[h=3]Nov 6, 2014, 7:45 PM ET[/h][h=1]Stories behind the biggest bets[/h]<figure class="article-figure"><source>
Holly Stein /Allsport</figure> A compilation of lighthearted, big-bet tales from the gamblers who placed them and the bookmakers who accepted them:
The race back to the sports book began shortly after Buster Douglas took his shirt off.
It was October 1990. Eight months prior, Douglas had stunned Mike Tyson as a 42-1 underdog, and he was now preparing for his first title defense against Evander Holyfield. A ballroom at the Mirage casino in Las Vegas was packed for the weigh-in. Mirage sports book director Jimmy Vaccaro was in attendance and immediately knew he had a problem.
"Holyfield gets on the scale and is svelte, weighs in at like 210 [pounds]," Vaccaro said. "Buster gets on the scale and is like 246. They made him do it again, to make sure it was right, because it was the first time anybody had seen him without his sweat top on. When he took that off, he was the Pillsbury Doughboy."
Vaccaro hung out for a few minutes to listen to the reaction, then hustled back through the back halls of the casino to get back to the book. He knew he was in a race.
"I knew that guys were going to run over to the sports book to bet Holyfield," Vaccaro said. "I was thinking that I'd adjust the price 30 cents, because he was so fat. But before I could get there, we had taken a half-a-million bet on Holyfield. They beat me fair and square."
Holyfield knocked out Douglas in the third round, capping one of the more entertaining bets of Vaccaro's 30-year Vegas career. But it's not close to the biggest he's ever taken.
In 1995, Vaccaro accepted a $2.4 million money line bet from billionaire investor Carl Icahn on Super Bowl XXIX between the heavily favored San Francisco 49ers and San Diego Chargers. Icahn laid 1-8 odds that the 49ers would win straight up and won $300,000 when San Francisco rolled to a 49-26 victory.
Holly Stein /Allsport</figure> A compilation of lighthearted, big-bet tales from the gamblers who placed them and the bookmakers who accepted them:
It was October 1990. Eight months prior, Douglas had stunned Mike Tyson as a 42-1 underdog, and he was now preparing for his first title defense against Evander Holyfield. A ballroom at the Mirage casino in Las Vegas was packed for the weigh-in. Mirage sports book director Jimmy Vaccaro was in attendance and immediately knew he had a problem.
"Holyfield gets on the scale and is svelte, weighs in at like 210 [pounds]," Vaccaro said. "Buster gets on the scale and is like 246. They made him do it again, to make sure it was right, because it was the first time anybody had seen him without his sweat top on. When he took that off, he was the Pillsbury Doughboy."
Vaccaro hung out for a few minutes to listen to the reaction, then hustled back through the back halls of the casino to get back to the book. He knew he was in a race.
"I knew that guys were going to run over to the sports book to bet Holyfield," Vaccaro said. "I was thinking that I'd adjust the price 30 cents, because he was so fat. But before I could get there, we had taken a half-a-million bet on Holyfield. They beat me fair and square."
Holyfield knocked out Douglas in the third round, capping one of the more entertaining bets of Vaccaro's 30-year Vegas career. But it's not close to the biggest he's ever taken.
In 1995, Vaccaro accepted a $2.4 million money line bet from billionaire investor Carl Icahn on Super Bowl XXIX between the heavily favored San Francisco 49ers and San Diego Chargers. Icahn laid 1-8 odds that the 49ers would win straight up and won $300,000 when San Francisco rolled to a 49-26 victory.