Man Who Bets It All on Roulette Wins

saint

Go Heels
Forum Member
Jan 10, 2002
9,501
140
63
Balls Deep
That guy who bet it all on 1 spin of roulette actually won. Glad the moron can live to gamble another day.


LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - A British man who sold all his
possessions, including his clothes, stood in a rented tuxedo on Sunday
surrounded by family and friends and bet everything on a single spin of the
roulette wheel.


He won't go home empty handed.

Ashley Revell, a 32-year-old Londoner, sold all his possessions in March,
took $135,300 to the Plaza Hotel in Las Vegas, did some low stakes gambling and
then placed everything he had left on "Red."

The wheel was spun, a crowd of supporters including his Mum and Dad from
London went wild, the ball bobbled over the slots and landed on Red '7' -- and
Revell walked away with $270,600.

"It all happened so quickly, it was spinning before I knew it," Revell said,
adding he did not intend to try to double it again. He gave a $600 tip to the
croupier and plans to party -- and buy some clothes.

"It's really down to my friends and family and Mum and Dad," he told Reuters
Television. "I knew even if I lost I'd always have a home to go to."

"I'm still against it," said his Dad. "He shouldn't have done it. He's a
naughty boy. I tell my kids they shouldn't gamble. I've got four others and
they're all going to want to go the same way."

"It's just brilliant," said Ashley Hames, a friend from London in Las Vegas
for the occasion. "He's put his neck on the line and got away with it. It's
absolutely great."

"It bobbled for a second and I just thought, 'Oh no, it's not going to do
it,"' said another friend, James Frederick. "But it did and I'm made up for him.
It couldn't happen to a nicer guy."

Asked if he wanted to try his luck again, Revell said: "No that's it for me.
I think he'd like me to do it again, but no that's it," gesturing to a casino
host. "I don't want to ride my luck," he said as the champagne began to flow.

This week, the gambling spirits had seemed against him. He put in a week
gambling about $3,000 in a bid to raise his pot.

By Wednesday, he was down $1,000.

Revell, recently a professional gambler, said he decided to take a big plunge
while he was still young and had raised the stakes as high as possible,
including selling his clothes.

"I like to do things properly," he said.

Revell said he had planned to have a friend videotape his bet-it-all spin,
but Britain's Sky One television decided it was worth a short reality series,
called "Double or Nothing."

Sky will not pay him, he says, but a crew from Dai4 Films has followed his
preparations and covered the spin at the Plaza Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. It
also plans to follow him for a month afterward.
 

yyz

Under .500
Forum Member
Mar 16, 2000
43,043
2,148
113
On the course!
I want to know what happened to the Hard Rock? They were supposed to be holding the spin, and the Plaza has it?:shrug:

The Plaza is a first class hole!
 

bubbas1

Registered User
Forum Member
Jan 7, 2003
974
1
0
59
Wisconsin
Edit.

Sorry didnt read the heading. Thought it was the original post on this subject.
 
Last edited:

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
Forum Member
Sep 16, 2003
17,897
63
0
Chicago
He made it all look so easy.

A choice is generally judged "stupid" only after it fails.





I can help but think.

I'll be thinking more about it Saturday in Vegas with trembling hands.:nono:

But it seemed soooo easy.:nono:

almost 50/50:nono:
 

spanky2

Registered User
Forum Member
Feb 23, 2001
1,483
0
0
toronto,canada
Man, What BALLS ... The house has a 5.56 % 'edge 'to start with.
Glad the 'sap' won,but we have all seen people try to 'chase' red or black and 'tap out ' before they get their bags to their room.
Everyone breathing would say the play was BAD !!!!! BUT he won,so I hpoe he he gets the "crew" on a plane and get his ass across the pond as quick as he can...
Strange stuff every day !!!!
Luck All .....Spanky...;)
 

Terryray

Say Parlay
Forum Member
Dec 6, 2001
9,616
1,618
113
Kansas City area for who knows how long....
HR got "cold feet"

HR got "cold feet"

a "professional gambler" eh? It is one of the worst bets, but among the most stylish and quickly settled, so I can see the appeal for the dramatically desperate individual (don't know any of them! :D ....Some places in LV, like the Stratosphere and Monte Carlo, offer single zero wheels--that cuts house odds in half on even money bets. The London Club inside Aladdin Casino even offers "en prison" on some, furthur reducing those odds.



Saturday, April 10, 2004

Copyright ? Las Vegas Review-Journal

NORM: Gambler's big bet in jeopardy



A live TV broadcast to the United Kingdom of a British man's $140,000 double-or-nothing bet was on the verge of collapse late Friday night.

Legal objections over concerns about Internet gaming violations were giving the Hard Rock Hotel a case of cold feet, sources said. The Hard Rock wanted to move Sunday's broadcast of British gambler Ashley Revell's make-it-or-break-it wager outdoors to avoid the problems.

The UK film company Dai4films was considering a new venue if negotiations fell through, according to sources.

Revell, a 32-year-old professional gambler from London, was to put everything he owns -- a net worth of about $140,000 in cash -- on one spin of the roulette wheel.




Monday, April 12, 2004

Copyright ? Las Vegas Review-Journal

NORM: Gambler bets it all on red, sees green



For a while it looked like Ashley Revell's double-or-nothing bet had spun out of control.

His mother burst into tears after the 32-year-old gambler from London successfully bet everything he owned, a total of $135,300, on red at the Plaza on Sunday.

Seven-eleven turned into his lucky numbers: The roulette wheel came up on red 7 on April 11.

Late Saturday, the wager and accompanying live broadcast back to the United Kingdom were all but dead.

After being given 15 minutes to leave the Hard Rock Hotel when talks broke down, the downtrodden Sky TV crew rewrote the entire script and titled it "The Bet Las Vegas Wouldn't Take."

Calls went out to the new owners of the Plaza and others.

Phillip Flaherty, chief operating officer for Barrick Gaming Corp., the Plaza's new owner, said it took "all of minus-five seconds" to green light the deal.

"If I can't make marketing dollars out of this, I'm nuts," said Flaherty, who finalized the deal at 3:35 a.m. Sunday.

Flaherty said the game was on after the control board of the Nevada Gaming Commission was assured it would not be a live broadcast. Another concern, he said, was the Federal Wire Act, which bars the transmission of wagering information.

Revell said he decided to go with red at the last minute, saying he was influenced by fan polls in the United Kingdom that preferred the color.

Wearing a loaned jacket, Revell told a media gathering in a Plaza ballroom that he sold everything but an old pair of pants and a backup pair of underwear.

He said he'll spend part of the $270,600 on something for his mum and plunk down $10,000 to enter the World Series of Poker here next month.



.........Longtime Las Vegans will recall the name William Lee Bergstrom.

If there was a Hall of Fame for wildest wagers, Bergstrom would have a plaque.

Bergstrom's big bet is recalled in my upcoming Las Vegas book, "1,000 Naked Truths -- Hot Spots & Cool Stuff." He made it known in 1980 that he was interested in making a $1 million bet on a single roll of the dice at Benny Binion's Horseshoe. Binion often boasted he would take any bet.

Bergstrom showed up with $770,000 in a suitcase and didn't bother to change it into chips.

He put the suitcase on the "don't pass" line and waited for a female patron to take her toss.

She crapped out, making Bergstrom a winner. He was escorted to the door.

A few years later, according to reports, he came back and tried it again. That time he lost.

Revell has been getting a lot of attention beyond Britain.

He was on ABC's "Good Morning America" with Diane Sawyer on Friday. His mother, Carole, arrived in Las Vegas on Thursday.
 
Last edited:

yyz

Under .500
Forum Member
Mar 16, 2000
43,043
2,148
113
On the course!
I highly doubt this cat would have been "broke", had he lost the bet. That just seems a little far fetched to me. Do we know what Mum and Dad have in the bank for junior?

Just seems a little odd that a film crew would follow a guy with no money for a month.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top