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Gaming News
McCain posts NCAA contest
By Staff Writer - Las Vegas Review-Journal
Mar 27, 2008, 11:41
WASHINGTON -- His record was a respectable 31-17 last week, but this isn't
just another guy hoping to get lucky in the office pool for the NCAA men's
basketball tournament.
It's Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the Republican
presidential nominee, who once tried to prohibit Nevada sports books from taking
bets on March Madness, college football games and any other amateur sporting
event.
For the second straight year, McCain's presidential campaign Web site includes not
only the senator's predictions for the tournament but encourages visitors to
make picks with him.
A first-place finish entitles a contestant to a
"McCain Fleece" jacket. Second place is good for a McCain hat. Third place
garners a McCain lapel pin.
It's free to play. Participants also are
asked to volunteer their phone numbers and indicate whether they would like to
help McCain get elected.
Calls and e-mails to McCain's campaign on
Wednesday were not returned.
Last year, McCain said predictions on his
Web site are not the same as bets placed at Nevada sports books.
"I think
there's a great deal of difference between setting up a Web site -- just like
there's office pools all over America that have no benefit to the person"
organizing the game, McCain said.
The legislation he sponsored in 2000
and 2001, McCain added, "said that everything is legal as long as someone
doesn't gain from it."
McCain is picking North Carolina to win this
year's tournament. His pick for the other finalist, Connecticut, was eliminated
in the first round.
(Editors Note: We posted Sen. McCains Elite 8 Bracket
below.)
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Democratic candidate Barack
Obama also has posted his brackets and went 32-16 in the opening rounds. Obama
has North Carolina beating UCLA in the final.
(Editors Note: We
posted Sen. Obama's Entire Bracket
below.
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Currently, nothing is pending in
Congress that would impose a sports betting ban.
It is not clear, if he
is elected president, whether McCain would continue predicting the outcome of
NCAA games on his Web site or if he would sign legislation to outlaw betting at
Nevada sports books on college games.
Arnie Wexler, a counselor for
compulsive gamblers in Bradley Beach, N.J., said McCain's Web site on the
tournament surprised him.
"I thought he was a prohibitionist on
gambling," Wexler said. "The promotion of this Final Four ... and these other
gambling Web sites is not fun and games. About 95 percent of people who gamble
don't have a problem, but for the other 5 percent -- their lives are being
destroyed."
This article is largely a reprint from Las Vegas
Review-Journal. To see the original LVRJ article Click
Here
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