David Carruthers, the fired chief executive of BetonSports, appeared in a Missouri court yesterday to plead not guilty to charges that he ran an illegal online gambling operation.
Mr Carruthers is among 11 people and four companies, including BetonSports, named in an indictment alleging offences under American laws forbidding the taking of bets over telephone wires. He has also been charged with racketeering, fraud and tax evasion.
Last week Mr Carruthers was fired by BetonSports, which said he could not fulfil his duties while in custody, but the company did say its insurers would foot his legal bill.
BetonSports founder Gary Kaplan, who is the subject of a U.S. arrest warrant, is still at large, although several other figures indicted in the US action have been arrested and also pleaded not guilty in St Louis yesterday. They included Mr Kaplan's siblings, Neil Kaplan and Lori Kaplan-Multz, former BetonSports employee Tim Brown, and four people connected with a marketing firm used by Gary Kaplan's gambling businesses.
BetonSports itself failed to send a legal team to fight an injunction that has shut down its lucrative US betting site. The injunction was extended for two weeks until 14 August.
How to ... Play poker with the big boys
Don't deny it. You're tempted. Everywhere you look there is an article about Positively Fifth Street, the story of James McManus going to cover the World Series of Poker for a magazine and playing instead, finishing fifth and winning $247,000 against the world's top pros. You think: "I could do that."
Before you hop that plane to Vegas, you better be ready. Be like Mac--read plenty of poker primers by pros David Sklansky and TJ Cloutier and practice on computer programs for countless hours. Then, when you're going head-tohead with these pros, be ready to face intimidation. The pros will push you to bet over your head or overplay your cards. Don't do it. "If the pros see you as a conservative rock who only plays pots with strong cards, they'll give you more respect than you often get in a friendly home game," McManus says. Then, when you raise them, they'll actually fold.
And don't forget poker requires lots of luck. McManus brought a half-dozen
lucky hats and kept pictures of his wife and kids in his shirt pocket or on the table. It worked for him.
From the lab to the net--French connection
If springtime in Paris sets you daydreaming about Roland Garros instead of romance, make a date with Babolat. U.S. tennis pro Andy Roddick loves Babolat's Pure Drive racket. So, when the French company came out with the VS NCT Drive (unstrung $209) and VS NCT Control ($199) aimed at us normal folks, Fanscape checked it out.
NCT stands for Nano Carbon Technology--the rackets were built with carbon tubes using nanotechnology, which is the spaceage manipulation of materials on an atomic level. Though it's strange--actually incomprehensible--that NASA scientists spend time moving molecules to improve Fanscape's forehand, the racket certainly works wonders, especially when combined with the old-fashioned natural gut strings that made Babolat famous.
With these light but well-balanced rackets, the ball stays on the strings longer, giving extra control and more spin, yet it still jumps off with zing. Getting the power of a stiff racket without the awkward can't-feel-the-ball effect apparently comes not just from nanotubes but also from Babolat's Dual Woofer shock absorbing system. Sometimes it's better not to ask.
Sultan of swap: rare Bambino jersey up for bids
There are only six known Babe Ruth Yankees uniforms, and Lelands.com is auctioning off a flannel, pinstriped one with "G.H. Ruth" stitched beneath the collar. Bids are being accepted online and by telephone until May 30; Lelands.com president Michael Heffner says the winner may have to shell out $500,000. You can get a genuine, live major league rookie for less than that.
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