Gambling was legalized in Nevada in 1931 but it took until the 1940s that the pointspread came into being. Charles McNeil, a Connecticut bettor and bookmaker, generally is credited with the invention of the pointspread though, like so much in the history of wagering, the facts are murky at best and open to interpretation. At any rate, sports betting still was in its infancy, barely able to take its first baby steps before the federal government applied its heavy handed child rearing tactics.
In 1951, Congress imposed a 10 percent tax on sports wagering, all but stuffing the sports betting baby back in the womb. Then, in 1974, largely through the efforts of Senator Howard Cannon (D-Nev.), the tax was dropped to two percent. Nine years later it was cut again, to .025 percent, effectively launching the now burgeoning era of sports betting.
Indeed, in 1973, the year before the federal tax was dropped from 10 percent to two percent, there were 10 sportsbooks in Nevada and the handle was a paltry $2.8 million.
“There was one black-and-white TV set at the old Churchill Downs book, and if the picture fluttered, a guy would whack it with a broom," remembered oddsmaker Roxy Roxborough, the seminal figure in the rapid growth of the sports betting industry.
Twenty years later, Nevada boasted over 100 sportsbook outlets with a handle of over $2 billion. The numbers in the Silver State have tailed off a bit since the mid-nineties, Nevada’s loss the result of the proliferation of off-shore and Internet wagering outlets. The overall growth of sports betting remains staggering, with ESPN the Magazine estimating in a 2003 article that $63 billion is wagered annually on sports over the Internet. Other estimates run as high as $200 billion annually.
The explosion of sports betting in the mid-eighties largely was the result of a daily double of good fortune; the lowering of the federal tax and the emergence of Roxborough, who everyone calls “Roxy," as the face of sports betting.
Roxy got his wagering feet wet betting baseball totals. In fact, he may have been the first player to regularly check local weather reports, chronicling the velocity and direction of the wind, a factor which influenced how many balls left the ballpark and, by extension, game totals.
Lured to the other side of the counter by management at the Club Cal-Neva in Reno, it wasn’t long before Roxy, armed with little more than a few hundred dollars and an idea, founded his then fledgling company, Las Vegas Sports Consultants, on his kitchen table. In time, LVSC’s client list grew to include 90 percent of Nevada’s licensed casino sportsbooks.
With a boost from Vic Salerno, the owner of dozens of wagering outlets under the Leroy’s banner and the man who developed the computer system now de rigueur in the industry, LVSC effectively helped transport sportsbooks from the hand-written betting slip Stone Age into the technologically savvy modern sports betting era.
Roxy’s company not only supplied odds, but information on injuries and weather conditions as well. Later, the service added data that tracked line movements, including unusual wagers, alerting sportsbooks to possible betting anomalies that had the potential to devastate their bottom lines.
Well-dressed and well-spoken, Roxy was equally influential in helping to obliterate the pejorative image of the oddsmaker/bookmaker as some sleazy, poorly educated garish figure in a hound’s tooth jacket with a diamond pinky ring and a cigar. Appearing on television shout-fests such as “Crossfire," Roxy would vanquish the opposition, which included now NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, with a series of well-argued points.
Roxborough has retired from the business of pluses and minuses and no one knows for sure what the coming years will bring, but if the future of sports betting is only half as imaginative and innovative as its glorious past, neither bet makers nor bet takers have reason for concern.
These days, satellite service for the televisions in your home is inexpensive to have installed (installation is often free), inexpensive to have ongoing service, and has a gentle learning curve for those of us who are used to having cable.
Remember those huge satellite dishes that had to be installed in the backyard? Gone are those days and now, the satellite can be about twice the size of a dinner plate (if that large) and can be mounted discreetly on the side of the house or on the roof.
The only thing that you might have to worry about with satellite service is it going out during precipitation or very cloudy days, but even cable service goes out during storms from time to time.
Your satellite service is also able to offer you a large number of channels, many more so than your local cable provider is able to offer you. While having more channels will definitely cost you more money, introductory packages are often loaded with all the basic channels that a family would want to watch.
Pay per view programming can also be purchased and the great thing about this is when a movie that has just been released to the theaters becomes available. You can stay home and watch that movie you have been waiting on to come out for months instead of going to a crowded theater.
Satellite has also become much more convenient to use in homes that have more than one or two people in them. If you have 4 or 5 people living in a household, it is extremely unlikely that you will all want to watch the same thing.
Back when satellite was first introduced, only one channel was available at a time, no matter how many TV's were connected to it. These days it is possible to watch almost as many channels at one time as you have televisions, usually up to 6.
Some satellite services even have game channels where you can play games with other satellite subscribers or you can just play against the system. These games cost money, of course, but if you are bored and looking for something to do, they are a great source of entertainment.
The practicality of satellite television service has grown and has become much less expensive over the years.
Both Karol Lucan & Dror Klar are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Karol Lucan has sinced written about articles on various topics from Football, Recreation and Sports and Football. This article was written by Luken Karel for -The Greek Sportsbook & Casino is host to one of the top online sportsbooks offering. Karol Lucan's top article generates over 3600 views. to your Favourites.
Dror Klar has sinced written about articles on various topics from Satellite, The Internet and Finances. Dror Klar is a writer and promoter of news, movie reviews and celebrity information. If you are in the market for DIRECTV or Dish Network