legal gambling, revenue increased anywhere from 0.1%-35% from January 2020 to January 2022. In five of these states, revenue declined but typically just slightly. In two states, revenue more than doubled. The AGA found that casino visits in early 2022 were roughly equivalent to what they were in January 2020. The growth in the industry is being driven by sports betting and iGaming.

Five states Connecticut, Tennessee, Virginia, Wyoming, and Montana had no gambling revenue in 2020 but have since allowed at least one type of gambling. Other states, like New York and Ohio, already had casinos but recently enacted laws that permit sports betting as well. Gambling can produce tens of millions of dollars in tax revenue for these states. These are the states that spend the highest on gambling.

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States Where Gambling Revenue Is Skyrocketing (and Plummeting) - 24/7 Wall St.

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Study estimates cost of gambling harm in Norway to be NOK5.14bn – iGaming Business

Posted: at 8:56 am

A Norwegian study has estimated the total cost of gambling harm in the country to be NOK5.14bn (444.8m/526.2m/$585.5m) per year.

This total, the National Competence Centre for Gaming Research said, represented just under half of the Norwegian regulated markets annual net revenue.

In order to calculate the cost of gambling harm in Norway, the Centre conducted a cost-of-disease analysis. It said that the expenses it looked into are divided into direct costs, including the cost of gambling harm treatment services and indirect costs indirect costs such as the loss in production due to the effects of harmful gambling. The study also considered intangible costs, such as the emotional impact of gambling harm for family members.

The report noted that a 2019 study of gambling harm conducted by the University of Bergen found that 63% of Norwegians had gambled that year.

Using the Canadian Problem Gambling Index, it classed 50% of the population as being at no risk of harm, 8.8% as low-risk. However, 3.1% were considered to be at medium-risk and 1.4% were classified as problem gamblers. The percentage of citizens classed as problem gamblers using the scale was up from 0.9% in 2015.

This means some 524,000 Norwegians would be classed as being at some form of risk, including 55,000 high-risk gamblers.

Looking at direct costs, the study said that gambling harm directly leads to costs of NOK822.8m.

The Competence Centre said that problem gambling treatment costs came to NOK157.5m, plus a further NOK168.5m to treatment of the consequences of problem gambling and NOK4.9m to gambling-harm nonprofits.

The largest direct costs by far, however, was recruitment, with costs in this area coming to NOK321.7m. This was mostly linked to replacing personnel who lost their jobs due to gambling-related reasons, with the assumption that 1,320 Norwegians at a given time are unemployed because of gambling harm.

The Centre added NOK38.2m in budgeting and debt advice costs, plus NOK27.8m in police costs, NOK29.6m in court costs and NOK20.4m in prison care. The study noted that as Norwegian data on the portion of criminal charges that are linked to gambling harm was not available, it used a study from Australia and adjusted for Norwegian crime rates.

In addition, NOK12.1m was attributed to prevention and treatment, plus NOK19.1m for regulation.

Indirect costs of gambling harm were significantly higher, however, at NOK2.43bn. Lost production related to unemployment made up NOK891.9m, while lost production due to sick leave and other absences made up NOK464.5m and NOK103.4m, respectively.

Production losses related to gambling-linked premature suicides came to NOK891.8m, based on 51 suicides with a median age of 32.5.

Costs related to lost production due to imprisonment came to NOK18.5m, while for disability this was NOK56.1m.

Finally, the study calculated NOK1.89bn in intangible costs. Of this total, NOK1.27bn was related to friends and family, while NOK618m was related to the gamblers themselves.

For intangible costs from the players perspective, NOK127.3m was related to the effects of violence, while NOK153.0m to mental health, NOK116.0m to divorce or seperation and NOK106.0m to unemployment. In addition, NOK16.9m was linked to suicide attempts.

Meanwhile for affected others, intangible costs related to mental health came to NOK342.8m, while for violance there were NOK285.2m and for divorce or separation NOK260.5m. For unemployment, intangible costs to friends and family were NOK237.4m, while costs related to suicide attempts were NOK37.8m and premature death NOK2.5m. Costs related to being the victim of crime were NOK205.7m.

As a result, the total cost to society was calculated as NOK5.14bn.

These are serious numbers, Henrik Nordal, department director at regulator Lotteritilsynet said. This illustrates that problem gambling is a public health problem, and that it is absolutely necessary to protect vulnerable players.

Using the estimate of 55,000 problem gamblers, the study noted that this would be a cost of NOK93,548 per player.

Alternatively, it said, the total could be considered 0.14% of Norways gross domestic product or just under half of the regulated Norwegian markets net revenue in 2019.

The final estimate of NOK5.14bn emphasises that problem gambling constitutes a significant cost to society, the study said.

It went on to note that given the calculated figure was much larger than the amount spent on problem gambling prevention, more should be devoted to this area as it could potentially lead to greatly reduced spending elsewhere.

Nordal went on to say that the study backed up the countrys regulatory structure, in which Norsk Tipping and Norsk Rikstoto are the only two licensed operators.

We have the strictest regulation of the games that potentially create the greatest damage, Nordal said. Although the report does not cover individual games, it shows that it is the right approach.

The report shows that it is important to continue the work of preventing illegal gambling companies from reaching Norwegian customers.

The study also noted that in the 2019 survey, the median self-reported annual spend for recreational gamblers using Norways regulated gaming monopoly was NOK2,866, compared to NOK4,610 for low-risk players, NOK8,078 for medium-risk players and NOK31,079 for those classed as problem gamblers.

Looking at unlicensed sites, meanwhile, the median recreational player spent NOK114 and low-risk players NOK704, but medium-risk players spent NOK3,183 and problem gamblers NOK13,438.

Looking at the combined figures, the spending represented 0.5% of annual income for recreational players, 1.0% for low-risk players, 2.8% for medium-risk players and 11.5% from problem gamblers.

Taking these numbers and the problem gambling prevalence figures, the National Competence Centre for Gaming Research estimated how much revenue the regulated and unregulated sectors made from at-risk gamblers.

It calculated that regulated operators receive NOK1.71bn from problem gamblers, NOK985.5m from medium-risk players, NOK1.60bn from low-risk players and NOK5.68bn from those at no risk of harm.This would suggest a combined total of NOK10bn, which was only slightly less than the 10.58bn in net revenue that Norsk Tipping and Norsk Rikstoto combined for in 2019.

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Study estimates cost of gambling harm in Norway to be NOK5.14bn - iGaming Business

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CSGO Gambling: The Next Craze in Gaming – GLYFE Nation

Posted: at 8:56 am

For many readers on our site, it is very likely that you are an avid gamer who has definitely tried or at least heard of CSGO. CSGO was one of the first shooter games made available on the market that provided equal interaction for multiplayers to play. However, more recently, CSGO gambling has been made possible and has gained the engagement of many proactive gamers within the CSGO gaming community.

For those intrigued by the idea, we have provided an outline and overview of some elite CSGO Exchange sites. After understanding more about what CSGO gambling is, you have the opportunity to explore and know exactly where to gamble at the best spots on the internet!

What is CSGO gambling?

CSGO gambling is where CSGO gamers join up and register, gambling their CSGO skins and coins for the possibility of winning even more. Gamers can choose to sign up and selectively gambler their existing skins within the games that the CSGO gambling sites provide. Many involve you gambling all with the chance of walking away with nothing. However, if you do win, you can win cash prizes or receive more in-game items to play with as you play CSGO. For this to successfully happen, you would need to link up your Steam account used to play CSGO in the first place. That is how you are able to deposit skins and withdraw them.

What can you play on CSGO gambling sites?

There are many games that players can check out, to place a wager with their skins or alternative currency. Some of the most popular games on CSGO gambling sites are the following listed below.

Coin Flip

A simple game, players will wager on the possibility of an outcome dictated by the coin toss. You will be able to keep going as you wager in increments, however, there is a choice to go in, all or nothing. Meaning all the winnings you have can be doubled or lost. A game designed to intensify the gaming experience; it can certainly get your adrenaline going as you play.

Dice

Another game that is popular on CSGO gambling sites, is the Dice game. Similar to the Coin Flip, this game bases its betting system on the odds of getting certain dice variations after rolling. For every guess you make correctly prior to rolling, your winnings increase. Just like the Coin Flip however, you get the choice to play all or nothing. If you win, you will walk away with double the amount you won in previous rounds combined.

Crash

Crash is a game where players will see a rising multiplayer. As the game commences, you need to time your wagers correctly and in accordance with the multiplier. When you click the cash out option, this will either trigger an outcome where you can win the amount you wagered, multiplied by the multiplier on the screen, or you will lose everything as the crash feature triggers a 0 multiplier, and essentially crashes out.

What makes CSGO gambling the future?

CSGO gambling is overtaking standard online casinos because it is more flexible and innovative for todays highly requested niche-eSports gaming. Many players within the recent pandemic, opted to go into online gaming, making skins and in-game items in high demand. The increased traffic for eSports, with particular examples to CSGO, makes CSGO gambling a perfect opportunity. Additionally, due to the many convenient opportunities to offer to players, such as deposit bonuses, giveaways and blockchain technology to support gaming, CSGO gambling has become a huge security convenience within the gambling realm.

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Are we there yet? – Gambling Insider

Posted: at 8:56 am

Lee Richardson MBA, regular Gambling Insider contributor, CEO of Gaming Economics and Co-Founder of the Big Betting Balagan, asks where we are in the drive towards responsible gambling.

The term responsible gambling (RG) was according to a recent Australian state government paper analysing the topic first coined about 30 years ago, as a means of describing both gambling behaviours (as those demonstrated by consumers) and gambling environments (as that facilitated by policymakers, regulators and operators).

It seems probable it was itself borrowed from the alcohol industry, and its policy discussions concerning consumption patterns, where the concept of responsible drinking had been around since the early 1980s.

Whatever its lineage, weve been aware of the RG term for at least a generation; yet theres evidence the industry still struggles with its very definition, and subsequent implementation and effectiveness.

By way of evidence, in a 2004 paper published by the University of Las Vegas (Challenges In Responsible Provision of Gambling: Questions of Efficacy, Effectiveness and Efficiency), academics Hing and Mackeller argued that there was a lack of agreement over the facts (efficacy), a lack of agreement over goals (effectiveness) and a lack of agreement over the means to achieve those goals (efficiency). Almost 20 years on,is that still the case? Sadly, I fear it is.

More recently, in a well-researched background paper (Responsible Gambling; Past, Present and Future) published just five years ago by the Victorian Responsible Gambling Foundation in Australia, one key conclusion was it may (still) need to be clearly articulated that the focus of responsible gambling is reducing gambling harm, rather than reducing or preventing problem gambling.

Such long-standing doubt about definitions, descriptions and scope continue to dog debate and hinder collective RG best-practice around the globe.

In the UK, where the industry awaits the publication of a (now overdue) White Paper on the UK governments Review of the Gambling Act 2005 later this spring, RG has been a common point of discussion, debate and disagreement for just about all involved in the advance consultation; whether within the industry itself, the media, critics or parliamentarians.

The latest skirmish appears to be the so-called single customer view (SCV) which, ostensibly, will deliver the industry with a holistic and detailed perspective of an individual consumers gambling activity and behaviour; and thus provide a better picture of potential indicators of harm from that gambling.

Some say its a vital part of the RG landscape, others claim its fraught with data protection and privacy issues. Nonetheless, after the UK ICO gave its blessing late last year, new Gambling Minister Chris Philp called on the industry to act, saying: Operators must now come together quickly to deliver a meaningful solution

In quick response, industry body the Betting and Gaming Council has just invested 1m ($1.3m) and selected self-exclusion organisation GamStop to deliver its first workable SCV application, for delivery before the end of March 2022. By this summer, the industry should then be in a position to properly evaluate the pros and cons of such a new RG tool, and the scale of benefits for consumers be better quantified.

On the point of backing such initiatives, the UK industry now appears to be embroiled in a spat over how, and from whom, research, education and treatment (RET) for gambling-related harm should best be funded, with the NHS due to stop accepting industry money in 2022.

Health services in England received 1.2m last year to help specialist gambling addiction clinics organised by GambleAware a charity set up to reduce gambling harms itself largely funded from industry donations. It insists it is fully independent, with the UK gambling industry havingabsolutely no influence over its activity.

However, in late January 2022, Professor Henrietta Bowden-Jones, Director of the National Problem Gambling Clinic, said NHS clinicians have been asking, for a long timefor independence of funding from industry.

Frankly, its difficult to know if this development brings a mandatory RET-funding operator levy closer in the awaited White Paper, or pushes it further away. Either way, the demand for more funding for RET seems assured, even if the mechanism might now be murkier.

Despite its critics, the UK gambling industry, particularly online, has much to look back on with confidence. It satisfies millions of consumers on a daily basis, is of significant benefit to the UK economy, has created thousands of high-value, skilled jobs and has developed innovative products now widely adopted throughout the rest of the gambling world. With a once-in-a-generation chance, through a proportionate, evidence-led government review, it has a golden opportunity to also lead the world in implementing evidence-based, sustainable and effective responsible gambling. Lets hope it gets the chance to do so.

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Are we there yet? - Gambling Insider

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In Focus: The rise of the female gambling addicts – Metro.co.uk

Posted: at 8:56 am

I felt like Id become two people the Tracy who was gambling and the Tracy who was trying to cover it up. It was like having a split personality.

Tracy Galvin, who lives in Essex, was introduced to gambling at the age of 17, when she would play the slot machines, after finishing a shift in the bingo hall she worked in.

What she didnt realise back then was that something that began as harmless fun would come to take over her life.

It started small, Tracy, 58, explains. And it just got worse and worse.

The mum of one experienced her first big win one night after she finished work, when she won 250 a moment she recalls as a turning point.

From there, things escalated and the slot machines quickly became something that she would turn to for escape and comfort. She describes gambling, and the distraction that it created, to fill a void in her life and as a way of dealing with difficult things she had going on.

But it became so much more than that. It was on my mind constantly and it got to the point I felt like an outsider looking in on my life, she says. I was a shell of myself.

Tracy is one of a huge number of women who are classed as problem gamblers and its a figure thats growing.

The gambling landscape has significantly shifted and evolved in the past decade or so, mostly due to the rise of accessibility and availability of online gambling, Zoe Osmond, chief executive of GambleAware, told Metro.co.uk.

The number of women gambling online has risen by over 50% over the past four years, she continues. This is almost double the growth rate of men over the same period of time.

And with the latest data showing that up to one million women may be at risk of experiencing some sort of harm as a result of gambling be it financial, emotional, or in terms of impacting their relationships with loved ones and leading to isolation its critical we drive awareness around early warning signs, such as losing track of time, spending too much, or a tendency to hide gambling from others.

Tracy found herself guilty of all three of these. For decades, she spent every spare minute on the slots and was unable to confide in anyone about the extent of her addiction. Emotionally, this was incredibly difficult.

Ive had two nervous breakdowns as I just wasnt able to cope with it all, she tells Metro.co.uk. And financially, I have lived a life of robbing Peter to pay Paul.

Tracy was working three jobs in order to fund her habit, leaving the house at 7am and getting home at 1am. In between, all she could think about was gambling.

At the age of 40, I had seven strokes, and spent a year in hospital. I fully believe that this was caused by the emotional damage it was doing.

Physically it nearly killed me, she says. I was lucky not to lose my life, but I lost the most important thing: Time.

After reaching breaking point, Tracy finally went to her first support group. She found that she was the only woman, out of over 50 attendees.

For her,this is part of the problem: Female gamblers feel more shame than men and are often more reluctant to ask for help. Women are seen to be the nurturer, the homemaker, she says. We have to be the strong ones.

Since then, Tracy has worked on her recovery, with the help of organisations including Gordon Moody a charity dedicated to providing support and treatment for gambling addiction.

She successfully obtained a degree in social sciences and recently qualified as an addiction counsellor, as well as supporting others during peer support meetings.

Despite this, Tracy still speaks carefully and with emotion about her addiction, stressing that just because youve stopped, youre not an ex-gambler. Its something that stays with you forever, she says.

The increase in female gamblers has been on the rise for some time and is likely a result of a few different factors, explains Osmond.

Since the pandemic, for example, we have seen the rate of growth in online gambling almost triple (36% between 2019-2021, compared to 13% between 2017-2019), with some turning to gambling apps whilst feeling isolated and anxious.

We also know part of the problem is likely driven by the accessibility of it; its on our laptops and our phones, therefore within touching distance at all times. And its easy to hide a screen.

Many women are drawn to online gambling, such as bingo or casino games, as the games are often perceived as more innocent and familiar. They appear very similar to the seemingly innocuous digital games were used to playing on our phones and, in a similar way, become a form of escapism.

And, according to GambleAware, women are exposed to a higher number of gambling adverts than men.

A recent report discovered that much of this promotion is found to be especially targeted at women, tending to portray gambling as innocent social fun and for lotteries, as a national pastime, for people like us, or about supporting communities.

This is something that Bev, from Newcastle-upon-Tyne is all too familiar with.

She was on her laptop one night, pottering around doing unrelated tasks, when an advert popped up, inviting her to play online bingo.

At that point, Bev had never gambled before. But the advert was colourful, shiny, and it looked like a bit of harmless fun, and so, without giving it much thought, she decided to deposit a ten pound bet.

Bev didnt win anything that first time. But she decided to have another go. And then another. Very quickly, she won 800 and couldnt believe her luck.

Id never won anything in my life, she tells Metro.co.uk. But it seemed so easy and, so, I decided to keep playing.

Very quickly, Bev lost the 800 and found herself trying to win it back. And then again. And again, as she lost more and more money.

This would be the start of a 10 year battle with an addiction that, ultimately, would lead to her attempting to take her own life.

Bev found herself placing more and more bets, until she was playing constantly, spending every spare minute and penny gambling online.

I had a good job and I was making around 2,200 after tax sometimes more. But at the end of every month, I would find myself sitting up until midnight on payday, so Id see my wages go in. Id blow the whole lot that night.

Over the years, the amount is staggering. The NHS employee estimates that shes gambled hundreds of thousands in total. I had a hundred grand in credit card debt alone, never mind all the loans from friends and family, she says.

Bev is married with a daughter. At home, she was spending all her time on the computer, but they had no idea what she was doing. She describes making sure she always had her screen facing away from her family, often finding herself sitting in the same room as them, betting hundreds of pounds at a time, with them none the wiser.

Eventually, she ran out of sources for money she, and by default her husband, were up to their eyes in debt. Bev was in charge of the bills they werent getting paid and things got to the point where she had to ask for help.

Initially, nobody could believe it. But, with the help of her husband and sister, the family made a plan to pay back the money that was owed. Everyone including Bev thought that would be it. Now that shed come clean, surely she would stop. But it wasnt as easy as that.

Bev tried several times to give up, but the sites kept enticing her back in.

She was depositing so much money hundreds at a time that she became known as a VIP. This meant that, when she hadnt played for a few days, she would start getting emails offering her free money to get extra plays sometimes to the value of hundreds of pounds.

Then you cant say no to that, she says. Its an awful, predatory tactic.

This is a huge part of the problem, she says, these sites do their utmost to lure new users in, and to keep bringing old ones back. Often, at great financial cost.

Not long after opening up to her family, Bev found herself taking out more secret payday loans, and defaulting on bill payments again. However, the impact wasnt all financial for Bev as it rarely is.

Gambling in secret took a massive toll on her mental health, her physical health, and her relationships. Bevs marriage started to suffer, with her husband on the edge of a nervous breakdown.

Then, on Christmas day 2016, it all came to a head. Bev decided to put a bet on. My logic at the time was, surely they wont let you lose at Christmas? she says.

Within 45 minutes I emptied my husbands account and blew 5,000.

I then took an overdose. That night was when I realised I couldnt carry on like this anymore. I just didnt want to be alive anymore.

Bev finally sought help after her sister scoured the internet for advice and came across a charity that specialised in supporting those with gambling addictions. Its now been three years since Bev placed her last bet.

She believes that there needs to be more regulation and a duty of care within the industry.

If affordability checks had been carried out like they are if youre getting a loan 99% of problem gamblers probably wouldnt be allowed to play, she suggests. But I was just allowed to continue to deposit and deposit and deposit.

To anyone struggling, I want to say that there is help out there. I am living proof.

But, with huge stigmas and shame attached to gambling, it can be hard to ask for help.

Its often dubbed the hidden addiction, with recent GambleAware data showing that more than half (59%) of people stated they felt society is judgemental towards those who struggle to stay in control of their gambling.

And this can be even worse for women with almost two in five (38%) people agreeing that society is more critical of womens gambling.

But its important to remember that there is not a stereotypical problem gambler it affects people of all ages, from all walks of life.

Liz Karter, MBE is a gambling addiction counsellor and psychotherapist with over 22 years experience supporting women. She has also published three books on the topic of gambling, addiction and women.

Over the last two decades, Liz has seen it all and not only has she noticed the rise in female gamblers, shes seen diversification in her clients.

I run womens groups which are pro-bono as well as a private practice and I would say that 50% of the women I treat are from a more typically middle class, affluent background, she says.

These are women with high-flying jobs, and people who from the outside look as though theyve got it all.

Its not true that people who are less knowledgeable about how to manage money are more susceptible. Lots of the women I treat are from financial backgrounds. I also see doctors, accountants, lawyers. Mainly, its driven by escapism.

These women, she says, are the unheard voices and they are even more reluctant to come forward for help. But there are many.

Liz stresses that shes seen people lose everything. Ive seen women lose their homes, their marriages, their lifes savings and in some really sad cases Ive seen women lose their children, she says. You name a figure, Ive seen it.

But its not just about trying to win money, explains Liz. Gambling addictions are often a result of people trying to fill a void, or distract themselves from other problems.

Its very much tied to the stress that women are under these days, trying to do it all, she says. Women with too much responsibility and not enough support.

Gambling can be meditative, she continues. Youre in that world so, temporarily, it puts to sleep other anxious thoughts.

However, after a while any excitement over initial wins subsides as they get deeper into it, before they find themselves in a pit of despair.

Jemima*, aged 35, started gambling after becoming a young mum.

Her ex-husband was an alcoholic, drinking every day. Jemima felt that it wasnt safe to leave her son in his care, and was therefore unable to leave the house.

However, feeling ashamed of her situation, she didnt ever confide in anyone. She was lonely and one night online, she decided to try bingo.

For Jemima, it was a form of escapism and it also became a replacement for the social life that she was sorely missing.

At the beginning it was fun, she admits. You had a chat forum where you could talk to other people who were playing. It was like a network of friends, and it felt like an alternative to a night out.

However, struggling to cope with the loneliness and difficulties of her life, Jemima soon found herself gambling constantly and obsessively.

I got to the point where I was then logging on at night, and before I knew it, Id hear birds singing outside and realise that Id been playing all night.

What started out as 10 or 20 bets gradually became deposits of up to 600 at a time. In the end, she estimates that she gambled well over 100,000.

It didnt even feel like real money, it just felt like a number on a screen, she admits.

Jemima says her life had deteriorated before her eyes.

Everyday I was digging a deeper and deeper hole, she remembers. I could have been in a room with 100 people and I would have felt so alone because I couldnt tell anyone how I was feeling or what I had going on. I was dead inside.

Thats when I turned to crime to fund that gambling habit.

Desperate for more money to feed her addiction, Jemima committed fraud, illegally accessing and spending money from a friends bank account. Realising what had happened, her friend then reported the fraudulent activity to the police.

When Jemima found this out, she turned herself in. She knew shed go to jail for what shed done, yet it felt like a relief as it meant that everything would be out in the open and it would force her to stop.

After ten months on bail, which Jemima used to try and sort out some of her debt and make sure her son would be ok, she served a total of nine months in custody, and four months on a tag.

Upon her release, she got help from charity Bet Know More UK, who she says were pivotal in getting her life back on track. After volunteering with them, she was offered a job and now uses her experience to help others.

She agrees that the stigma is much worse for women, making it harder to ask for help.

I think gambling is seen as more typically male, she says. We often think of betting shops and casinos. And, in the glamorous casino scenario we think of the woman being there on the arm, rather than being the ones gambling.

I didnt feel able to turn to anyone and admit the mess Id got myself into I felt so ashamed.

Research from GambleAware has found that womens experience of gambling differs from men.

Stigma, such as feeling ashamed or embarrassed in particular play a huge role, both in women recognising that they may be experiencing harm, but also in feeling secure and empowered to seek help without being judged, explains Osmond.

The charity has also found that women experience gambling very differently to men, all the way from their initial motivation through to how they experience harms and how they might seek treatment.

We also know that women are more likely than men to say their gambling has caused them mental health issues such as stress and anxiety, adds Osmond.

Following their gambling addiction, Tracy, Bev and Jemima have all received help, and all have turned their lives around, coming back from rock bottom.

They each wanted to stress that help is out there for people who are struggling, or who think they might have a problem.

Dont be embarrassed or ashamed, you are not alone, says Jemima.

We need to break that stigma. It doesnt make you less of a mum, sister, daughter, or person youre still you.

The more women that come forward, the more we normalise asking for help. I want people to know that you can get your life back, like I did.

Do you have a story youd like to share? Get in touch by emailing Claie.Wilson@metro.co.uk

Share your views in the comments below.

MORE : Up to 1,000,000 women at risk of problem gambling, charity warns

MORE : Dad shares how he paid off 5,000 of gambling debt in 10 months on 23k salary

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After a Mixed Session For Gambling Interests, Legislative and Tribal Leaders Will Chart Path Forward – Willamette Week

Posted: March 15, 2022 at 6:14 am

Oregons contentious gambling industry is inching toward a comprehensive discussion of how three playersthe state-owned Oregon Lottery; the states nine federally-recognized Indigenous tribes; and a plethora of private interestswill split the wagering pie.

The tribes went into the February session pushing a bill that would have halted all expansion pending a sit-down at which all three groups discussed whats possible in the future and who should benefit from it.

As WW previously reported, while that bill was pending, the Oregon Department of Justice opined that the proposed inclusion of 225 gambling terminals at the horse-racing track Grants Pass would violate the Oregon Constitutions prohibition on off-reservation casinos. And a bill that would have legalized betting on Oregon college sporting events died without a floor vote.

Five tribes pointedly opposed that bill, which was sponsored by just one lawmaker: Senate President Peter Courtney (D-Salem).

Those two outcomes softened the blow to the tribes of seeing their request for a global discussion fail again, as it did during the 2021 regular session.

But a week after this years short session ended March 4, five tribesthe Cow Creek, Grand Ronde, Klamath, Umatilla and the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslawwrote to Courtney and House Speaker Dan Rayfield (D-Corvallis).

We are writing to request a meeting with you in the spirit of our government-to-government relationship regarding our continued request for the state of Oregon to convene a special Joint Committee on Gambling, tribal leaders wrote.

It has been more than 25 years since the state has led a comprehensive review of the state-gambling regulatory structure. Another examination is long overdue and necessary given the evolution of technology in gambling and the constant pressures to expand state-government sponsored and private gambling in Oregon.

Courtneys chief of staff, Lisa Taylor, says Courtney is ready to talk. Our office is setting up a meeting between Sen. Courtney and the tribes, Taylor says.

Danny Moran, a spokesman for Rayfield, says the new speaker looks also forward to moving the issue forward.

Speaker Rayfield committed to establish a joint committee on gambling weeks ago and his office has been in contact with Tribal members to plan next steps, Moran says. He shares concerns about the expansion of gambling options in the state and the impact it will have on the Tribes.

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The Guardian view on the gambling industry: an intervention is overdue – The Guardian

Posted: at 6:14 am

The enormously profitable gambling industry has been on notice for some time. Amid mounting evidence of the severe problems that its products can cause, with hundreds of gambling-linked suicides every year, the government launched a review of current laws in 2020. A white paper tabling its proposals for change is expected soon. Industry lobbyists have spent the intervening period doing all that they can to soften the expected blows to their business model, while campaigners, including bereaved families, have argued for a regulatory framework that takes human frailty into account. Evidence suggests it is the latter who have the publics support, with one survey showing that three-quarters of adults favour restrictions on gambling adverts.

A report from the Social Market Foundation co-authored by Prof Henrietta Bowden-Jones, the director of the National Problem Gambling Clinic, should stiffen reformers resolve. It makes the case for a new board funded by a statutory industry levy, to oversee national efforts to reduce gambling-related harm. Currently, voluntary contributions from gambling businesses which between them are responsible for around 11bn of annual losses by gamblers are funnelled through a charity, GambleAware. But this activity is poorly integrated with other NHS services, and suffers from a lack of research and evaluation.

Last month, the NHS severed links with GambleAware, citing concerns about the charitys independence, while affirming its commitment to NHS addiction services. Demand for these rose sharply last year, with a 16.2% increase (from 575 to 668 referrals) in the number of people seeking help in England for severe gambling issues. Company contributions should be in proportion to the harm that their activities cause, and there is work to be done on how exactly the levy would work. But the argument that it should be compulsory, not voluntary, is correct. In fact, this should have happened years ago.

The remit of addiction work must also be broadened to encompass prevention. It is not enough to offer support to those individuals who are most severely harmed. The government estimates that while the vast majority of Englands 24.5 million gamblers do not have a problem (many restrict their gambling to the national lottery), 0.5% of them do. A testing regime for new products, and a cap on the amount that can be staked online, would restrict businesses ability to manipulate their customers into taking unhealthy risks. There is plentiful evidence, including in a new book by the Guardians Rob Davies, that companies have grown more sophisticated in their efforts to maximise profits by exploiting cognitive biases and disguising losses as wins. Between 2020 and 2021, the firms handed over 225,000 in wages and freebies to MPs. Since 2020, a former Labour MP Michael Dugher has been a prominent industry lobbyist.

Denise Coates, the billionaire owner of Bet365, pays more UK taxes than anyone else. Inevitably, such wealth brings power. By contrast, there can be few people more desperately powerless than the people often young men who have gambled too much and found themselves in debt, obsessed and afraid. It is the governments duty to protect both these adults and children, who Prof Bowden-Jones says have been placed at risk by too much exposure to gambling since the advent of ubiquitous online and sports advertising and smartphone access to 24/7 betting apps. MPs must call time on the claim that gambling is harmless fun.

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Should the NFL have suspended Calvin Ridley for gambling? – Los Angeles Times

Posted: at 6:14 am

The pushback was immediate and vitriolic, angry words bristling across social media and sports talk radio. Critics insisted that, in suspending Calvin Ridley for betting on football, the NFL was guilty of something even worse.

Hypocrisy.

How could officials discipline the star receiver so harshly for behavior that it promotes through partnerships with DraftKings and FanDuel?

You should be allowed to bet on NFL games as a player, Emmanuel Acho, a former pro linebacker turned television commentator, tweeted. The rule should be you can only bet on your team to win.

How could the league ban Ridley for all of next season maybe longer after handing down shorter suspensions for athletes convicted of violent crimes such as domestic abuse?

A year? former receiver Torrey Smith posted. That math aint mathing.

Yet, for a billion-dollar sports organization mindful of its bottom line, the Ridley sanction might just represent what experts in law, marketing and ethics describe as a predictable and reasonable punishment.

It might sound cynical, but we have to look at how these institutions are structured and what their purpose is, said Shawn Klein, a philosophy lecturer at Arizona State and author of The Sports Ethicist blog. The league exists to protect its game and any perception that players are involved in gambling is a direct threat to that.

The NFL announced last week that Ridley bet on a series of games during a five-day period in late November 2021 while on mental health leave from his team, the Atlanta Falcons. The four-year veteran was reportedly in Florida when he used a legal gambling app on his cellphone. The wagers were flagged and reported to a compliance company employed by NFL.

A league investigation found no evidence that Ridley used insider information or that anyone else on the team was aware of his activity. Still, officials handed down an indefinite suspension through at least the conclusion of the 2022 season.

Your actions put the integrity of the game at risk, threatened to damage public confidence in professional football and potentially undermined the reputations of your fellow players throughout the NFL, Commissioner Roger Goodell wrote in a letter. For decades, gambling on NFL games has been considered among the most significant violations of league policy warranting the most substantial sanction.

The league exists to protect its game and any perception that players are involved in gambling is a direct threat to that.

Shawn Klein, author of The Sports Ethicist blog

Ridley, who can petition for reinstatement in February 2023, cooperated with investigators.

I bet 1500 total I dont have a gambling problem, he later tweeted. I know I was wrong But Im getting 1 year lol.

From a legal standpoint, the NFL isnt the only entity that prohibits its workers from participating in otherwise lawful activities.

Radio and television stations do not let employees enter their on-air contests. Corporate executives can be prosecuted for using insider information to buy and sell stocks.

That the league supports sports gambling but disallows its players from gambling on sports is not necessarily contradictory, said Marc Edelman, a law professor and director of sport ethics at Baruch College in New York.

Since the standard contract that all players sign, in accordance with the leagues collective bargaining agreement, prohibits betting on NFL games, Edelman said, suspending a player is within the right of the league.

And I think a sports league would have a far easier time having the suspension of a player for betting upheld than they might have other suspensions upheld, he said. The misconduct cuts to the very essence of the job function.

Consider the legacy of betting scandals in sport, a list that includes the Black Sox of 1919, college basketball point-shaving, Pete Roses banishment and the imprisonment of NBA referee Tim Donaghy.

Pete Rose, the all-time hits leader, received a lifetime ban from baseball in 1989 for gambling on the sport.

(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

It took a lengthy process marked by time, social change and the allure of big money to draw the NFL and other professional leagues into their newfound relationship with gambling. The shift began gradually with the popularization of March Madness office pools, rotisserie leagues and fantasy teams.

I call them pizza gamblers, said Jim Kahler, a former NBA executive who is now director of sports gambling education at Ohio University. If you lose, youve lost pizza money, but that couple of dollars can enhance your enjoyment of the game.

As wagering on sports became more acceptable, as it became legal in more states, leagues stopped fighting it.

In 2017, NFL owners overwhelmingly approved the Raiders move to Las Vegas, a decision that would have seemed inconceivable less than a decade earlier. Last year, the league signed a deal reportedly worth $1 billion to name Caesars Entertainment, DraftKings and FanDuel as official sports betting partners.

This emerging revenue stream came with obvious risks, so league officials established procedures to monitor betting patterns and watch for misconduct. Kahler views the Ridley suspension as proof that they acted responsibly.

Now that [sports betting] is out and about, weve got to manage it right and stick to our guns with rules and regulations, he said. Lets not kill the golden goose.

That the league supports sports gambling but disallows its players from gambling on sports is not necessarily contradictory.

Marc Edelman, a law professor and director of sport ethics at Baruch College

Debate over the length of Ridleys punishment is not as easily settled by legal or marketing arguments. Critics point to incidents of domestic abuse involving players Adrian Peterson and Ezekiel Elliott that resulted in sanctions of six games each.

The NFL just doesnt value the impact of racist hiring practices, rape, domestic violence, DUIs, harassment and steroids on its business as much as a player betting on games, quarterback Robert Griffin III tweeted.

As an ethicist, Klein returns to an objective view of what the league is, and is not.

Punishing criminal activity isnt what the NFL exists to do, he said. Not that the NFL shouldnt do its part, but [crime] is more of something where society and the court system need to be the primary actors.

No laws were broken in Ridleys case, making league officials the only party in position to take action. But the incident now puts greater pressure on them to investigate allegations that fired coach Brian Flores has leveled against Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross.

Sports betting tips and info

In a racial discrimination lawsuit filed this year, Flores claims that while he was coaching the Dolphins during the 2019 season, Ross offered to pay him $100,000 for every lost game in hopes of gaining a favorable position in the subsequent draft.

The team issued a statement saying any any implication that we acted in a manner inconsistent with the integrity of the game is incorrect.

Failure by the NFL to aggressively pursue the accusation would bolster claims of hypocrisy, giving more ammunition to critics who, in terms of the Ridley sanction, probably wont be mollified by talk of contractual stipulations or revenue streams.

Though Edelman views the suspension as legally sound, he does not count the last week as a victory for the league. Any time there is a whiff of gambling in the professional ranks, sports will suffer.

Neither side comes out smelling like a rose, the law professor said. Nobody looks good here.

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