Odds Man Out: The Untold Story of How Professional Sports Crushed the Pioneers of Online Betting

Jay Cohen
Foreword by Benjamin Brafman
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Odds Man Out: The Untold Story of How Professional Sports Crushed the Pioneers of Online Betting

Jay Cohen
Foreword by Benjamin Brafman
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Overview

384 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
“The vast army of fans who enjoy sports gambling, owe a debt—of gratitude, yes, but a financial one, too—to the author. They were pioneers, wrongly targeted by the same sports institutions that now mint money using their innovation, technology, and frameworks. This riveting read is both tragic and triumphant, the story of enterprise, international intrigue, power, and situational ethics. And it helps explain the biggest story in sports so far this century.”
  • Published date: Jul 07, 2026
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 384
  • Publisher: Post Hill Press
  • ISBN: 9798895658345
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 1.2" L x 9.0" H
Jay Cohen is the co-Founder and former President of World Sports Exchange, the first fully online betting site. World Sports Exchange opened in January 1997 and closed in April 2013.

On February 28, 2000, Cohen was the first person to be convicted in federal court for violation of the 1961 Federal Wire Act for operating an online gambling company despite being in Antigua, where the business was licensed and regulated. Cohen served eighteen months in Nellis Federal Prison in North Las Vegas, Nevada. He was released in March 2004.

Cohen was instrumental in Antigua’s decision in March 2003 to initiate the dispute resolution process of the World Trade Organization to challenge the US’ prohibition on the cross-border supply of online gambling services.

Prior to World Sports Exchange, Cohen worked as an options market-maker for Group One Trading on the floor of the Pacific Stock Exchange.

Cohen moved to Europe and renounced his citizenship in 2012. He currently lives in Eastern Europe with his wife and son. He grew up in Long Island and graduated from the University of California, Berkeley where he majored in nuclear engineering.

Cohen and World Sports Exchange have been featured in The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post and on CNBC, HBO Real Sports, 60 Minutes, and ESPN.

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