
Win Big: How to Capitalize on Opportunities in the NCAA Conference Championship Games
Coming off his best week of the season, the Gridiron Guru attempts to keep the

Coming off his best week of the season, the Gridiron Guru attempts to keep the

Stop the cooking! Hold the turkey! It’s the NFL on Thanksgiving – one of the

Rivalry Week is always fraught with wagering perils, but the Gridiron Guru found a path

The NFC West is the tightest race in pro football. All four teams have a

The Gridiron Guru is still smarting from a winless week backing underdogs. But one game

This is a week for underdogs to eat well. And the Gridiron Guru is at

With the NFL season more than half over now, a familiar face is at the

The Gridiron Guru is playing the memory game this week, remembering scenarios that have teased

The second round of the Major League Baseball playoffs start on Saturday and it features

The Boston Celtics are still the heavy favorite to repeat as NBA champions, but off-season

While everyone is understandably paying attention to No. 2 Georgia traveling to Tuscaloosa to face

This is the year of rookie starting pitchers with the Pirates’ Paul Skenes and the
On July 3, 1966, Atlanta Braves pitcher Tony Cloninger made MLB history by hitting two grand slams in a 17-3 rout of the San Francisco Giants at Candlestick Park. Driving in nine runs—a single-game record for a pitcher—Cloninger remains the only pitcher in major league history to hit two grand slams in a single game, or even an entire career.
On July 3, 2009, John Kane triggered five video poker jackpots in under an hour at Vegas's Silverton Casino. The secret? A hyper-specific software glitch that let him replay winning hands at max stakes just by pressing a precise sequence of buttons. The feds charged Kane and his partner under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, but a judge dismissed the case. The ruling? Simply pushing the buttons a casino provides to the public—even in a glitchy order—isn't hacking. The exploit forced IGT to rush out global firmware patches, cementing it as one of the wilder legal loopholes in modern gaming history.