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Big News from YOU.... We would like everyone visiting our sites around the world to share their news, information or everything that is interesting with us and our visitors. So if you wish to share your Big News with us, please submit the following and we will post your Big News immediately.
21 June 2008 Thank you for many interesting emails from visitors for the last one and half week. Since today is Saturday I decided to take some times to response to some emails: 1) Mr. Anonymous - Yes, I did think about a 90 minutes draw match between Turkey and Croatia. It is either a draw or a Croatia's win. I wanted to be a smart ass and go against my Turkey friends cause I didn't want to watch the match with them and listen to their stupid and irritating comments if Turkey falls behind. I thought since I am not going to watch the match with the Turkish, I have the freedom to bet against Turkey and I went for it cause I was really unimpressed by their previous three matches performance..... 2) Joseph - No, I have no idea if Christiano Ronaldo is leaving Man Utd. I have not been following soccer news since last October although I continue to bet on EPL, La Liga, Serie A and Bundesliga every week. It is difficult to pump up your interest on soccer when you live in a country where the sport analysts think every sport must have defense and offense: "Roger Federrer is so good with his defense; Tiger Woods is defending the hole very well...." I feel like telling them you dumb ass motherfuckers, unlike basketball, not all sports has offense and defence... Please tell me how do you play defense in a bowling game???" 3) Many other visitors - I really appreciate your interest to join member. There are too many stuff going on right now. My wife is pregnant with our second child, NBA season just finished, Wimbledon is starting next week, Betfair.com has just banned my account again, the stock market is tumbling (mark my words, Dow Jones will dip below 11,000 before end of this year, the worst is yet to come, wait until after the Olympics in September and USA Presidential election in October), I am trying to find any lawyer who is willing to help me to start a shareholders derivative class action against a NASDAQ listed company..... I don't have time to add or compile all of your emails to my mailing list. I promise to do that in August when the new soccer season begins. Again, we are flatter. Thanks again for visiting Everydaybigwin.com 20 June 2008 Fact #1 - (Let's start with less controversial shit first....) Question: Do you know why Orchard Road and Suntec City is so full of crowd on weekend and Sunday? Answer: 90% of Singaporean live in the tiny government apartment unit they called flat or pigeon hole. When it comes to weekend and Sunday, daddy and mummy are not working, sisters and brothers stay home too... it is too fucking crowded to stay in such a tiny apartment when all members of the family are at home. So most people go outside to avoid the lack of oxygen in the little apartment. (By the way, we are not Singaporean as you have probably figured. But I did spend 5 years of my life living in Singapore.)
3 June 2008 Apologize for the long absence. I have been traveling in Asia on business with limited access to web hosting. Glad to be back for the EURO 2008 and the Summer Olympics. I hope everyone is as excited as me for the coming EURO 2008. I promise many high percentage winning picks and absolutely insightful EURO 2008 pre-match analysis are coming along the way. I just need to get settle down. 11 February 2008 In last week Women Tennis Association (WTA) Paris Open (Open Gaz De France) quarter final, Daniela Hantuchova played against Agnes Szavay. Hantuchova of course was the second seed of the tournament after her recent accomplishment in the Australian Open (semi finalist) and Szavay was ranked seventh seed of the tournament. The money line was Hantuchova paid 1.53 twelve hours before the match. The odds was increased to Hantuchova 1.69 just two hours before the match. I thought it was a good odds considering Hantuchova has found her form (together with her forever perky breast and lengthy leg since she first came on the tour when she was 16 years old) since last year and is playing the best tennis of her life with very good results to back her up. I bet a small $200 on Hantuchova to win (pay $138) on www.bookmaker.com. Hantuchova lost the match 6-7, 1-6 but Bookmaker refunded my money. I have no idea why my loss was refunded. Apparently Bookmaker voided all bets on this game with no reason given. The way I figure, the bookies were already concern with this match with the initial high odds given to Hantuchova at 1.53. For whatever reasons there were more and more bets placed on Szavay to win, the bookies had to increase Hantuchova odds from 1.53 to 1.69 (and decrease Szavay odds). The bookies marked this match as potentially rigged. Subsequently the result came out which confirm their suspicious. All bets voided. I have been betting on Bookmaker.com for many years (previously called Bet Cris). I have seen them refused to offer odds for certain soccer matches or certain sports but I have never seen them voided any matches after the result has come out. This is unprecedential but turn out I save $200. 10 February 2008 (A little bit long, but definitely worth reading if you are a sport fan and a gambler. Just think about it. If real life events like these happened to tennis, a sport that you would last think of being fixed, what do you think soccer has become.) The gambling parlors along Vienna's Laxenburger Strasse are hungry for customers tonight. A few die-hard punters stand in the rain, peering through steamy windows for the luck that may linger inside. A man in a tight-fitting leather jacket stands on a dimly lit corner beneath a sign he hopes will entice some of them his way. Wetten ist geil. Betting is sexy. Inside his shop, Bet Paradise, a half-dozen grim-faced gamblers smoke unfiltered cigarettes and sneak peeks at the curvy Serbian cashier as they keep track of various games and matches on flat screens that hang on the wall. Martin Führer, the man in the leather jacket, taps his long fingers impatiently, waiting for them to fill out their betting slips. The pressure of running his own parlor has begun to crease his 30-year-old face. He misses his old life, the one he spent as a party boy on the pro tennis circuit, where his exploits earned him a nickname that would be his undoing: The Gambling King.Führer was everyone's friend, a former model whose looks and live-for-the-moment manner opened doors. The ATP Tour was his NASDAQ. He studied picks in intimate detail, and to do his research, he paid his own way to tournaments from Miami to Monte Carlo. He hung around players' hotels and lounges, got himself invited to the right meals and parties. What began as $100 bets quickly became $1,000 ones. Before long, $10,000 was the norm. But even as Führer kicked back in players' lounges placing bets on his mobile, no one seemed to care much about the fact he'd become one of the heaviest tennis bettors in the world. The fun ended on May 18, 2004, when Führer won roughly $23,000 on an obscure ATP event held about 40 miles outside Vienna. An Austrian gambling firm immediately froze his bet, accusing Führer of conspiring to fix a match. Since then, he's been poison to bookies; no one will take his action. That's why he has put his savings into this parlor on the edge of the red-light district. Führer drops onto an empty stool in front of an "Always Hot" video-poker machine. He scans the room, waiting for a Monday night straggler to get an itch. From here, he's also watched the world's fourth-ranked player, Nikolay Davydenko, get drawn into a controversy eerily similar to his own. Last August, a London betting company voided nearly $7 million of bets after Davydenko unexpectedly withdrew from a match he was winning in Poland against an also-ran. Davydenko denies any wrongdoing, but the episode exposed a world apart from the glitz and glamour of big-time tennis, in which vast reservoirs of international cash move on obscure matches. The biggest events on the tennis calendar are the four Grand Slam tournaments. Roughly $30 million was wagered on the Australian Open final in January -- much of it while the match was in progress. The Slams also account for most of the championship points that are awarded on the Tour. (Novak Djokovic received 1,100 points for his win Down Under.) But the life blood of professional tennis is the 65 tournaments the ATP hosts each year. These far-flung events give unsung players a chance to move up the rankings ladder. But because the early rounds are usually played away from the cameras, they have become prime entry points for a gambler who wishes to insinuate himself. After the ATP hired Scotland Yard investigators to launch a probe into the Davydenko affair, a dozen top players stepped forward to say they'd been approached about throwing matches while on public practice courts, in players lounges, even in hotel rooms. Just a few weeks ago, on Jan. 8, two Scotland Yard policemen were hired as part of a new anti-corruption unit. "Nothing is more important than the integrity and honesty of the sport," says ATP chairman Etienne de Villiers. But Martin Führer's story shows that ATP officials knew they had major problems three years before the Davydenko match and took their eyes off the ball at exactly the moment Führer was making his boldest bet. In a one-bedroom apartment across from a Vienna park, Führer waves off any suggestion that his access to the back rooms of the tennis world made him unique. "What makes me special? Nothing. I'm a normal guy." Führer's gambling career began innocently enough, after his brief career as a department store model faltered. Newly married, he took a clerk's job with one of the many betting parlors in the Austrian capital and began to spend part of his paychecks wagering on his favorite sport, tennis. He'd scan the ATP's website and devour as many newspapers as he could. Soon, the wins were piling up and Führer got the itch to see how far his luck would take him. Over the next two years, he expanded his reach, driving to tournaments throughout his country and in neighboring Germany. He'd hang out in lobbies of the players' hotels, which he found on the ATP's website, and he got to know Tour regulars by becoming a familiar (handsome) face. Some of those he grew close to offered him one of the two credentials that each player gets for an event. And, like that, he had access to places in which overheard talk of a sprained ankle could be turned into cold cash. "The tour is a big family," Führer says. "Everybody knows everybody and would help everybody."Eventually, he made enough at his hobby to start flying around the world, hitting 20 tournaments a season. One of Führer's mantels holds photos of him hugging his wife in Dubai and the two mugging in Times Square. In 2003 and 2004, Führer bet more than $2.5 million on at least 200 matches. One of his favorite betting targets was Irakli Labadze, a 6-foot-2 southpaw from the Republic of Georgia. Labadze had moved to Austria after going pro in 1998 and was still trying to crack the top 50 when Führer started to befriend him. "I watch his practice," says Führer. "I have lunch with him after. If I meet him at a tournament, he asks me, 'Would you like to go to a cinema?' We watch a movie, have dinner together." As Führer paints it, their association sounds innocent enough, but some players were wary of Labadze. Justin Gimelstob, an 11-year veteran who retired last year, remembers being pitted against him at Wimbledon in 2003, when Labadze had such a serious shoulder injury Gimelstob says he wondered why his opponent even bothered to show up. In a recent interview on Russian TV, Labadze, a 26-year-old with a 49-81 career singles record, acknowledged knowing Führer. But Führer uses cold logic to explain why he would make money betting against a friend."Labadze is not the best player," he says, pointing out that the Georgian knew the odds were often against him. "If you bet against him, you will win very, very much money." Mark Cridland, a tennis expert who runs an Australia-based gambling site called On The Punt, says the growing presence of big-time gamblers like Führer was obvious by 2002, but tennis officials were slow to react. "The players had free rein and suspicious matches just kept happening," he says. Bookies, of course, had the most to lose; they were the ones paying out on those matches. So a small group of them began to keep track of events they considered suspect, attempting to determine which players attracted unusual betting patterns. Not every match on their list involved a fix. Odds can move for simple reasons, like when a player shows up noticeably hurt at a public practice. Still, the oddsmakers began to look at some ATP pairings as if they were evaluating pro wrestling matches; their outcomes appeared that scripted. "It was getting out of control, even at that stage," Cridland says. None of this was widely known by a public that was wagering more than ever on tennis, thanks to a new member of the gambling scene called Betfair. A traditional bookie sets odds then sells them to willing customers. Betfair is much different. Like a gambling version of eBay, Betfair pairs people who are willing to offer odds with those willing to take them. The site has customers in 100 or so countries, although not in the United States -- at least, not legally; the U.S. bars Internet gambling. "When you include Betfair, the turnover on individual matches can be as much as $60 million," says Cridland. "When betting is so big, any information about injuries or player motivation is gold." In 2003, Führer wagered more than a million dollars with Betfair. He'd log into his account from a computer in the business center of a players' hotel or call an associate from the players' lounge to place bets for him. According to Gimelstob, it was easy for unsavory characters to blend in behind the scenes. "How am I supposed to know who the friends of an Argentine player are when I barely know the player himself?" he says. "It's chaos."Führer is almost blasé about the access. "If I saw an injury, I'd call a friend and he bet for me online," he says. "But I saw many people betting in the players' lounge." On Sept. 23, 2003, anyone sizing up the draw for the Sicilian Championships in Palermo would have picked Labadze to win. The 84th-ranked player was up against Italy's Tomas Tenconi, then-ranked 225. But an unusual amount -- $362,741 -- was put on Labadze to lose. The amount was six times that played on any other first-round match. Bookies were on alert before the first point was contested in Palermo. Several called the ATP to complain that the odds were whipsawing against the favorite, as if someone knew what was about to happen. The chair umpire took the unusual step of warning both players to play hard. But once the match started, Labadze seemed listless and remained so even after a second warning. His straight-set loss earned him a $7,500 fine for lack of effort. "The problem with Labadze was that he's a total nut case," says an ex-ATP staffer. "One day he can play like Pete Sampras. The next he can't beat his neighbor." That's one explanation. Bookmakers had another. Five months into the 2004 season, Führer climbed into his BMW and drove the 40 miles outside Vienna to the industrial town of St. Pölten. A small tournament was underway, and the fourth-seeded Labadze was scheduled to play a first-round match against an unseeded Austrian, Julian Knowle. Although Labadze was hovering near his career-high ranking of 42, Führer says he had good reason to bet against his friend that day. "I saw him practice two hours before the match," Führer says. "It was too hot for him. He was sweating. I thought, He cannot beat Knowle."On the tournament grounds, Führer went to a booth owned by Cashpoint, a betting outfit whose black-and-yellow signs are familiar on the streets of Vienna, and he placed a bet with a clerk for 10,000 Euro ($11,968) on the underdog. Führer was so sure of himself he boasted that he might as well collect the money right there. He also chided a friend for considering a bet on Knowle to win in straight sets. Another Cashpoint clerk who knew about Führer's relationship with Labadze overheard him say, "Are you mental? You have to bet him to win two sets to one." The clerk called her boss, who, knowing of Führer's penchant for betting on Labadze to lose, had instructed his employees to reject any of his wagers. Outraged to learn a bet had been accepted, the manager ordered it voided. When Führer returned to the booth following Knowle's three-set win, the clerk refused to pay out his winnings. "They talked to me like I was a criminal," Führer says. So in June 2004, Führer sued Cashpoint for his money and forced a match-fixing allegation into a courtroom for the first time in the sport's history. Eager to prove its case, Cashpoint charged that "an attempted betting fraud" had occurred and asked the court to compel Labadze's testimony. But in early 2005, the Georgian said he had no intention of taking time away from his busy schedule. "These accusations are complete nonsense," his agent told reporters. As a last-ditch effort, Cashpoint lawyers wrote to the ATP. Did anyone there have anything that could help their case? The request found its way to Richard Ings, then the ATP's vice president of rules and competition. Ings had recently traveled to London to ask Betfair execs for access to their vast database. He proposed that the firm alert him every time they detected a sudden shift in the odds, and he requested details to help investigate those shifts, such as when and where bets were made. Eager to stay scandal-free, Betfair pledged to cooperate. Ings wasted no time running Führer's name through the database. Führer, it turned out, was one of Betfair's largest tennis customers. The strange thing was that so much of his action seemed to be on Labadze to lose. At the Palermo match in which Labadze was fined, Führer stacked more cash against the player than anyone else. Ings called Labadze to ask about the relationship, but the Georgian was vague. Sure he knew the gambler, but that didn't mean they fixed matches. Führer says Labadze phoned him the day after that conversation. "I said to him, 'Sorry, what can I do? I bet against you and won.' He said, 'Okay.'" But Ings wasn't convinced. "We had little pieces of the puzzle," he says. "We just didn't know what they meant." On May 24, 2005, Ings sent an email to Cashpoint's lawyer, spelling out what he'd learned. In particular, he listed five 2003 matches that contributed to the $45,000 Führer had made on Betfair by wagering against Labadze. In each of them, he wrote, "Mr. Führer took unusual positions placing bets at almost any odds on Labadze to lose." Ings cautioned that before Cashpoint's lawyers used the information in court it needed to be confirmed and approved by his bosses. "The ATP does not want to compromise its sources as our inquiries continue," he wrote. Two months after Ings pressed the send key, he left the ATP for a higher-profile job in his native Australia as head of its new anti-doping agency. But before clearing out of the ATP's Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., headquarters, Ings wrote a report that urged his colleagues to keep an eye on the Führer suit. "It is an important test case," Ings recalls writing, "the first time anyone has gone to court to challenge the relationship of a player and a gambler." The report went to the ATP's chief executive, Mark Miles, but by September 2005 Miles was gone too. It is unclear if de Villiers, the ATP chairman, ever saw the report. (The ATP would not answer questions about the report.) The tour's general counsel, Mark Young, didn't even know Ings had written to Cashpoint until he was shown the email last month. A Cashpoint lawyer, Martin Paar, says he tried to follow Ings' instructions to get approval from the ATP before using the explosive email about Führer in court. He says he reached out to ATP officials "three or four times." But whether by oversight or design, no one called back. "It seemed a little strange," he says. "First, we got a lot of information. Then everything stopped." Paar asked the judge in the case to appoint someone to get the answers he couldn't. But the expert, Klaus Zotter, fared no better. In a report to the court obtained by ESPN, Zotter wrote that he called the ATP and was "informed that, relating to my inquiries, no further information was available any longer." ATP officials insist they have no record of any approaches to their top staff. But Paar says he was left with the distinct impression that after Ings left, "there was no interest anymore in this case." Last August, with the Cashpoint case still pending, Nikolay Davydenko walked onto a court in Sopot, Poland. His opponent was the 87th-ranked Argentine, Martin Vassallo Arguello. Davydenko won the first set easily, 6-2. Fans saw nothing unusual in Davydenko's early lead, but Betfair executives in London did. More than $7 million had been laid on the match, at least a fifth of which came from nine Russian customers. All of them had picked Davydenko to lose. So when he dropped the second set before withdrawing in the third with a foot injury, Betfair took the unprecedented step of voiding all bets on the match. Young, the ATP's general counsel, insists his organization wasn't caught unawares by the incident."It didn't wake us up from a powerful sleep," he says. "It didn't shake us into sudden activity. We've been on top of this." He blames the slow pace of investigation on the vague nature of gambling cases. "People see the same incident six different ways," he says. "No one has hard evidence." But by this past September, evidence seemed to be everywhere. Djokovic, the world's No. 3 player, told reporters that he'd been offered £110,000 (roughly $200,000) to lose in the first round of a 2006 tournament in St. Petersburg, Russia. Although representatives for Djokovic later backed off the statement, de Villiers reacted by saying he was taking "any form of corruption extraordinarily seriously." And yet, ATP officials appeared not to know of the Cashpoint decision made that same day until ESPN told them about it three months later. The judge had ruled it was "a well-known fact in betting office circles that there existed a close connection among [Führer] and the tennis player Labadze." But with no concrete evidence of a fix, and no further testimony from the sport's governing body, she had to find for Führer.So it was that, last Sept. 24, with the ATP already investigating the allegations against Davydenko, the Gambling King collected his sweetest payday ever: $25,353 in winnings plus 4% interest and $13,419 in court costs. A worldwide television audience of more than a billion people watched Djokovic take the Australian Open on Jan. 27 with booming ground strokes and pinpoint serves. But as long as the rank-and-file build their careers in places like Sopot, Poland -- and as long as gamblers know where to find them -- the shadow of corruption will dog the ATP. By the time the tour passed an emergency rule last fall that required players to report suspicious contact within 48 hours, the bookmakers' secret list of questionable matches had ballooned beyond 140. "In Austria, it's a new experience to try to prove a tennis match is a fake," says Paar, Cashpoint's lawyer. "We tried everything, but in the end we lost for lack of evidence." Watching Davydenko get dragged ever further into the gambling investigation, Führer is relieved his own case is over. "I am not a criminal," he says, sounding like the wounded victim. "Why this big story? Just because I bet one bet on a tennis match and have this luck and won?" Führer, of course, insists the evidence that Paar seeks doesn't exist. He says he's just a hard-working guy who used every tool available to him to make a buck. Well, every tool but one: "I never spoke with Labadze about tanking a tennis match for money." As a new season gets rolling, Führer has a hankering to get back out on the circuit. "I have many friends there," he says. But he also knows he's too high-profile to pass unnoticed. Anyway, his friends are older now. "They probably just want to drink a glass of red wine and go to bed early." So he'll stay at Bet Paradise, hoping none of the dour-faced chain smokers at his tables have access to the kind of inside information he once did.
18 January 2008 HAPPY NEW YEAR 2008. WE APOLOGIZE FOR BEING AWAY DURING DECEMBER 07. WE WERE TRAVELING THROUGHOUT ASIA FOR ALMOST A MONTH. WE ARE BACK NOW. MORE STUFF, NEWS AND BETTER PICKS TO COME ALONG.
31 October 2007 Associated Press - October 15, 2007
LONDON -- With tennis in the midst of a major gambling investigation, a British bookmaker said Monday match-fixing will never be stopped. "There is always a way,'' William Hill spokesman Graham Sharpe said. "There will never be a foolproof system. Whatever rule you have in place, they'll find a way around it.''
The four major governing bodies of professional tennis -- the ATP, WTA Tour, International Tennis Federation and Grand Slam Committee -- are trying to come up with a unified set of regulations to keep corruption out of the sport. U.S. Open finalist Novak Djokovic said Monday from the Madrid Masters that he never had been approached by gamblers, despite reports that he was offered money to lose a match in Russia last year. "I've seen a lot of stories about gambling in tennis, but I have to say that nobody ever spoke to me about that,'' Djokovic said. "I was not involved in anything even though there were some stories that I was involved. ... It was a made up story.''
Last week, a document listing about 150 matches considered to be suspicious was given to the ATP, then sent to other tennis officials. According to that document, some players retired from matches to void bets. Sharpe said that tactic wouldn't work for long. "You've got nothing to gain by doing that. It would very soon reflect on the player,'' he said. "As a plausible betting scam, you would want to be sure the other player wins ... not by pulling out through injury.'' Online betting exchange Betfair, however, considers one player to be the winner as long as one set is completed. "The result stands as long as one set's played,'' Betfair spokesman Adrian Murdock said. "The retirement is considered a victory for the other person.'' Other reasons for a player losing, according to the document, included illness and the desire to leave a tournament early.
Professional players are not allowed to gamble on tennis, but the ATP has been investigating an August match at a minor tournament in Poland. In that match, fourth-ranked Nikolay Davydenko withdrew in the third set against 87th-ranked Martin Vassallo Arguello. An online betting site, in an unprecedented move, then voided bets because of suspicious betting patterns. "I can't comment on specifics of an ongoing investigation, but procedures are laid out in the ATP rule book,'' ATP spokesman Kris Dent said Monday. Since the Davydenko match, others have said they were approached by outsiders trying to influence a match. Last month, Belgian player Gilles Elseneer said he was offered -- and turned down -- more than $100,000 to lose a first-round match against Potito Starace of Italy at Wimbledon in 2005.
On the women's tour, a September match drew suspicion for unusual betting patterns. An online betting site briefly delayed payment after 120th-ranked Mariya Koryttseva beat No. 96 Tatiana Poutchek in the quarterfinals of a tournament in India. Eventually, bets were paid, and the WTA and the betting site said they doubt there was any wrongdoing.
Andy Murray implied last week that match-fixing was common knowledge, but the 17th-ranked Briton has twice backtracked on his original comments. "I'm just glad it's kind of been cleared up,'' Murray said at the Madrid Masters, where he beat Radek Stepanek in the first round. "I'm meeting up with the ATP tomorrow to chat with them, but I don't really have anything new to tell them.''
Associated Press - October 11, 2007
LONDON -- Tennis officials are examining a document that lists professional matches considered to be suspicious, including some at Grand Slams, dating back to 2002.
"We were in receipt of the document yesterday, and it has been sent to the relevant authorities within tennis," ATP spokesman Kris Dent said Thursday. The document was labeled "Suspect Tennis Matches," and it was unclear who compiled the list. "I saw this list earlier in this week after it was passed on to me," said Adrian Murdock, a spokesman for online betting site Betfair. "It's already gained quite a lot of notoriety within the industry. Quite what the long term effects of this will be I don't know -- I don't think anybody is yet able to predict that." The listed matches were followed by a brief explanation as to why they were considered to be suspicious, with reasons ranging from illness to giving up in order to leave town to prepare for another tournament.
Match-fixing rumors have swirled around tennis for the last few months. Betfair, in an unprecedented move, voided bets on a match in August because of irregular betting patterns. Fourth-ranked Nikolay Davydenko withdrew from that match in Poland against 87th-ranked Martin Vassallo Arguello in the third set because of a foot injury, and the ATP is looking into it. "We have not found evidence of corruption in the sport," Dent said. "But we recognize there is a threat to all sports posed by gambling."
ATP players and their entourages are not allowed to bet on any tennis match.
The ATP is planning to meet with the International Tennis Federation and the WTA in London on Friday to discuss match fixing. The meeting comes only three days after 18th-ranked Andy Murray became the latest player to speak out about corruption in the sport, saying "everyone knows it goes on." "I'm not going to name names," Murray said Thursday from Moscow, where he was upset in the second round of the Kremlin Cup. "I've just spoken to quite a lot of the players about that and there's obviously something that needs to be addressed. I'm going to speak to the ATP in Madrid to discuss that."
Davydenko later criticized Murray for his earlier comments. "If Murray says that he knows, that means that he gambles himself," Davydenko said after reaching the quarterfinals of the Kremlin Cup. "Because people who start talking out loud have their fears disappear. And they know that if they speak out loud it means that they are free, they have not done it."
Second-ranked Rafael Nadal also doubted Murray's claims. "I doubt he knows more than anyone else," Nadal said. "I see what goes on each week on the circuit just as he does and I'm not more stupid than him as to not see what goes on."
Murray's previous comments also revived talks about a rule requiring players to tell the ATP within two days of any information they may have regarding match fixing. "Any information we receive regardless of source we examine and investigate," Dent said.
Since the Davydenko match, others have said they have been approached by outsiders trying to influence a match. Last month, Belgian player Gilles Elseneer said he was offered -- and turned down -- more than US$100,000 to lose a first-round match against Potito Starace of Italy at Wimbledon in 2005.
On the women's tour, a match in September drew suspicion for unusual betting patterns. An online betting site briefly delayed payment after 120th-ranked Mariya Koryttseva beat No. 96 Tatiana Poutchek in the quarterfinals of a tournament in India. Eventually, bets were paid out, and both the WTA and the betting site said they doubt there was any wrongdoing connected to the match.
16 October 2007 Due to our dismal performance during last weekend EURO 2008 qualifiers, we are taking a break from the midweek EURO 2008 qualifiers. We will be back for the weekend European domestic league actions. 11 October 2007 Barcelona, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich continue to win their respective domestic matches and cover their respective Asian Handicap just as we predicted. These are the money teams right now. Let's continue to ride on it. On the other hand, we went 2 wins and 2 losses during the Rugby World Cup quarter finals picks. France late winner against New Zealand was an absolute beauty. The truth is, if you take the points for all the 4 quarter final matches (England, France, Fiji and Scotland) as our general advice at the beginning of the tournament, you would have won all the 4 quarter final matches. Our winning picks and analysis for the semi finals are coming up. See Everyday Analysis. 5 October 2007 Feeling blue from the midweek Champions League losses (too many dirty games unexpectedly)? Not to worry. We have absolute winners for the 2007 Rugby World Cup quarter finals coming up this weekend. Please see Everyday Analysis. 30 September 2007 How the big guns are doing in their domestic league after almost 2 months of actions? Please see updates at Everyday Analysis. I think we have figured out a hopeful way of winning money and will try to do so in the next 1 month. 18 September 2007 We apologize for missing out on Round 1 of Champions League actions. Away on last minute "business" notice, couldn't find time to post our picks. It won't happen again. 10 September 2007 Want to win some easy money, see our tips for the Rugby World Cup 2007 at Everyday Analysis. 2 September 2007 A couple of interest observations for the gambling fans out there one month into Season 2007/2008: (1) If you are a die hard Man Utd fan and have been betting blindly on Man Utd so far this early season, then you are fucked. Man Utd has not won a match on Asian Handicap at this point. Same for the Chelsea fan. (2) On the other hand, if you have been betting on the BIG 4 teams in Serie A for the last couple of weeks then you would have make a lot of money. The combined Asian Handicap result for the BIG 4 teams in the Serie A after 2 round of matches are a whopping 6 wins 1 loss (86%). For more information and analysis, please see Everyday Analysis. 23 August 2007 Another laugh, this time for the British. Camilla bought new shoes for her wedding which got
increasingly tighter and tighter as the day went on. 18 August 2007 We are proud to conclude that at this time
(2 weeks after the beginning of Season 2007/2008), Everydaybigwin.com is the
KING of English Premier League with 19 Win 16 August 2007 Just a laugh - mostly for the American though. WHY DID THE CHICKEN CROSS THE ROAD Answers: GEORGE W
BUSH: We don't really care why the chicken crossed the road. We
just want to know if the chicken is on our side of the road, or not. The
chicken is either against us, or for us. There is no middle ground here. JUDGE JUDY:
That chicken crossed the road because he's GUILTY! You can see it in his eyes
and the way he walks. ERNEST
HEMINGWAY: To die in the rain. Alone. JOHN LENNON: Imagine all the chickens in the world crossing roads together - in peace. ARISTOTLE: It is the nature of chickens to cross the road. BILL GATES:
I have just released eChicken2006, which will not only cross roads, but will
lay eggs, file your important documents, and balance your check book. Internet
explorer is an integral part of eChicken. The Platform is much more stable and
will never cra...#@&&^( C \.... reboot. 11 August 2007 Everydaybigwin is finally BACK.... after 3 months out of country 'emergency vacation' from May to August. We missed plenty, including AC Milan's Champions League win and exciting final weeks of La Liga title chase. We apologize for the absence and we sincerely hopeful everyone ended up winning a lot of money last season. Let's look forward to Season 2007/2008 and start kicking the bookie's arse tonight. More interesting news is to follow... 10 May 2007 Everydaybigwin.com hit jackpot with 8 wins 2 March 2007 7 wins 20 February 2007 Champions League Round of 16 kick off in the middle of Chinese New Year. Everydaybigwin.com wishing everyone a Gong Xi Fa Cai on Celtic 17 February 2007 EverydayBigWin.com wishes everyone out there celebrating Chinese New Year a Prosperous and Happy New Year. May a Golden Pig Year bring health, carry wealth, unite families, hold peace to everyone. Ang Pow on M'Gladbach +0.5 Loss 3 February 2007 The Aussies called Melbourne Cup "the Race that stop the nation". Super Bowl is the Game that the American of all ages and all races would not miss for the year. We have posted our Super Bowl picks - Bears +7. Also see our Super Bowl analysis at Everyday Analysis. 2 February 2007 We apologize for missing many important league matches across Europe this week due to us being in a very different time zone. We will try to make sure same mistake does not happen again in future. 23 January 2007 8 WINS out of 10 NFL playoff games... It kicks the shit out of every ESPN sports analyst, it beats the crap out of all American sports handicapper, this is as good as it ever gets. To be honest with everyone visiting EverydayBigWin.com, this is the best NFL post season picks result we have ever had since we started betting NFL in 1993. Perhaps (15 years of) practise makes (close to) perfect; maybe sharing our picks with everyone gives us inspiration.... One final winning pick for the SuperBowl on February 4 will make us next to immortality.... Please check it out on February 3. 19 January 2007 We have posted our Sunday NFL Championship games - go Colts and Bears!! 16 January 2007 "Hi Everydaybigwin, I am a life long soccer fan. I have recently gained interest in American Football after I came across your posting a couple of weeks ago. I started to bet a little money on those playoff games and I have a pretty good net win so far. Thanks to your picks. I hope you can continue to be successful. Good luck to you and I. Song - Bangkok" Dear Song, thank you for your email and best wishes. Personally, I have more than almost 30 years of sports betting experience dated back to 1978 World Cup. Since the starting of internet era in the mid 90's, I have been betting regularly on various sports that most people can imagine including Tennis (Australian Open is on going right now as we speak, I just lost money a few hours ago on the Lleyton Hewitt 5 set win over Michael Russell), Rugby, Golf, Formula One, Snooker, Cricket, Ice Hockey.... I can tell you with no hesitation that American Football has been the most unpredictable sports to bet on (Spread - Handicap) due to several reasons. (There are 53 players on every team roster - offense, defense, special team, too many players too many uncertainty; there are too many people betting and too much money involves on NFL every Sunday in the United States, the bookies behind the scene are Italian Mafia, Russian Mafia, the Blacks, the Corporate Tycoon.... You thought you have a winner but you don't... If you want winners in American Sports, try checking out NBA and Major League Baseball. 15 January 2007 No immortality but with 6 NFL Playoff Wins out of 8 games played so far means MONEY in the pocket. Well, we don't get to live forever at least we win money. Bravo... We have absolute winners for this Sunday (January 21) NFL Conference Finals. Please check out our picks on Saturday. 12 January 2007 David Beckham is joining Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer in USA next season for a US$250 million 5 years deal. There is something you should really know about Beckham and the story.... More to come over the weekend.. fucking busy with NFL playoff 11 January 2007 While we are patiently waiting for the full European soccer schedule to come back to action this weekend, we have now posted our picks for coming NFL Divisional playoff. Check them out in the below table. 7 January 2007 Another year just flew by and we again stumbled at the barrier to immortality. What the fuck.... 14 years of failure.... Now with another year of waiting for immortality, we might as well go for the second prize - winning money. We will continue to post our NFL playoff picks every Friday until Super Bowl Sunday. Let's hope we can at least win money from the #1 sport in the America at its most fascinating time. 2 January 2007 "Immortality" - Endless life after death. Eternal Life. This is the definition, encyclopedia for "immortality". Now try asking any ESPN sports writers or analyst and they will give you the following meaning of immortality - Winning 11 straight spread picks on NFL post season games from Wild Card playoff to Division playoff to Conference finals to Super Bowl. (American Football is the most unpredictable sport in the world. To win 11 consecutive picks on post season games is close to impossible if not a miracle. Nobody has ever done that since the internet era of ESPN.com) We have tried to archive this meaning of immortality since 1993 and we have failed each and every year. So this year we are going to try again and we will share our post season NFL picks with you here. Hopefully we will go as far as it takes... and eventually reach eternal life in the world of American Sports. ROAD TO IMMORTALITY
1 January 2007 EverydayBigWin.com wishes everyone a Happy and Prosperous 2007!! ~ Always keep the faith in doing whatever you are doing. 26 December 2006 "Fear knocked at the door. Faith answered the door. There was no one there." ~ Chrisopher Moltisanti, The Sopranos, 2004. 13 December 2006 So Henrik Larsson will begin his Man Utd tenure in January 2007 and it would last at least until middle of March 2007. Alex Ferguson thinks Larsson is the best available back up striker to Louis Saha and Wayne Rooney while he has Ole Solskjaer and Alex Smith on the bench. Some times you have to wonder how a team with such fuck up front line can remain top of the English Premier League while a billion dollar team like Chelsea with one of the best strikers in the world (Andriy Shevchenko) has to play catch up. (It has been my years and years long goal to write an article about David Beckham while could never find the time and now I plan to start some day soon with a disgusting Wayne Rooney. But this is about Henrik Larsson so I will try to stick with it.) Many of the younger generation soccer fans may not know Henrik Larsson well enough. This is one of the most important players that revitalized Swedish soccer in the early 90's. Larsson played for Sweden in 1994 World Cup. The Swedish team went all the way to the semi-final of 1994 World Cup and lost 0-1 in a close fight to Romario and Bebeto led Brazilian team. Swedish ended 3rd place in 1994 World Cup defeated Bulgaria 4-0 with Larsson scored a wonderful goal in the 3rd place match. 8 years later a more mature Larsson steered Sweden to the Round of 16 of World Cup 2002. Larsson scored a goal in the knock out match against Senegal while Sweden lost the match 1-2. While during the 8 years period, Larsson again led Sweden to the 2000 and 2004 European Championship. Bear in mind before the 90s, Sweden previous success in the international tournament was dated back to the 50s. During the span of 30 to 40 years, Sweden was considered as one of the weakest national team in Europe. Henrik Larsson's many years of success at Celtics was evidence for all to witness while ultimately capped by his deservedly Champions League triumph with Barcelona last year. All is said and done, Henrik Larsson is one of the great players that we have seen in the last 15 years of European soccer. There is no doubt about that, But.... But it takes an idiotic manager as stupid as Alex Ferguson to bring a 35 years old worn out Swedish to English Premier League, the most physical soccer league in Europe. Especially so if the team is currently top of the table and it is as prestige as Man Utd. It was silly to acquire Alex Smith, Louis Saha a few years ago (that was however compensated by Van Nistelrooy goals at that time), it was idiotic to let Van Nistelrooy leave in the summer. Henrik Larsson is not the answer to Man Utd strike force while some of you may argue that Man Utd is playing as well as they should right now so why are we fucking them upside down. Well, a team like Man Utd needs a "franchise" player. Man Utd has none and it is a shame to EPL. (No no not Wayne Rooney, the kid is a fucking wife/girlfriend beater, complusive gambler and ultimately a self destroyer like Paul Gascoigne.)
5 December 2006 EBW#1 is falling sick like shit right now. Everyday Big News will be back later this week with top news and comments for (1) Arabian bid for Liverpool takeover and (2) Henrik Larsson and Man Utd (oh man, if you are below the age of 30, you know nothing about Henrik Larsson, I mean, the history of Henrik Larsson.)
27 November 2006 "A father bull and a son bull at the top of the hill looking down at a group of cow on the field. The son bull asks the father bull: "Dad, why don't we rush down the hill and fuck one of these cow?" The father bull says to the son bull: "Son, why don't we walk down the hill and fuck all of the cows." ~ Junior Sopranos, The Sopranos 1999. It takes patience to fuck somebody, whether it is cow or bookies.
22 November 2006 "Hi, Congratulation...I always have
the confident in your tips. I believe you will bounce back after poor spainish
tips last week. Anyway, I am happy because I jackpot all the five games which I
bet last night by following your tips. Hope keep the good tips coming tonight as
well. My confidence is always there for your consistency in your picks. Horay !!
Congratulation again We couldn't post each and every feedback that we received from our visitors but we got to post this one. Thank you Andrew for your faith and we are envious of your jackpot luck. We missed out an extra bonus 7 matches combination jackpot by the Lille match... Anyway, we also want to take this opportunity to introduce a "stupid" website for all you faithful out there. Check out www.betcris.com. After 10 years of internet betting, this is the first site that we have come across that allow "parlay" (combination bet) on Asian Handicap soccer matches. What it means is that on a feel good Saturday/Sunday, you can parlay say a 5 or 6 or 7 or 8 (up to 12) most confidence Asian Handicap soccer matches as a single combination bet. You can do the math yourself. If you are a little lucky, a $100 parlay bet can easily win you more than $100,000 on a 10 matches Asian Handicap parlay or may $50,000 on a 6 matches Asian Handicap parlay.
21 November 2006 Big News for EverydayBigWin.com and our visitors. We spent half a day to analyse the
Champions League matches for you, we called our contacts in UK and various
countries in South East Asia to get most updated and reliable information for
you, we spent an hour to write a simple reading and easy understanding analysis
for you, all of these are done so that you can spend 2 minutes to read our
analysis and get your winners. See what we got now - 7 meaningful picks, 6
Winners!!! Win We have combined more than 100 years of
sport betting experience, we have the expertise and insider contacts to assist
us, we are very confidence being professional gamblers because we know exactly
what we are doing. We are here to help. You got to stay with us through the
thick and thin. There are 40 matches every week from Serie A, EPL, La Liga and
Bundesliga. Obviously we do not have the time and resources to analyse each and
every match. There are bound to have matches being a "simply
pick". Join us as member so you will receive our most confidence pick
every match day. At the meantime, enjoy the winnings and keep it cool.. 12 November 2006 "this two weeks your picks are so bad. I hope you can repair that. thx" - from unknown visitor. Hey guys, we know our website picks have not been doing well. It sucks.. But then again, EverydayBigWin.com is a free site. We do not charge any fee for accessing the sites or the picks posted on the site. So we do not expect visitors to follow our picks blindly and we are not obligated to hit winners everyday. There are hundreds of soccer sites just like ours. Don't take things for granted. Our ultimate lifetime goal for EverydayBigWin is to be like ESPN for American Sports. When you talk about American Sport, when you want to find out any news/results about American Sport, you go to ESPN. So hopefully one day when your children talk about soccer, someone will mention EverydayBigWin.com but at the meantime we hope to be like Limso for soccer. Limso doesn't hit winner ALL the time, does he? Keep it cool buddy. For the last 20 years, we see punters come punters go. People bet their monthly salary on a match, people bet their fortune over a weekend. People stop betting after a season, after a few season, after losing too much to continue. No one survive a decade. (Our own family doctor killed himself in 1990 after huge losses in World Cup Italia. I swear to God this is a true sad story. Until today I am still wondering why he did it. NOT why he gambled and lost so much because I can understand that BUT why he had to kill himself instead of paying off the debt slowly from his clinic income.) You don't make a fortune from sports bettings overnight or even over a season. Even if you do, you will always loss it back unless you stop betting entirely. We have been through the path and we are here to help. Being a professional gambler is every punters' dream. But first, you need to be DISCIPLINE, keep it COOL and know exactly what you are doing. Cheers - EBW#1
3 November 2006 No offense to anyone. But we got to post this because it actually came from one of our visitors and a very good friend of ours. "AUSTRALIAN STUPIDITY: You have 2 cows. You are so stupid you think they are Kangaroo so you fuck them to death while getting drunk on a Thursday night."
2 November 2006 Not a Big News. But this is our way of saying Thank You to all our Malaysian visitors, especially those who grew up in Doctor Mahathir's era.. An Easy Guide to Political Ideologies...using 2 cows. FEUDALISM: You have two cows. Your lord takes some of the milk. FASCISM: You have two cows. The government takes both, hires you to take care of them, and sells you the milk. PURE COMMUNISM: You have two cows. Your neighbours help you take care of them, and you all share the milk. PURE DEMOCRACY: You have two cows. Your neighbours decide who gets the milk. DICTATORSHIP: You have two cows. The government takes both and shoots you. MILITARISM: You have two cows. The government takes both and drafts you to join army. CAPITALISM: You have two cows. You sell one and buy a bull. AMERICAN DEMOCRACY: The government promises to give you two cows if you vote for it. After the election, the president is impeached for speculating in cow futures. The press dubs the affair "Cowgate" (Watergate). The cows sue you for breach of contract. BRITISH DEMOCRACY: You have two cows. You feed them sheep's brains and they go mad. The government does not do anything. EUROPEAN DEMOCRACY: You have two cows. At first, the government regulates what you can feed them and when you can milk them. Then it pays you not to milk them. After that it takes both, shoots one, milks the other and pours the milk down the drain. Then it requires you to fill out forms accounting for the missing cows. SINGAPOREAN DEMOCRACY: You have two cows. The government fines you for keeping two unlicensed farm animals in an apartment. MALAYSIAN CAPITALISM: You have two cows. You sell three of them to your publicly-listed company, using letters of credit opened by your brother-in-law at the bank, then execute a debt/equity swap with associated general offer so that you get all four cows back, with a tax deduction for keeping five cows. The milk rights of six cows are transferred via a Panamanian intermediary to a Cayman Islands company secretly owned by the majority shareholder, who sells the right to all seven cows' milk back to the listed company. The annual report says that the company owns eight cows, with an option on one more. Meanwhile, you kill the two cows because of bad feng shui.
31 October 2006 This will change the landscape of internet betting. Associated Press Britain Attacks U.S. Online Gambling Ban By Jane Wardell, AP Business Writer Britain Criticizes U.S. Online Gaming Ban As It Prepares for International Summit LONDON (AP) -- Britain's culture secretary on Friday compared the U.S. crackdown on online gambling to the failed alcohol ban of the Prohibition as she prepared to host an international summit on Internet gambling next week. Tessa Jowell warned that the U.S. ban on Internet gambling would make unregulated offshore sites the "modern equivalent of speakeasies," illegal bars that opened in 1920s America when alcohol was banned. U.S. Congress caught the gambling industry by surprise earlier this month when it added to an unrelated bill a provision that would make it illegal for banks and credit-card companies to settle payments for online gambling sites. President Bush signed the law Oct. 14. The decision closed off the most lucrative region in a market worth $15.5 billion this year in "spend" value -- the amount gambling companies win from their clients, or the amount gamblers lose. Several London-based Internet gambling companies and a handful in Europe and Australia subsequently sold off or shut down their U.S. operations, losing around 80 percent of their combined business in the process. U.S. officials have declined to participate in Tuesday's gambling summit in London, where lawmakers from 30 countries will discuss ways to regulate the industry, including the protection of minors and keeping the industry free of crime. Officials from Australia, South Africa and New Zealand, Malta, Costa Rica and Antigua and Barbuda are expected to attend. Antigua in particular has been engaging in a strong defense of Internet gambling, one of the tiny Caribbean state's few economic success stories. It argues that the U.S. ban is in direct contravention to a ruling by the World Trade Organization last year that the United States amend some of its legislation to permit Antiguan gambling operations to offer their services to U.S. citizens on a level playing field. Mark Mendel, who leads Antigua's WTO legal team, said Friday that the summit would put further pressure on the United States to comply with the ruling. "Ultimately, I think they are going to have to satisfy us," he said. Mendel said online gambling was vital to Antigua, whose only other industry of note is tourism. Next week's gathering has been months in the planning and officials intended to discuss ways to stop criminals from defrauding online gamblers and to prevent sites being used for money laundering. However, the new U.S. law is likely to be the focus of talks. Jowell said that regulating sites worked better than prohibition. "America should have learnt the lessons of Prohibition," she said, noting that legislation that was meant to stop alcohol from causing harm in practice forced otherwise law-abiding customers into the hands of the bootleggers. Under new British gambling laws, online operators have a "social responsibility" duty written into licenses and policed by the independent Gambling Commission watchdog. It requires them to work to prevent underage gambling, give prominent warnings about addiction and inform users how much time and money they have spent on the site. "Broadly speaking we have three choices: you can prohibit, like the U.S., do nothing or regulate, like we have," Jowell said. "I firmly believe we have chosen the path that will do the most to protect children and vulnerable people and keep out crime."
27 October 2006 "Funny you mentioned Ladbrokes (in your Betting Guide). I want to share with you a betting experience that I had with William Hill. I used to bet NBA on William Hill account. I don't know much about betting or NBA but my American boyfriend was very good with sports betting. I bet 1 game everyday and then go to sleep. I wake up the next day and if I won the previous day, I will just rollover my entire balance on the next game, so on and so forth. I would stop for entire week if loss. So after a few months, I won about S$50,000 and was able to withdraw my winning. But thereafter William Hill limited my bets to S$100 per game. I was upset and stopped betting after that. Angela, Singapore" Angela, we really appreciate your story and we absolutely believe your encounter. William Hill is supposed to be one of the largest betting company in the world. If you are in London, it is like Magnum (4D) store in Malaysia (one in almost every street) or like 7 eleven in Singapore (one in every block). But if I am an online gambler, I would not bet on William Hill account because there are too many other better sites. We had a similar unpleasant encounter with William Hill 3 years ago and we will share with all of our visitors at our Betting Guide soon. 26 October 2006 Well this is not a Big News but a good laugh. We all deserve it after another winning performance from midweek Serie A. This is for all of our international visitors out there if you have not heard this joke before: THE "TWO-COW EXPLANATION" OF WHAT MAKES... A CHRISTIAN DEMOCRAT: You have two cows. You keep one and give one to your neighbor. A SOCIALIST: You have two cows. The government takes one and gives it to your neighbor. A REPUBLICAN: You have two cows. Your neighbor has none. So what? A DEMOCRAT: You have two cows. Your neighbor has none. You feel guilty for being successful. You vote people into office who tax your cows, forcing you to sell one to raise money to pay the tax. The people you voted for then take the tax money and buy a cow and give it to your neighbor. You feel righteous. A COMMUNIST: You have two cows. The government seizes both and provides you with milk. A FASCIST: You have two cows. The government seizes both and sells you the milk. You join the underground and start a campaign of sabotage. DEMOCRACY, AMERICAN STYLE: You have two cows. The government taxes you to the point you have to sell both to support a man in a foreign country who has only one cow, which was a gift from your government. CAPITALISM, AMERICAN STYLE: You have two cows. You sell one, buy a bull, and build a herd of cows. BUREAUCRACY, AMERICAN STYLE: You have two cows. The government takes them both, shoots one, milks the other, pays you for the milk, then pours the milk down the drain. AN AMERICAN CORPORATION: You have two cows. You sell one and force the other to produce the milk of four cows. You are surprised when the cow drops dead. A FRENCH CORPORATION: You have two cows. You go on strike because you want three cows. A JAPANESE CORPORATION: You have two cows. You redesign them so they are one-tenth the size of an ordinary cow and produce twenty times the milk. A GERMAN CORPORATION: You have two cows. You reengineer them so they live for 100 years, eat once a month, and milk themselves. AN ITALIAN CORPORATION: You have two cows but you don't know where they are. You break for lunch. A SPANISH CORPORATION: You have two cows but you don't know where they are. You break for afternoon nap. A RUSSIAN CORPORATION: You have two cows. You count them and learn you have five cows. You count them again and learn you have 42 cows. You count them again and learn you have 12 cows. You stop counting cows and open another bottle of vodka. A MEXICAN CORPORATION: You think you have two cows, but you are so stupid you don't know what a cow looks like. You take a nap. A SWISS CORPORATION: You have 5000 cows, none of which belongs to you. You charge for storing them for others. A BRAZILIAN CORPORATION: You have two cows. You enter into a partnership with an American corporation. Soon you have 1000 cows and the American corporation declares bankruptcy. AN INDIAN CORPORATION: You have two cows. You worship them. 25 October 2006 "To. Sir, This is not exactly a Big News but we posted here anyway because we are pleasantly surprised that we have Korean visitors. Pardon our ignorance, but having been in this betting business for almost a quarter of a century, this is actually the first time we become aware that Korean bet soccer as well... Cool.. 24 October 2006 "ban nhan dinh giai bundesliga rat tot nhung
tay ban nha ko dc tot lam , ban nhan dinh ko dc deu luc thi thang nhieu luc thi
thua het len toi rat ko tn ve ban nhan dinh.ban len nghien cu*u' lai di nhe .bye
,see you again Well, we read English, Chinese, Bahasa Indonesia, Bahasa Malayu, Spanish but unfortunately we couldn't read Vietnamese. Anyhow, we want to make sure that we don't miss any Big News contributed by our visitors even though we couldn't read the language. So here you go... For all our Vietnamese visitors out there. (By the way, if you ever read this, our best buddy Vu Nguyen and Quoc Nguyen in Canberra Australia.. Miss you each and everyday. G-Boy here.) 23 October 2006 We start our Everyday Big News with a good news...
EverydayBigWin.com hit 100%
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