Las Vegas Sun

March 18, 2024

English soccer team, 5,000-1 longshots, close in on title

Britain Soccer

Rui Vieira / AP

In this Sunday, April 17, 2016, file photo Leicester’s Shinji Okazaki chases the ball during the English Premier League soccer match between Leicester City and West Ham United at the King Power Stadium in Leicester, England.

LONDON — Bettors looking for a wager with a fancifully high payoff last summer could have gone into their local betting shop in England and risked a bit of cash on the proposition that Elvis Presley would be found alive and well.

Or they could have placed their money on a true longshot: The laughable idea that the lowly Leicester City soccer club would somehow surge to the top of the world-class English Premier League.

Elvis surfacing in good health was a 2,000-1 shot; the Foxes taking the top spot was rated even more unlikely, at 5,000-1.

The King of Rock and Roll is still buried on the grounds of his beloved Graceland, but the Foxes are on the verge of one of the greatest upsets in the history of modern sports, and the impact of their astonishing run on Britain's betting industry is already being felt as the team closes in on the top spot, which they can clinch as early as Sunday with a victory over past powerhouse Manchester United.

Joe Crilly, spokesman for the William Hill betting chain, said the company will no longer casually offer such high odds in the face of an expected 10 million pounds ($14.6 million) industry-loss that will be suffered this weekend or next if, as expected, the Foxes finish in first place.

"It's a big loss but it's not going to bankrupt us thankfully," he said. "There will still be 5,000-1 shots from time to time, but we will certainly be a lot more careful if offering that price. Our company alone will be paying out 3 million pounds on Leicester City."

That loss will be slightly offset by profits made on bets on other English Premier League clubs, including perennial powerhouses like Manchester United and Chelsea that have fallen on hard times.

But still. The reality of paying 100,000 pounds each to the handful of people thought to have placed 20 pounds on the Foxes is galling to the firm's bean counters, said Crilly.

"Doom? Maybe not," he said. "But certainly a few people feel sick about it."

The Paddy Power chain said it faces its biggest Premier League payout ever.

"In hindsight we were idiots offering odds of 5,000-1," the company said in a statement. In contrast, a bet that President Barack Obama would admit the moon landings had been faked was seen by the company as 10 times more likely.

Betting firms say some people are holding 20 pound bets on Leicester City, with reports that some may have 50 pound tickets that would pay 250,000 pounds. Academy Award winning actor Tom Hanks last week said he had put 100 pounds on the Foxes (the payoff would be half-a-million pounds) but industry professionals think he was joking. No one reports hearing of a bet that large.

One person kicking himself this weekend is longtime Leicester City fan John Micklethwait, the editor-in-chief of Bloomberg News, who for nearly 20 years dutifully placed a 20-pound bet on the Foxes to finish atop the league.

Having moved from London to New York, he skipped the wager this year, missing out on what is expected to be the ultimate payoff.

In a rueful column, he pointed out that betting companies placed the chances of Leicester City winning the league as equal to the chances of U2 front man Bono becoming pope.

Carpenter Leigh Herbert has been more fortunate in his betting choices.

He placed a 5-pound bet on Leicester City before the season began and has already collected part of the dough (about 5,680 pounds) when companies started trying to cut their losses by offering partial payouts and he cashed in 2 pounds of his wager.

He stands to collect the full amount (15,000 pounds) on the final 3 pounds of his bet.

"I'm a fan, I wanted Leicester to win the league but I didn't in my wildest dreams think they would," he said. "It's been a roller-coaster. Now I'm excited, totally excited."

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