The NFL season can never come soon enough. There’s nothing quite like having a wager on a fall Sunday.
Fortunately, there are plenty of other sports to fill the gap from February to September, including the riveting NBA and NHL playoffs at the moment.
But don’t sell golf short.
It’s not unusual for a player who’s 20/1 or 30/1 to win a tournament. Occasionally, a 70/1 or 80/1 ticket might hit.
And then there are the rare occasions where a big long shot delivers.
That was the case in the PGA Championship. A completely unexpected win from Aaron Rai made substantial five-figure winners of a few prescient bettors.
More on those wagers, a massive bet-a-lot-to-win-a-little World Cup play and the NBA ladder bettor striking once again, as we recap the week that was in sports betting.
This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.
PGA Payday
Pre-tournament, several sportsbooks had Rai at +20000 (200/1) or longer to win the PGA Championship at Aronimink. Rai’s first two rounds were solid — even-par 70, followed by a 69 — were solid, but at 1 under par, he didn’t really stand out on a crowded leaderboard.
A 3-under 67 on Saturday got him to 4-under 206 for the tournament, two shots off the lead. However, he had an inauspicious Sunday start: three bogeys, two birdies, three pars over his first eight holes, dropping a shot in the process.
Then came a completely unexpected charge. Rai eagled the par-5 ninth, sparking a run of 6 under on his final 10 holes. He birdied Nos. 16 and 17 to leave the field behind, posting a three-shot victory with a 9-under 271 total.
At DraftKings Sportsbook, a bettor put $288 on Rai +23000 (230/1), banking a $66,240 win. Similarly, a Fanatics Sportsbook customer had $300 on Rai at 200/1, netting $60,000.
A Caesars Sports customer put $188 on Rai +20000 (200/1) and profited $38,000.
The beauty of such huge odds — at least for those who took fliers on Rai — is that you didn’t need to bet much to win a significant amount. One DraftKings customer put a nominal 10 bucks on the Englishman and cashed out for nearly three grand.
Prediction markets also offered the PGA Championship. In fact, ahead of Thursday’s first round, Kalshi had even longer odds on Rai than sportsbooks offered. One customer made it pay nicely on just a $9 trade.
Minuscule Returns
On the flip side of big winners on Rai, Kalshi took a massive trade that comparatively has almost nothing in return, on its World Cup futures market.
Morocco is given around a 2% chance of winning the tournament. That means there’s around a 98% chance that Morocco doesn’t win the tournament.
That translates to odds of -5000 or so. Which means it doesn’t pay much.
But a Kalshi customer was convinced enough to put $300,000 on that position.
As long as Morocco doesn’t make a shocking championship run, the trader will profit all of $6,000.
Similarly, ProphetX had three trades that staked a lot to profit significantly less, on golfers not to win the PGA Championship:
- $125,000 Bud Cauley -25000. Cauley tied for 26th, and the trader profited all of $500 (total payout $126,500).
- $110,000 Rory McIlroy -1100. This one got much more of a sweat, with McIlroy very much in contention on Sunday. But Rory tied for seventh, and the trade netted $10,000 (total payout $120,000), which is a nothing-to-scoff-at 9% ROI.
- $75,000 Scottie Scheffler -500. The world No. 1 tied for 14th, and the customer banked a very respectable $15,000 profit (total payout $90,000).
NBA Payday
As reported over the previous couple weeks, a BetMGM buyer ran up greater than $900,000 in winnings by making ladders of straight point-spread bets on a number of video games.
That bettor returned for Friday’s Spurs-Timberwolves Game 6, inserting 5 wagers totaling $300,000.
San Antonio then went out and hammered Minnesota 139-109, clinching the sequence 4-2 and advancing to the Western Conference finals vs. the Thunder.
The bettor went 5-0 on these wagers, banking $165,063 in revenue (complete payout $465,063). Over the previous three weeks or so, that buyer is now up $1.085 million.
MLB Money
Home-run parlays are a well-liked play on daily basis of the MLB season. On Sunday, a Hard Rock Bet buyer made a four-legger pay out massive, on only a $25 guess.
The bettor took the Braves’ Austin Riley, the Cubs’ Michael Busch, the Royals’ Salvador Perez and the Brewers’ Ryan Jeffers to go yard.
Riley and Busch didn’t delay, with every homering within the first inning. Perez went deep within the fourth inning, and even Jeffers didn’t make the bettor sweat a lot, with a fifth-inning homer.
At big odds of +146080 — nearly 1461/1 — that turned a modest $25 right into a wholesome $36,544.92.
A Fanatics buyer went larger Sunday, with a $1,000 guess on a nine-leg parlay. Which is an effective time to remind you: Nine-leg parlays are usually not a great way to take a position $1,000. Rather, they’re a great way to separate you out of your cash.
Just hold that in thoughts.
The odds had been +3800, however the bettor additionally utilized a 33% revenue enhance, mountaineering these odds to +5091. Fortuitously, all 9 legs delivered, and the client’s $1,000 become $51,907.