The gambling tips scammer

Tony Levene investigates an email from a gambling tipster which promises he will be very rich indeed....
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It's impossible to ignore that football is back – with the World Cup and pre-season friendlies, it seems it was only away a matter of days.
And this means your friendly neighbourhood bookmaker will be listing football bets in the window. These range from a simple “team X to win” to the very complex “Team X to win 3-2 but be 2-1 down at half time with player Y the first to score.” Pulling off the second bet will win you a lot more than the first.
With all those possibilities plus wall to wall Sky coverage, football has now overtaken horse racing as our top way to enrich the bookies.
So, it's not surprising emails from tipsters claiming they can beat the bookies and make me a fortune from virtually nothing now feature heavily in my in-box.
The mysterious Mr X
One promoted Mr X. No, I am not making this up or changing the name to protect the innocent. He really calls himself Mr X.
The email said I would have been very rich by now following Mr X's football tips. It detailed a long list of wins from his recommendations.
If I sign up for a direct debit, I can get a one month free trial and then I pay £79 for a year's subscription to his magazine.
Now I have no doubt this newsletter will arrive every month, backed by the direct debit guarantee.
But Mr X is not just a football genius. His abilities cover almost everything other than which of two moths will burn on a light bulb first. He boasts winners in rugby, tennis, golf, the X-Factor, Gaelic football and the Turner Prize.
Now, I know the X-Factor and the Turner can be bizarre and there is no accounting for taste. But golf and Gaelic football as well? Mr X must truly be a genius, pushing Leonardo da Vinci and Albert Einstein into the shade.
According to the 18 page website sales pitch, the magazine does only finds winners including Amy Winehouse to win a Brit for best female and Kayne West to win Best Hip-hop act at the Mobo awards.
But this leads me to wonder whether Mr X has been selective in choosing the bets revealed on his website. There is not a single loser.
The winners are spread over two years, going back to early 2008. As Mr X promises up to 20 tips a month, two year's worth could total 480 tips. Now how many others were winners? What would have happened if I had backed all of them?
Most are losers
One of my first jobs (a long time ago) involved a share tipping newsletter (long since defunct). The author told me: “I recommend about 12 to 15 shares each week. Some go up, some go down – it's the law of averages. I follow the winners, and put them in my publicity. I ignore the losers. Most are losers.”
The magazine's owner used to run share tipping newsletters.
And here's another question for the mysterious Mr X. Can you get the odds quoted? If Mr X is as good as he claims, then all the bookies will subscribe to his service. They are not stupid. They would adjust the odds against punters as soon as they saw his advice. And they would do that before you got a chance to place your bet.
Here are my top tips – for free.
- 1. Never bet what you can't afford to lose.
- 2. Successful professional gamblers are as rare as hen's teeth.
- 3. The bookies always win – otherwise they would not be in business.
- 4. If I really knew what would win, I would keep it to myself and make a fortune rather than get involved with a publication costing the equivalent of 30p a day.
More: My phonecall with a sharedealing scammer | The oldest scam in the book
Award-winning scams expert Tony Levene explains why he's writing a blog about scams and why he is The Scam Magnet!
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Comments
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oh yes,one more thing-even if a bookie paid for the service it does not follow that they would move the price since most profit-making tips go against the majority of other bettors! and bookies seek to balance their books.only if a tipster has a large influence on the market would the bookie need to act.
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hi,while it may well be true that this guy is a scammer,I really felt that i should pull you up on 1 or 2 things if thats ok? a) you do not have to be a genius to make money from various sports as well as,say,the x-factor!I am a pro-gambler(who is writing a book)and have won-in the last 4 years-from: the x-factor(youd be amazed how easily!!!!),littlewoods pools,county cricket,football,rugby league,rugby union and golf! b)to say that pro gamblers are as rare as hens teeth is so ignorant-there have never been so many pro-gamblers! c)actually most people who can make money from betting would sell their knowledge if they were able to convince people,as it usually really hard work getting friends etc to place your bets due to being banned from bookies d)dear oh dear-in fact many bookies have gone out of business in the last 10 years!! it is only the huge companies that thrive and they do so largely by the scandal of having very poor value roulette machines in their shops!!!!
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Hi Guys, You can try out these so called money making schemes for free by trying them out on an online Casino such as Mansion where you can set up a practice account. Use a search engine to find the site rather than the link provided by the affiliate - so as to deprive them of any money they might have made from you clicking through their site! In my experience it is the Martingale system and if you play it for long enough you will eventually lose to a long run of reds or blacks. There are supposed independent review sites, such as Red Button Reviews, promoting these make a fortune from home scams. If you are tempted to believe what they say then firstly read the entire page from top to bottom. There will be a legal disclaimer somewhere to protect them from any action which might arise as a result of them promoting a scam. Secondly have a look at the web host address for the site. Interestingly Red Button Reviews is hosted by adweber.com - as is themoney pro! Finally, stick to Tonys advice, if you can't afford to lose your money don't gamble with it.
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07 July 2011