WEATHER ALERT

Doubling down

Gambling industry’s grip on sports has raked in plenty of cash — and created a new wave of addicts

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Today you don’t have to go any further than your purse or pocket to lose your shirt.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Today you don’t have to go any further than your purse or pocket to lose your shirt.

Just ask the British. They’ll tell you what happens to a nation when its people can’t stop gambling.

Darragh McGee’s extraordinary book, Imitation Games, describes a country of compulsive gamblers who rely on a public-health system in crisis largely because of what they have done to it.

Steve Heywood
                                Darragh McGee

Steve Heywood

Darragh McGee

McGee, an Englishman himself, hopes Canada avoids the chaos his country and others are suffering having given free enterprise and technology more room than they should have in the marketing of gambling.

McGee is a lecturer at the University of Bath in England and has been studying gambling in sports for a decade.

He laments that betting brands all over the world, of immense wealth and influence, are busy at work programming fans, and their kids, to believe the best way to enjoy spectator sports is to bet on them. And they bombard stadiums and arenas where the pros play with the names of betting sites emblazoned on their tunics.

What happens then is that the industry picks a popular sport such as football (soccer) and creates an “imitation game” of it with bets and stakes. The game is highly addictive because it’s constant and will convince you to stake more cash. The device you employ in this conversation may well be the cellphone you carry in your pocket or purse every day.

“Gambling is so imbedded in mainstream media and broadcasting today that it is virtually impossible for fans to consume sport that isn’t directly produced by, sponsored by or officially linked to a gambling brand,” says McGee. “It is no longer far-fetched to think that the end game of all this… is a world where just as many young people bet on sport as participate in it.”

Imitation Games

Imitation Games

In England, sports betting has become a monstrous problem, with increasing numbers of compulsive gamblers and the problems of divorce, suicide, theft, bankruptcy, loansharking and an increased strain on the health care system.

McGee’s study shows the magnitude of sports betting in the world is mind-boggling. Europol (EU’s police) claimed in 2020 that the world’s sports gambling market was worth US$1.69 trillion. In 2024, in the U.S. alone it took in almost US$14 billion.

Meanwhile sports betting companies advertise their services on live sporting events. These ads are a kind of social pornography aimed at enticing people to gamble — just like the print ads that used to encourage smoking without saying so.

Some of their names: Bet99. Toonie Bet. BetMGM. FanDuel. Draft Kings. Bet365. The companies that own them are worth billions.

“While many of us think we are in control, few of us realize the extent to which we have allowed our lives to be channelled through our smartphone,” says McGee. “For those who experience the feel-good factor of a winning bet early on, the dopamine hit is laced with an affirmation of ego that is a powerful reinforcer of behaviour, ” McGee explains.

Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press files
                                England captain Harry Kane celebrates after scoring a goal during the 2026 World Cup. The 2018 World Cup generated a total global gambling turnover of about $225 billion. That record is expected to be broken at the 2026 tournament.

Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press files

England captain Harry Kane celebrates after scoring a goal during the 2026 World Cup. The 2018 World Cup generated a total global gambling turnover of about $225 billion. That record is expected to be broken at the 2026 tournament.

In the brain, dopamine is central to the reward system which reinforces our pleasurable experiences and encourages the activity that created it (gambling, in this case) be repeated.

One of the most bountiful betting events — the 2026 World Cup of soccer — is currently being staged in the U.S., Mexico and Canada. When Russia hosted the World Cup in 2018, it generated a total global gambling turnover of 120 billion pounds (about $225 billion). The current tournament is expected to beat that record.

When single-game betting became legal in Canada in 2021, Ontario flooded the market with 18 brands; BetMGM partnered with Wayne Gretzky in ads showing The Great One giving shooting advice to current Edmonton Oilers star Connor McDavid, who became one of the few active professional athletes anywhere in the world (at that time) to be an ambassador for a gambling brand. Auston Matthews was then hired to promote Bet99.

The endorsements by these famous and idolized sports names led to a public backlash in 2023, forcing Ontario to ban the use of athletes and celebrities that could appeal to children and young people in the promotion of online gambling.

Says McGee: “It is difficult not to reach the same conclusion that the U.K. government’s football (soccer) regulator did: that is, sport’s governing authorities (in Britain) cannot be trusted to prioritise the wellbeing of fans, including children and young people, and hence should not be allowed control over the future of gambling relationships. It is time to take such decisions out of their hands.”

File photo
                                Sports betting apps such as BetMGM, FanDuel, DraftKings and WynnBet have made online gambling remarkably and dangerously easy.

File photo

Sports betting apps such as BetMGM, FanDuel, DraftKings and WynnBet have made online gambling remarkably and dangerously easy.

McGee concludes: “Fans in (addiction) recovery… know better than any of us what is at stake when the games we love become a dangerous imitation of all that they once represented.”

Retired journalist Barry Craig doubled his very first paycheque playing craps in the newsroom. He lost it all the following payday.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Decorative coverings solve exterior problem

Marc LaBossiere 5 minute read Preview

Decorative coverings solve exterior problem

Marc LaBossiere 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

After completing a massive feature wall that includes a beautiful, floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace structure with a large flat-screen TV above the mantel and an electric fireplace below — and a symmetrical array of shelving and cupboards on either side — all that remained was the finishing touches on the exterior side of the wall.

Before the project began, three windows had been filled in to accommodate the continuous vertical surface required to complete the interior project. Early this summer, I had occasion to finally address the final steps.

Unlike breaching an exterior wall for the introduction of a window, filling in an opening is far less complicated. With the lintel already in place, framing within the opening is not structural — it simply serves to provide a nailing surface upon which the drywall can be mounted along the interior side, and the exterior sheathing (in this case, three-quarter-inch plywood) can be fastened outside.

Once the stud cavities were filled with insulation and the separate areas were sealed with vapour barrier inside and Tyvek on the outside, the interior processes continued with coats of mud, the required sanding and two coats of matching paint.

Read
2:01 AM CDT

Bearing other people’s burdens

Joel Schlesinger 6 minute read Preview

Bearing other people’s burdens

Joel Schlesinger 6 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

It might feel like an honour to have a family member or friend place tremendous trust in you to be their voice when they can no longer speak for themselves.

Whether they’re physically or mentally unable to do so, or deceased, being in charge of fulfilling their wishes often can’t be fully grasped by those taking on the roles of executor of their will or power of attorney.

These important jobs may not be the most onerous on the planet, but for the uninitiated, they probably involve more twists and turns than anticipated.

There’s not many playbooks on how to be an executor or serve as the attorney-in-fact named in the power of attorney document, says Philippe Richer, lawyer and principal at TLR Law Office in Winnipeg.

Read
2:01 AM CDT

Wildfires force another Manitoba First Nation to evacuate

3 minute read Friday, Jul. 23, 2021

A growing number of wildfires and increasing smoke are forcing the evacuation of another Indigenous community in Manitoba.

The Canadian Red Cross says it is helping individuals with health concerns from Red Sucker Lake First Nation, about 700 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.

About 300 people were expected to start flying out of the community Thursday and were to be put up in hotels in Winnipeg and Brandon.

The Red Cross said it hoped to have those people out by the end of the night, but added evacuations could continue into the weekend.

Weed control increasingly important part of harvest

Laura Rance 4 minute read Preview

Weed control increasingly important part of harvest

Laura Rance 4 minute read Friday, Sep. 8, 2023

We often think of harvest as an annual “rush,” but in reality, it moves at more of a rhythmic pace, especially when the sun is shining, the fields are ripe, and the equipment is running smoothly.

Operators and machinery steadily grind away at the unharvested crops, moving from field to field as needed. Grain carts and trucks roll back and forth, hauling the grain into storage, often sidling up to the moving combine so it can unload on the fly.

Of course, the equipment needs servicing, and the people need food, but every operation has a system that minimizes the downtime and maximizes the effort. So far this season, Manitoba farmers are running ahead of the five-year average for harvest progress.

However, a brief reference in the latest crop report urges producers to break up that synchronicity and pause to closely examine patches of weeds in their fields before they push them through with the combine.

Read
Friday, Sep. 8, 2023

Province tables legislation to cover health-care system changes

Larry Kusch 4 minute read Preview

Province tables legislation to cover health-care system changes

Larry Kusch 4 minute read Wednesday, Mar. 6, 2019

The Pallister government has introduced broad legislation to support several of its key planned health-care reforms.

Health Minister Cameron Friesen said Wednesday that Bill 10 (The Regional Health Authorities Amendment Act) will provide the framework to simplify the administration of the health-care system and improve accountability.

All health services in Manitoba will be delivered through the five current regional health authorities, CancerCare Manitoba and a new provincial authority called Shared Health. The administrative changes are set to begin next month and will continue to be rolled out over the next two to three years.

The Health Department will cease to administer health services directly and focus its activities on planning, policy development, funding and oversight. It will set system-wide performance goals and track results.

Read
Wednesday, Mar. 6, 2019

Free Press Game Day Giveaway

2 minute read Tuesday, Jul. 14, 2026

Free Press Game Day Giveaway

VS

Thursday, August 27 @ 6:30pmBlue Cross Park