Our Euro 2008 PredictionTuesday, June 24, 2008 at 8:45 AMWritten by Daniel O Germany takes on Turkey on Wednesday, and Spain meets Russia the following day, in the semi-finals ahead of the Euro 2008 Football Championship. Except for Spain, all the teams to have reached this stage have done so from the less favorable standing of second place in their respective Groups. Does this make them favorites? We don't know! It's hard to tell anymore, with the defending champions Greece out with three losses; the Netherlands, early favorites, falling to Russia in the uarter-finals; crowd pleaser Portugal and superstar Christiano Ronaldo losing to Germany; and Turkey, somewhere around 100th in world standings, impressively making its way to the final four. Did someone say Turkey?
So how are we to make a prediction with these rather surprising results? I'm still getting over the fact that England isn't playing. Sports betting sites have already placed Germany as favorite. The same bookies, in double irony, have also sent the message that the underdogs are favorites. Clearly the results support this latter claim. Push me and I back Russia. But for the heck of me I cannot get the company to join me on this prediction. Guess we'll just keep on following and reporting odds to our site members, who are welcome to place their own odds at any of the sports betting sites we cover and present on the site. Commending the US Congress HearingsMonday, April 07, 2008 at 3:45 PMWritten by Daniel O Of all the recent news stories and developments that we have reported on our news pages recently, one stands out. Whether we be located in Europe, South Africa, China or the moon, last week's Congress Hearings in Washington, DC are significant. They are also worth our response, here on this blog entry. First off the bat, we would like to commend the House Financial Services Committee and its Chairman, Rep. Barney Frank, for holding this important meeting. The subject is far too important, not only for the millions of online gamblers in the United States, but for reasons that include free speech and trade. The discussion, at this level, was long awaited. That is even more obvious today, after we got the chance to hear the banking industry officials, who complained about the unfair burden laid on them under the current ban. (For quotes from the witnesses visit my summary of the day article.) While their criticism is directed at the regulations that were on the Congress table that day, well over a year since the ban itself was passed in late 2006, our criticism is on the law itself. As for the hearings themselves, the topic of today's blog, they served us, the gambling community, well. From allowing a mainstream stage for the establishment - feds and banking officials - to voice its aversion of the ban and the way it is handled, to the widespread media coverage that brought the contested subject to the public's computer screen (and TV and newspapers), especially after the ban was passed stealthily under the Safe Port Act at the time. Several other questions were raised thanks to the hearings. What with horse racing? How come it was excluded from the ban? Is it not a form of gambling? We thought it was... And poker? Is it a game of skill, thus more appropriately legal than, say, state lotteries, or is it a form of chance game strictly? As things went until last week, the details were, well, "ugly" in the words of our friend J Todd. Which leaves us a little scared to ask for more. But at the end of the day, we encourage debate and believe the hearings were an important, if first, step.
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