![]() ![]() Ultimately, it looks as though Andrade's plan to bet on himself won't end up in the big payday that he had hoped for, but it appears he came closer to success than many initially suspected. Alexander’s restaurant in Tampa late Monday, where he claimed that he bet 50,000 on a prop bet at +750 that there would be a streaker at the Super Bowl, which would have netted him 375,000. Perez wrote that one bettor who said he had no prior knowledge of the stunt had already had his account shut down by Bovada. "We will continue to make sure that any publicity stunts or ill-intended behavior cannot adversely affect the outcome of a player's wager."Īccording to Perez, Bovada is refunding those that wagered there would not be a fan on the field during the game and paying out winning bets for accounts that were not linked to early knowledge of Andrade's plan. "Our players have always trusted us to ensure the integrity of all props offered in our sportsbook," a Bovada spokesman told Perez. Perez at Front Office Sports, Bovada was working to identify accounts that knew of Andrade's planned stunt. By making several smaller wagers rather than one big $50,000, it's more conceivable that Andrade could have gotten a healthy wager down on his run.Īccording to a report from A.J. In the radio interview with Wild 94.1, Yuri Andrade, a 31-year-old Boca Raton native, said that he and his. Andrade told a Tampa radio station that he had gotten friends to place wagers from different accounts on the gambling site Bovada, betting that there would be a fan on the field at +750 odds. According to a report from the New York Post, however, he may not be getting his money.
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