
St. Joe’s Joins Villanova in Banning Sports Bets
St. Joseph’s University in eastern Pennsylvania last week became the second Philadelphia-area school to issue
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St. Joseph’s University in eastern Pennsylvania last week became the second Philadelphia-area school to issue

Six months ago, sportsbook operators across the U.S. launched the Sports Wagering Integrity Monitoring Association

Like all players on the team, Penn State star wide receiver and kick returner KJ

The location is sweet. Stand at the epicenter of the site that next year will
The $450 million Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Sacramento at Fire Mountain lived up to

Of all the table games on the casino floor, baccarat may carry the most mystique.

Yahoo Sports and MGM Resorts have struck a multi-year deal to bring online betting to

WSOP.com’s special “Bounty” series of tournaments live up to their name, running November 10 –

Social media mammoth Facebook may file a lawsuit against The Spinner, a secretive UK-based startup

Pennsylvania introduced online gambling almost three months ago, but online poker has yet to launch.

The Nevada Gaming Control Board is asking the state’s Gaming Commission to declare Steve Wynn

If a Washington State sports betting bill is ever passed, Major League Baseball (MLB) has
The longest poker game in history was played continuously, 24 hours a day, from 1881 to 1889 in the basement of The Birdcage Theater in Tombstone, Arizona. The stakes were legendary; with a minimum buy-in of $1,000—an absolute fortune at the time—the marathon cash game drew elite tycoons and famous Wild West figures alike, including George Hearst, Diamond Jim Brady, and Bat Masterson.
On June 22, 1937, 23-year-old Joe Louis captured the heavyweight championship by knocking out James J. Braddock in the eighth round at Chicago's Comiskey Park. Despite being knocked down in the first round, Louis dominated the rest of the fight against the 31-year-old champion. Louis held the title for nearly 12 years until retiring on March 1, 1949, successfully defending it 25 times—including seven defenses in 1941 alone—despite a wartime hiatus from March 1942 to June 1946.