Gambling Stories Uk

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  1. Gambling Stories Uk Online
  2. Winning Gambling Stories
  3. Gambling Debt Stories Uk
  4. True Compulsive Gambling Stories
Stories

In one of many sad gambling stories from the UK related to addiction, Justyn Larcombe squandered a massive £750,000 in online sports bets. Previously, he had a six-figure salary and he and his wife owned a £450,000 townhouse in an idyllic Derbyshire village. Apr 07, 2020 However, some players do win, and there are inspiring gambling stories which can help us remember that any day now, on the next spin, next ticket, or next bet, it could be us that other punters talk about with envy. I’ve dug through the web and newspaper archives to find some of the most inspiring stories about UK gamblers having big wins. A woman who built up debts of £70,000 by betting online is calling for more support for female gambling addicts. Kelly Field shared her story with the makers of ITV's Cleaning Up. Editor’s Note: We are grateful to Ms. Jodie Nealley for sharing her story with readers of The BASIS. Throughout, we have provided links to journal articles and other sources to illustrate how aspects of Jodie’s story coincide with scientific findings.This Editorial is part of our month-long Special Series on Gambling Disorder. To understand my story you need to understand my addictions.

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  • Hey eveybody I just decided to join this today. Have never used anything Like this before so I will just break down my story. I have been gambling for 10 years on and off since I was 18, as soon as I became legal to enter the casino in my city. I am 28 now. My gambling is on and off. I had stopped for about 6 years and when my ex gf and I took a trip to Las Vegas in 2014 it came out again. I knew going there was a bad idea but i went anyways, I left her in the hotel one day and gambled all day and all night long , maxed out a 5000$ credit card and didn’t even have money to pay for my baggage on the way back, back in 2014 5000$ was a lot of money to me And I was devistated as it put me in credit card debt. she was super ashamed and worried of me and saw I had a problem. When I got back to my city I went right back to the casino and started Gambling more all week, I had lost another 4-5000$ and when I went into work my manager saw I was distraught , she asked what’s wrong and I opened up to her. She and I went to the casino that day and banned myself for 5 years. Self ban until year 2020. I felt relieved yet still ashamed and self hatred as I was in a bunch of debt. Fast forward to 2017 my ex and I went to Las Vegas again for our anniversary and I had been gamble free for nearly 3 years. It came out of me again there but It wasn’t in large amounts tis time, won 700$ first day, lost it all the third day plus a few hundred of my Own. Still felt that feeling of pain of a loss i guess because it had been years since gambling. So I get back to my city and of course I can’t gamlbe here because I am banned. Fast forward to 2018 my gf and I break up and I blow through 40k of savings I have worked so hard to save not from gambling but I travel and go party as a single guy now after 5 years and start thinking I’m a millionaire because I have some savings. I take nearly a year off and now I have a beard, so I think maybe they won’t recognize me. Surely i try my luck and I get in, I win 1000$ and I stop for a couple of weeks. Then the worst things happens, my friend invites Me to vegas for labour day weekend. I tell myself don’t go you will gamble there but I go Anyways. first night I break even , second night I win 3500, lose it all the same night, third day I go in a hole lose around 5000, fourth and last day I win 10k, super happy I have to catch my flight in a few hours have 10k in my pocket My trip is payed for and I have some priofits, my friend says let me hold your money you will go lose it i know it. I don’t listen to him and I go lose the 10k in 30 minutes of roulette, feel like complete scum again. So I get back home what do I do I go to the casino which I am banned from, and it spiral out of control, they don’t recognize me with my beard, I start going everyday. Skippping class to gamble, stop working out, lying to family and friends . I became numb to it. I used to get upset When I lost 500$, and fast forward to playing 500-1000$ hands of blackjack or spins of roulette. So I would go in and win 1000-5000$ per trip, then I would lose that much the next day or more , I was going up, down, down. Up. The wins kept me going back. So I tracked all of my gains and losses. One day I lost 15000 and I was devistated, I was gambling with my line of credit. I had to keep chasing and I got it down to -5000 a couple times, and then I stopped for 2 weeks. My sister and family was really proud of me. After 2 weeks I got the urge again and I went one night and won 1200$, I left because I said I don’t wanna feel that feeling of giving it all back. I went back couple days later and won 1500, again I left and went next day won 1600, then again 2 days later won 5000$. I was on cloud 9. I finally got back that 15000$ loss with a bit of profit, and I was so proud I told myself you did It. You got it back ! Now don’t go again , use this as a lesson that you got your money back, have savings again and not a lot of people are able to get back a loss. So few days go by until Saturday night i get off work and I have the urge to go back. Tell myself have a bankroll management , you’ve done well this week . Take a bit if profits once you’re up. Well.. you all know what happens next, I never went up. I lost 6000 in less than 30 minutes, waited until midnight till I caj withdraw more . Took another 2000 climbed back up to 4000 so minus 2500’on the day, should have walked. Got greedy lost it all so 8000 on the day. In less than one hour. Walked out so ashamed as always self hate beating myself up how can I do this. I had gotten my loss back and was so proud and I gave it all back again. Of course woke up in the am took another 1000$ and climbed up a bit just to lose it all. Finally went up to the front of the casino I had enough I told the guy listen I am banned right now and I’ve won and lost over 50k this month I need you guys to re take pics of me within my beard because I am supposed to be banned right now. They did. I feel now a weights lifted off my shoulders but I am so ashamed how bad it got, how much money I’ve won and lost, how I will never see the $ again and how hard it will be to save all what I’ve lost working. I became numb. Insensitive . I wasnt even excited when I was winning anymore , the value of a dollar was gone. 1000$ hands of blackjack , like I was a millionaire. I am now starting from scratch financially but all I can think is at least I am not in debt. But still really hard to swallow what ive done this past month . My family is devistateD, my friends don’t understand my addiction . I guess I just needed to get my story off my chest. With hopes there is others who can relate to this. Maybe I needed to lose it all and re ban myself , because if I had kept winning, I would have kept gambling. And know I would just give it all back eventually. 🙁 thanks for listening.

    -Stephen

    Hello and thanks for starting a thread in the Gambling Therapy forums

    Here at Gambling Therapy we pride ourselves on being a caring and diverse online community who can help and support you with the difficulties you’re currently facing. We understand that this might be a tough time for you, particularly if you’re new to recovery, so come here as often as you need to and participate in the forums, access online groups and connect to the live advice helpline if you need one to one support. We’re in this together!

    Here on the forum you can share your experiences in a safe, supportive and accepting environment. The beauty of writing it all down is that you can take your time and you will be creating a record of your progress that you can look back on if it ever feels like you’re not moving forward. So, share as much or as little as you like but do try to stick to keeping just one thread in this forum so people know where to find you if they want to be updated on your progress or share something with you.

    As well as the forums New Members are invited to join Charles in the New Members Practical Advice Group On Mondays at 21:00 (UK) and Thursday at 19:00(UK)

    And on that note….

    I’m going to hand you over to our community because I’m sure they will have some words of wisdom for you 🙂

    Take care

    The Gambling Therapy Team

    PS: Let me just remind you to take a look at our privacy policy and terms and conditions so you know how it all works!

    Gambling is a hidden illness like no other addiction!!! Having read your life story of compulsive gambling, I understand you & feel for you!!! Word by Word of your writing was painful to read, but I am on the same track as you. I really really wish if the world had no gambling issues!!! because Nobody can understand it unless they are made to gamble all their own money within hours!!!

    While we are all suffering, the gambling venues, bookies, online platforms are becoming wealthy and taking exotic holidays from the gambling funds earned via the most vulnerable people. This is my Day 1 & I have decided I can no longer gamble or else I may die in a painful death…. Who cares? apart from compulsive gamblers, Nobody will give a flying bat! The future for compulsive gamblers is very very dark

    Hey man I’m new to here too just posted the other day. I have huge swings like u mentioned but when I win big I never leave. I was up 30k one night off $500 and freaking gave it all back! I just got peeled the other night for 10gs. So I definitely feel your pain. The best thing I can say is it’s good you banned yourself and also the fact your 28 and want to stop now. I’m 36 and have been like this since 19 I just have a good job to luckily support it. If you stop now you will have plenty of time to rebound, I have been to negative and dug out many times. Keep your head up and thanks for posting and know your not the only one that does crazy bets and doesn’t walk.

    PLEASE do not gamble online. In March 2015, a member here mentioned, innocently, that “a £4 online bet “won” a 4 figure sum” I’m a seasoned casino gambler. Had no idea how to “play” online but I thought “I could do that ” and lost a very large sum of money in a short time. I thought my 15 year habit of gambling/losing (a 6 figure sum) in land based casinos was bad but that experience almost destroyed me. What saved me? Three members here on GT really came to my rescue. One suggested I should “make a plan” and start saving. I stuck to that plan. Saved all my money back. Plus a bit extra, then last April , after 27 G free months, the effluent hit the air conditioning and I have been withdrawing money to gamble in the casino. I would NEVER try my luck online again. It wiped me out. Take a fool’s advice and put a blocker on your devices before the second thought enters your mind. You have enough on your plate without adding to the misery. As I write, I am gazing at 2 bills -large ones, and saying “Why did I need to bring all this stress back into my life” MAKE IT IMPOSSIBLE to gamble, Murr. It will ruin you.

    Hi Murr 4 days is brilliant keep taking it one day at a time, Vera has given you some great advice , take heed she is a good person who will always give good advice, keep focused on your exams and most of all look after yourself. 🙂

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Given the nature of gambling, it can throw up a surprise or two. But sometimes, when the stakes are raised, the story becomes that bit more compelling. We’ve trawled the depths of the Internet to compile a comprehensive concoction of the crazy, the weird and the wonderful moments associated with gambling in collective human memory.

It’s likely that plenty of epic tales of gambling have passed without being recorded. After all, if you won £40 million playing baccarat before somehow getting trampled by an elephant while celebrating, you might not want people to know about it. If you had just robbed a bank, and then blown the lot in a casino the same night, you might not be very forthcoming when asked about it. Fortunately, some crazy gambling stories survived, including some truly legendary tales which have been immortalised in movies and books. Read on to find the best real gambling stories around.

All or Nothing – Players Who Went All In

Do you have to be crazy to risk everything? That’s probably a question you should ask Ashley Revell, who bet all he had on a roulette wheel landing on red. The Englishman sold everything he owns, including clothes and childhood football trophies, to fly to Las Vegas and gamble it all in one spin of a wheel. It was just under £80k, which included cash from an online bookmaker who sponsored him for changing his name to ”Ashley Blue Square Revell”. He won, and doubled his money.

The whole thing was filmed for a TV show entitled Double or Nothing, and has been a source of inspiration for nutcases the world over ever since. Possibly the craziest thing about the story is that he chose to risk it all on an American roulette wheel, which offers worse odds (47.3%) than on a European wheel (48.6%).

The Most Audacious Casino Cheats in History

There have been numerous cases of punters attempting to cheat a casino down the years. It’s likely that some of the best gambling stories slipped through the cracks because, well, they got away with it. Needless to say, these upcoming cheats didn’t get away with anything – eventually.

When a group of maths whizz kids from the famous MIT university in the US decided to play some blackjack in Las Vegas, they had a cunning plan up their sleeves. They found a way to predict when the cards being dealt would be favourable to them by using a technique called card counting. They won tonnes of money, including over $400,000 in one weekend. They were able to roughly predict how many cards are left, which ones have been spent and which ones remain in the shoe. To avoid detection, they rotated personnel regularly and employed a counter to sit in on games and secretly signal when the team’s designated high-roller should start playing. The tale was turned into a movie called 21, starring Kevin Spacey.

Gambling stories uk website

In the early 1990s, a Spaniard by the name Gonzalo Garcia-Pelayo realised a way to beat roulette. He noticed that some roulette wheels had very minor imperfections, which meant that some numbers came up more than others. He analysed data from thousands and thousands of spins to determine the statistical distribution and the hot spots. He, and members of his family, then bet on these numbers every spin. He is considered the first person to beat the roulette absolutely honestly, using mathematical precision. His story was told in the 2012 movie, Winning Streak.

The Luckiest Players Ever?

Sometimes the laws of nature, and probability seem to stand aside for a moment, letting some lucky punter slip through a loophole in the universe. Insanely good fortune can seem quite surreal when it occurs, and for the beneficiary, keeping a hold on reality might become a challenge.

In 2009, a Grandmother from New Jersey, USA, left the Borgata Hotel Casino in Atlantic City as the most fortunate player in a casino ever. The odds of rolling a pair of dice 154 times at a craps table, without throwing a seven are an astonishing 1 in 1.56 trillion. That’s a figure almost impossible to comprehend. The lucky lady was rolling the dice for four hours and 18 minutes, breaking the world records for the longest craps roll and the most successive dice rolls without hitting a seven. The amount she actually won from the casino was never revealed, but even if you wagered a paper clip, it’d probably be enough to buy a small country or perhaps 1.56 trillion paper clips.

On a slightly different tangent, the multinational delivery company, FedEx, would likely not exist today if it weren’t for blackjack. The owner, Fred Smith, realised the company was in trouble when it was down to its last $5k and it couldn’t afford to fuel the delivery planes.

He decided to head to Las Vegas and gamble with the last of the company money. The next week, he returned after turning the $5k into $26k – enough to keep the company in operation. The money wasn’t the solution to all his problems, but it was the catalyst to propel the company towards the huge success it has now become. Fred Smith is now worth an estimated $4.3 billion dollars.

What On Earth?!

The biggest wins are not always the best gambling stories. Money does add a bit of a ’wow’ factor, but some punters have won by some remarkably ridiculous and unconventional means.

  • Five of the Strangest Bets in the History of Gambling
  • A Welsh punter beat the odds of 6,479/1 with a strange novelty bet in 1989. He gambled £30 that in the year 2000, U2 would still be a band, EastEnders and Neighbours would still be on the BBC, and Cliff Richard would be knighted. Ladbrokes paid out £194,400 in one of the biggest novelty bet payouts ever.
  • In 2014, a Norwegian gambling website offered odds of 175-1 that Uruguayan football star, Luis Suarez would bite someone in the World Cup. Given the striker’s penchant for such a thing, 167 punters took the bait. Suarez took the bite and made some very happy Scandinavians.
  • Brian Zembic is a high-stakes gambler and magician, who developed a reputation for taking on any bet. In 1996, he agreed to have breast implants and keep them for one year in return for $100k. He grew accustomed to his new friends, and decided to keep them.
  • In 1980, William Lee Bergstrom arrived at a Las Vegas casino with two suitcases. One contained $777k, the other was empty. He bet the $777k on a single roll of a dice – the largest bet in the history at the time, and he won. A friend, Ted Binion, said Bergstrom had intended to kill himself if he lost – after borrowing most of the money for the bet – but instead ended up travelling the world for several years.
  • A grandfather saw his 18-month-old grandson kicking a football about and decided to put £50 on him one day playing for the Wales national team. Peter Edwards cashed in £125,000 when grandson Harry Wilson eventually became the youngest player to ever play for Wales, aged 16.

Winning Can Be a Curse

Life can often seem unfair. Sometimes, some people seem to have all the luck. And then there are moments where the universe seems to get its revenge, in order to restore an equilibrium; moments of extraordinary bad luck following on from the absolute opposite.

In 2000, cocktail waitress Cynthia Jay-Brennan became one of the biggest winners in casino history, winning an incredible $35 million on a Las Vegas slot machine jackpot. Just weeks later, Cynthia and her sister were in a car, stopped at a red light, when a drunk driver ploughed into their vehicle. Her sister died, and Cynthia was left paralysed and confined to a wheelchair. She had only just gotten married.

Gambling Stories Uk Online

The culprit already had 16 charges of driving intoxicated and was sentenced to 28 years in jail by a Nevada jury. The extreme swings of fortune have turned many a person superstitious, and added fuel to the fabled ’gambler’s curse’. Cynthia told reports she’d give away all the money to have her sister back.

The self-styled ’King of Chavs’, Michael Carroll, lived an outrageous lifestyle after winning £9.7 million on the UK National Lottery. The former dustman turned up to collect his winnings wearing an electronic tag, and the money funded a lifestyle that left him with less than he had before. It took him 8 years to squander it all away on drugs, gambling and prostitutes. He ended up with a crack cocaine habit, and without his wife, who left him due to the strains his new lifestyle put on their relationship. Carroll now works in a biscuit factory.

The Unluckiest Player Ever?

There are plenty of tales of punters who have had a run of bad luck that defies belief. Most of the time, you won’t hear anything about it because big losers don’t want anyone to know about their exploits. However, some tales of misfortune slipped through the net, and made it into folklore; the punters’ names, into keywords for bad luck.

  • Five Insanely Unlucky Punters
  • Martyn and Kay Tott won over £3 million on the lottery. Unfortunately for them, they didn’t realise it. They discovered it six months later after seeing an appeal for the winner to come forward, by which time they had lost the ticket. The lottery organiser, Camelot, refused to pay up, even though computer records could prove they bought a ticket with the winning numbers. Martyn launched three unsuccessful legal battles, and the stress of not living the life he thought he should have cost him his marriage and his sanity.
  • In 2012, bus driver Hazel Loveday pulled out of a work lottery syndicate just six months before the numbers came up. She experienced seeing her 12 colleagues win the £38 million EuroMillions jackpot without her. She says she pulled out of the syndicate because she couldn’t afford the weekly £2 contribution. Apparently, they didn’t even share any of the money with her. Harsh.
  • In 2007, high-roller Terry Watanabe lost over $120 million at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas. Tourists crowded around the tables he played at so they could witness a man wagering staggering sums of money on blackjack. His play was notoriously bad, often hitting when on twenty, and his total losses reached over $200 million. He wasn’t able to pay the debt and the casino sued him for $15 million.
  • Austrian casino enthusiast, Josef Reiner, lost thousands of dollars playing roulette, but he was more concerned about how his wife would react. He was willing to avoid telling her how he lost the money at all costs and fabricated a story about being mugged. To make the story seem authentic, Reiner broke his own nose, jaw and arm with an iron bar.
  • Japanese high-roller Akio Kashiwagi was regarded as one of the biggest gamblers in the world in 1992. He holds the record for the biggest baccarat loss in history, waving goodbye to $10 million in one session at the Trump Taj Mahal Casino in Atlantic City. Soon after, he was stabbed 150 times with a samurai sword, in a murder still unsolved to this day.

High Roller No More?

For some punters, money is no object, and gambling with the GDP of a small country is their way of making that perfectly clear to everyone. To them, losing millions in one hand of blackjack is as life-changing as a mosquito bite. These are the people who draw crowds when they play; people who can bring a casino to its knees in one foul swoop; people who have spawned some truly crazy gambling stories.

Billionaire Kerry Packer goes down as arguably the highest high-roller in history. His exploits saw him win an enormous amount of money, but he also lost staggering sums on many occasions. As a consequence, casinos were by-and-large very happy to see him. In 1999, he lost close to $28 million in one session of blackjack at Crockford’s Casino in London. However, given his immense wealth, the loss wasn’t enough to stop him from continuing his gambling habit. Packer was renowned for paying off the mortgage of one dealer and tipping $1 million to dealers after clearing out one casino.

Archie Karas, on the other hand, achieved legendary status for turning $50 into $40 million in casinos, over the course of three years. He had an astounding run of success, largely playing poker, but also other casino games. Unfortunately for Karas, the laws of physics dictate that what comes up, must come down. His luck ran out, and he managed to lose $11 million dollars in three weeks playing craps. Then lost another $17 million trying to recoup his losses, before losing another $2 million playing poker. That’s $30 million, in just four weeks.

From Hero to Zero

Proving the dangers of gambling are well and truly real, these gamblers left with more than just a hole in their pockets.

A woman in Arizona won a $1,200 slots jackpot in a casino, but she failed to show her passport when trying to cash in. This prompted further questioning and the realisation that she was in the United States illegally. Consequently, she didn’t pick up her winnings, and she was deported back to Mexico.

In one of many sad gambling stories from the UK related to addiction, Justyn Larcombe squandered a massive £750,000 in online sports bets. Previously, he had a six-figure salary and he and his wife owned a £450,000 townhouse in an idyllic Derbyshire village. His addiction grew, and he was eventually forced to sell his possessions, including the house and his £30,000 Porsche. His wife left him and took their two children with her, and Justyn now lives alone in a rented cottage. The online gambling industry in the UK is worth over £2 billion, and there are many unfortunate punters with tales like that of Justyn showing just how important it is tomanage your bankroll and gamble responsibly.

Celebrities Who Gamble

Some people just want all the limelight for themselves. A whole host of famous faces have been spotted at high-roller casinos, and have lost their way, along with a fair chunk of their fortune. Needless to say, they tend not to be happy about being spotted, especially when they lose. But gambling is addictive, and it can lure even the most camera-shy celebrities towards the bright lights of Las Vegas or Atlantic City.

Golfing legend Tiger Woods is well known for his gambling exploits. He’s regularly seen in the exclusive high roller Mansion club at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. The club set him a $1 million-dollar betting limit in the fear he’d win too much, and he frequently played blackjack at $25,000 a hand.

Spiderman star Tobey Maguire was sued for his involvement in a multi-million-dollar illegal gambling ring. Allegedly he won more than $300,000 dollars’ worth of illegal funds, stolen from a jailed hedge fund investor. He is a very skilled Texas Hold’em player, and poker legend Phil Hellmuth claims he has won as much as $10 million through playing the game.

Charlie Sheen is well-known for various extra-curricular activities, and his ex-wife, Denise Richards, said in divorce papers in 2006, that he was spending about $200,000 a week on gambling. She even claimed Sheen would have called his bookie to place a bet while en route to the hospital for the birth of their daughter, Lola.

Faulty Casinos or Crooked Punters?

Owning a casino is, by-and-large, an incredibly lucrative investment. Unfortunately, to hold onto your house edge, you need to ensure the casino equipment is up to scratch. There are always going to be eagle-eyed punters willing to meticulously check the equipment themselves, but they probably won’t be too keen on letting you know about it.

Winning Gambling Stories

In 2012, poker legend Phil Ivey tried his hand at a high stakes baccarat table in Crockford’s casino in London. Being the prodigious gambler he is, he walked away with a whopping £9.1 million. However, the casino contends that Ivey cheated because they could find a faulty shoe (the mechanism that holds the decks of cards). If the cards were dispensed in a particular way from this shoe, Ivey would gain an advantage. The practice is known as edge counting, and experienced gamblers throughout history have sought to find such an advantage. The casino sued Ivey, while Ivey counter-sued for not paying his winnings out. It has got many people wondering whether the casino should deal with the consequences of having faulty equipment.

Way back in 1873, knowing that man-made inventions were imperfect, engineer Joseph Jagger managed to find a way to beat the roulette wheel at the Monte Carlo Beaux-Arts casino. He hired six helpers to study the outcomes on the wheels until they discovered one of them had a bias. Needless to say, Jagger went for broke and left the casino $300,000 richer. The story was immortalised in the 1935 movie, The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo.

Fourteen baccarat punters took $1.5 million from the Golden Nugget casino in Atlantic City due to faulty cards and dealers. The players noticed that cards were not being dealt out randomly, and they began to spot patterns. The dealers didn’t notice, and the players all increased their bets until they’d won a huge sum of money. The casino decided to sue the card manufacturer for the error.

Gambling Debt Stories Uk

Conclusion

True Compulsive Gambling Stories

Some of these real gambling stories have inspired books and movies. Some have inspired others to go out and create their own rags to riches story. Some have probably been the catalyst for epic tales of rags to riches and back to rags again. We just hope someone will be there to tell the tale. If you’re after your own incredible gambling tale, you don’t have to go far to get started. Our recommended online casinos are just as good a place as any to tempt fate and reach for that incredible win. Don’t get carried away, though – always operate within a manageable budget and find the best casino game that suits your style!