Here. I'm using this thread as a reference in a video about Canbet.
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Here. I'm using this thread as a reference in a video about Canbet.
Canbet argue human error, i.e. that not linking the markets in software is the same as typing +11 instead of +1. I do have some sympathy with that argument; if we allow one typographical error why not the other?
What were the spreads in question?
SBR Founder Join Date: 9/8/2005
Canbet has a rule that says "No correlated parlays, unless on a side/total in a North American Sport". All the canceled wagers were side/total on US Football.
Here it is:
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Excellent video, Justin.
Is one of those head scratching rulings that points out exactly how bad the IBAS is.
SBR Founder Join Date: 8/10/2005
A few things:
- IBAS is not a governmental agency -- there is one, they're called the Gambling Commission. As far as I know the player did not appeal there.
- Advising players use caution with UK books is a little harsh; for the vast majority of players worldwide financial security is much better with UK books than offshores, eastern european books, asian books etc.. and in 2/3 of those cases some regulation is better than none (I give SBR credit for being able to pressure offshores).
- It could be said Canbet have two rules 'on point'. The ability to make a correlated parlay does not neccesarily outweigh the right to correct software/typographical errors that all books maintain.
On the last one let's say the market line was Colorado State +21, total 45. I bet a parlay with Colorado State +31/Under 45. A book wouldn't be compelled to accept it just because they had a rule saying they allowed correlated parlays on US sport, it would still be void on the basis of a typographical error.
The panel in this case seems to find that a human error was made by not linking these two markets to block the parlay -- if that is how it usually worked at Canbet (and I'm not sure that's the case), I can understand the ruling.
Last edited by Santo; 10-12-09 at 04:01 PM. Reason: typo - games/markets
SBR Founder Join Date: 9/8/2005
Santo, thanks for the responses.
Betpartners,
I'm DEAD serious. I keep seeing more and more UK books screw players. No explanation, or very weak ones. Would you prefer your average UK book vs Pinnacle, Cris or Greek? Hell, I'd take most C books over UK. They are just giving so much crap lately. This one part of Canbet is just the tip of the iceberg. I'd love to see how the mass confiscations are dealt with.
Betpartners,
What do you think of Totesport?
We can agree to disagree.
I mention Totesport, because it was a ridiculous example of a UK Sportsbook cheating a player, IBAS rubber-stamping the decision, and me issuing one of my "overreaction" warnings.
Here's the problem I see with MANY UK Sportsbooks (which currently includes Betfair, Canbet, Iasbet and Sportingbet): They do something asinine, and refuse to explain to the player what they're doing. You can't ****ing steal someone's balance and give the player no explanation. This is what they are doing (not Sportingbet; their problems are different). Regardless of a book's willingness to talk to SBR, I'm going to ream them if they steal from a player and don't explain themselves to the player.
Justin; what were the spreads involved here? Just how correlated were they?
I do agree with you that in any case the player should be informed of the reason for any decisions, however I believe that in all cases, at least once the player has gone to IBAS, they get that reason?
If they are still unhappy with an IBAS decision, I believe under the new gambling commission they are entitled to file a claim in small claims court.
SBR Founder Join Date: 9/8/2005
I think the player bet every parlay on the card (14 games, 28 parlays; 27 were voided, one losing parlay was not voided). I think Canbet's cutoff was a 3:1 ratio of total:spread.
In this Canbet case, the "reason" was Canbet's rules cover this. This ruling was nonsensical though - there was no rule that permitted Canbet to void a correlated parlay in NCAAF. Just the opposite - there was a rule permitting correlated parlays in that one sport.
I suppose closing one's eyes to written rules falls under human error in your universe.
The rule at Canbet specifically stated that these parlays were allowed.
When something as obvious as this is completely ignored by a monitoring organization, there's a strong possibility that the opinion is bought and paid for.
Canbet is under new ownership; same name, different game. Could that have anything to do with it? When were these parlays? I always liked the old Canbet, which was anything but uptight. Maybe they allowed the North American parlays, but the new ownership does not?
And, of course: Have similar bets been canceled for all players that lost such parlays?
Last edited by Dark Horse; 10-13-09 at 06:11 AM.
SBR Founder Join Date: 12/14/2005
Let's return to my example:
Let's say the market line was Colorado State +21, total 45. I bet a parlay with Colorado State +31/Under 45 when they put up a line in error. Should Canbet accept it just because they had a rule saying they allowed correlated parlays on US sport?
(I agree that leaving one of the losing parlays seems a bit odd if they were deleting anything above the contingency ratio)
SBR Founder Join Date: 9/8/2005
Ok, so in that case there was human error in typing the line. Where does the precedent come from that we don't allow for human error in the linking of markets?
My point is; if Canbet could prove that in other weeks parlays with a ratio of 2.5:1 or less were blocked, but this week due to human error the markets weren't linked correctly, is that different from any other input error?
SBR Founder Join Date: 9/8/2005
Human error: I lost the bet, so it doesn't count. I meant to bet the other team.
If a rule states that a bet is allowed, and the bet is accepted, how is it not free rolling if the winnings are not paid?
SBR Founder Join Date: 12/14/2005
Under contract law, there is allowance for a mistake. If one party made a mistake, and the other party knows it was a mistake, contracts can be canceled. If I mean to pay $100.00 for something, and the contract says $10000 (decimal point removed), that contract is voidable IF the other side new this was an accident.
Was the parlay offering a mistake? And if it was, did the player know it? I don't know what Canbet's current practice is. Other books take correlated parlays, and they have a rule saying they take them. Given that, it's reasonable for the player to expect that Canbet intended to take this bet.
In the "bad line" example, if the line is far enough off, the player knows it is bad. Getting +9 when the market is +8 may or may not be bad. 10 points off is bad in NCAAF.
If Canbet didn't want these bets, why did they wait until AFTER the event to cancel it? Did they seriously not see 28 bets come in? Did they seriously not look at the wager log until days after the event, when the player asked for a payout?
Another requirement if you want to void a contract due to "mistake" is that you must discover the mistake in a reasonable time period. If they player lost money, they would not have discovered the mistake. In this instance, waiting until after the events were completed is simply not reasonable. They are free-rolling the player by waiting.
If Canbet had canceled these bets before the event started, I would not call foul.
My prediction on Canbet: They will be rated "D" within 9 months.
SBR Founder Join Date: 12/14/2005
Ah well now you're introducing facts that we didn't know in either the letter or the video...
Have you suggested the player files an appeal / small claims court claim?
SBR Founder Join Date: 9/8/2005