by Wiseguy » Wed Aug 19, 2015 9:33 pm
Five Felonies wrote:it seems like the uk has done a decent job centralizing the gambling over there, at least that's the impression i've gotten. granted, i don't live there so maybe i'm wrong but whenever i watch a ufc broadcast on a british tv station they have a seemingly endless amount of gambling commercials! curious as to the extent of underworld gambling over there in the present day as opposed to a few decades ago during what i guess would be considered the heyday of traditional british firms, i'd imagine it's much less now. this is the direction i believe we're headed over here as well, gradually less and less illegal bets as younger people grow up with an ever increasing amount of ways to legally place a wager along with a continually weakening lcn.
I can't speak for Britain but sports betting has remained largely illegal across the board here in the US (with only a few exceptions) and mob-run bookmaking doesn't seem to have slown down at all. It's perhaps the one racket where, not only has it not become passe despite various forms of legal gambling - state lotto, state casinos, Indian casinos, gambling boats, race tracks, Web cafes, Internet gambling sites, indy poker games, office pools, etc - but the mob has largely retained it's dominance in the racket, being still the biggest player wherever there is still a viable mob family. One can see the effects of legal gambling on other mob gambling operations - numbers, video poker machines, card/casino games - but not on sports betting.
[quote="Five Felonies"]it seems like the uk has done a decent job centralizing the gambling over there, at least that's the impression i've gotten. granted, i don't live there so maybe i'm wrong but whenever i watch a ufc broadcast on a british tv station they have a seemingly endless amount of gambling commercials! curious as to the extent of underworld gambling over there in the present day as opposed to a few decades ago during what i guess would be considered the heyday of traditional british firms, i'd imagine it's much less now. this is the direction i believe we're headed over here as well, gradually less and less illegal bets as younger people grow up with an ever increasing amount of ways to legally place a wager along with a continually weakening lcn.[/quote]
I can't speak for Britain but sports betting has remained largely illegal across the board here in the US (with only a few exceptions) and mob-run bookmaking doesn't seem to have slown down at all. It's perhaps the one racket where, not only has it not become passe despite various forms of legal gambling - state lotto, state casinos, Indian casinos, gambling boats, race tracks, Web cafes, Internet gambling sites, indy poker games, office pools, etc - but the mob has largely retained it's dominance in the racket, being still the biggest player wherever there is still a viable mob family. One can see the effects of legal gambling on other mob gambling operations - numbers, video poker machines, card/casino games - but not on sports betting.