Sports
Can A.I. Help Casinos Cut Down on Problem Gambling?
Since beginning in 2018, Mindway has contracted its companies to seven Danish operators, two every in Germany and the Netherlands, one world operator and a U.S. sports-gambling operator, Mr. Kjærgaard stated. The web playing giants Flutter Leisure and Entain have each partnered with Mindway as nicely, based on the businesses’ annual stories.
Since this know-how is so new and there’s no regulatory physique setting a normal, Mindway and related firms are, for now, basically on their very own. “We wished to have the ability to say to you, to anyone else — operators, clearly — that not solely do we offer this scientific-based software program, however we additionally need to have a 3rd occasion to check the validation of what we do,” Mr. Kjærgaard stated. “However it’s a paradox that there’s no particular necessities which I can ask my group to satisfy.”
At present, Mindway’s know-how lives largely in on-line playing. Operators connect Mindway’s GameScanner system to their portal, and it analyzes not solely particular person dangers, however whole dangers for the system. Making use of that degree of oversight to in-person playing is way more troublesome.
One instance of a measure of success may be present in Macau. On line casino operators there use hidden cameras and facial-recognition know-how to trace gamblers’ betting conduct, in addition to poker chips enabled with radio-frequency-identification know-how and sensors on baccarat tables. This knowledge then heads to a central database the place a participant’s efficiency is tracked and monitored for interplayer collusion.
This, Mr. Kjærgaard stated, is the long run: The monetary incentives will drive success. “Sensible tables” and efforts to deal with cash laundering and monetary rules might ultimately present the information that can supercharge the appliance of A.I. to in-person playing.
(It additionally highlights one other problem in making use of A.I. to playing: cultural variations. In Chinese language casinos, Ms. Abarbanel stated, the gamers are used to this degree of monitoring; not so in the US.)
A.I. would definitely work for casinos when it got here to advertising and marketing, promotions and game-suggestion, Mr. Feldman stated, however regardless of progress in recent times, he stays skeptical of its use to assist drawback gamblers. The applying of such a instrument could also be higher used personally as a substitute of broadly, he believes, very similar to the “Your spending is 25 p.c larger than final month” reminders that pop up in on-line banking accounts.
Sports
Giants' Malik Nabers faces backlash after he was spotted at concert following concussion diagnosis
It hasn’t taken long for New York Giants rookie Malik Nabers to show why he was one of the first wide receivers selected in the 2024 NFL Draft.
The No. 6 overall pick’s 35 catches through four games leads the league. But Sunday will mark the second consecutive game the star wideout will miss due to a head injury. On Friday, the Giants officially ruled Nabers out of New York’s Sunday night game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
Although Nabers has not been able to practice the past couple of weeks, he did recently spend some time enjoying a concert at the Giants’ home stadium in New Jersey.
A video surfaced on social media showing Nabers entering one of the stadium’s tunnels as security personnel held some concert attendees back.
Nabers was one of an estimated 60,000 fans who watched hip-hop star Travis Scott perform in support of his “Utopia” album in East Rutherford. “Utopia” became the bestselling rap album of 2023.
NFL GREAT BELIEVES PANIC IN JETS’ ORGANIZATION PLAYED A ROLE IN ROBERT SALEH’S FIRING
While it is unclear where exactly Nabers was on his road to recovery, loud music and bright lights can often worsen concussion symptoms. However, teams typically handle each concussion based on the unique circumstances and how a given player responds over days, weeks or even months.
Nabers most recently appeared in a game in Week 4 when the Giants lost 20-15 to the Dallas Cowboys.
Giants head coach Brian Daboll was asked to share his thoughts on Nabers’ appearance at the concert. But the coach stopped short of divulging any details.
“I’ll keep that in house,” Daboll said.
Nabers has 386 receiving yards and three touchdowns so far this season.
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Sports
It's already do or die: What to watch when USC plays host to Penn State
The refrain felt frustratingly familiar. Here again, in the wake of another disappointing defeat, was the same rosy message from Lincoln Riley, reassuring the public that USC was really just a few plays, a few stops, a few inches away from where its coach wanted them to be.
It’s all a matter of perspective. Still, however close USC might have come, however “battle-tested” it might now be, the harsh reality is Riley has lost seven of his last 12 as the Trojans coach. That’s equivalent to the worst 12-game stretch of Clay Helton’s tenure as USC’s coach.
With No. 4 Penn State on tap Saturday at the Coliseum, the Trojans now find themselves playing for their College Football Playoff lives in mid-October, with zero room for error.
“I promise you,” Riley said this week, “we’re still a very confident team. This isn’t some team that has two losses where we got our ass kicked. No, that’s not the case. We know what we’re capable of.”
Miller Moss had a lot of time to consider that subject on the long flight home from Minneapolis on Oct. 5.
“The most important thing for us right now,” the quarterback said, “is everything we stood for, we worked for, all the messages we said to the team that said what we were about, when you face adversity like this, that’s when that gets tested the most.”
Coming up, against Penn State this weekend, is that fork-in-the-road moment.
“We have two pretty clear choices,” Moss continued. “Double down on who we are and get closer as a team and go forward with the great opportunity we have this weekend, or let this affect us and deter us from what we ultimately want to do.”
We should, by Saturday night, have a much better idea which path the Trojans have chosen.
Sports
Football and CBD: A complicated relationship
A couple of years ago, Hannah Deacon took a call from a football agent.
Deacon, who had no background in football, was surprised. What she did have, however, was a deep knowledge of cannabidiol (CBD), a legalised chemical extracted from cannabis — and this is what the agent wanted to talk to her about. Some of his clients were interested in starting a company selling CBD, which promises to help users overcome stress and anxiety, and he wanted her advice.
Deacon was appalled. It was her impression that the group were trying to make a quick buck out of something they did not understand. She refused to get involved.
“They weren’t passionate about it,” Deacon tells The Athletic. “These are patients’ lives we’re talking about…”
The incident was instructive, both about the controversy attached to discussions around CBD and how football, and footballers, have become one of its biggest marketplaces.
In the UK, former footballers have been at the forefront of marketing CBD, particularly on social media. Former Premier League players such as Matthew Le Tissier, John Hartson, Paul Merson, John Aldridge and Dean Windass all say it has helped transform their lives; from a more recent vintage, the ex-England and Liverpool goalkeeper Chris Kirkland is also a strong advocate. Former England international David Beckham, meanwhile, had a minority stake in the cannabinoid product firm Cel AI before selling in February.
In many ways, football is an obvious marketplace for CBD. Former professionals habitually complain of managing pain to some degree because of old injuries, while many have spoken about the mental challenges that come when they no longer have the adrenaline rush of matches that have defined their lives for so long.
Anthony Fowler, the former boxer and cousin of ex-Liverpool and England striker Robbie Fowler, runs Supreme CBD, a company which lists Le Tissier, Merson, Kirkland and Windass as ambassadors. He says former footballers are also dealing with the cold reality that they no longer have their clubs around to solve their aches and pains.
“Footballers get anxiety, like anyone else — arguably more because of the public pressure they’re facing,” he tells The Athletic.
Although Fowler thinks CBD could also help active players with injury prevention, pointing to evidence that it can ease inflammation, active footballers have been less willing to openly talk about any experiences they may have had with CBD — despite the fact it was taken off the banned substance list by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), as well as United Kingdom Anti-Doping (UKAD), in 2018.
According to one football agent, who would like to remain anonymous to protect the identity of his clients, the fact that cannabis remains prohibited explains why current players are reluctant to admit trying it. Although it seems unlikely CBD will get banned again, if it did, that player’s reputation could be damaged by association. “There isn’t enough distance yet since coming off the banned list,” says the agent.
CBD is not a new product. It is an active ingredient in cannabis and derived either from the hemp plant or created artificially in a laboratory. As opposed to tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), another part of the cannabis plant, it does not create a ‘high’ and is also non-addictive.
CBD’s medicinal use, largely to treat minor pain or ease anxiety, can be traced to Central Asia, where a study in the journal Science Advances recently suggested it formed part of burial rituals as early as 750 BC.
More recently, CBD has become a commercialised product, sold on the open market usually in the form of gummies — small sweets that can be chewed — capsules or oil infused with CBD, which can be applied to the tongue. Vapes, creams and even bath bombs containing CBD are also available.
Its users can be evangelical about what they believe it has done for them. Aldridge, the former Liverpool and Republic of Ireland striker, insists he is sleeping better than ever since using CBD but a significant amount of his social media timeline involves responses to accusations that he is only promoting the product due to alleged financial incentives coming his way. Aldridge is an ambassador for Supreme CBD.
In September, Aldridge described himself on X as a “man of integrity” insisting he wouldn’t advise others if it didn’t work. “Thousands of people” were now using it according to Aldridge, who claimed they were getting “brilliant results”.
Aldridge told The Athletic that he had encouraged family and friends to try CBD oil, which has done “wonders” for his life. He says he has struggled for years with carpal tunnel syndrome (a condition that creates numbness in the wrist) as well as back inflammation, but since using CBD he has had fewer problems.
“A lot of people are cynical about it, possibly because of its connection with cannabis,” Aldridge says. “It’s done me no harm whatsoever. I wake up in a much better mood. It agrees with me.”
There are, indeed, many sceptics. A study led by the University of Bath this year found there was “no evidence” that CBD reduced chronic pain, describing it as a “waste of money and potentially harmful to health”.
Sixteen people were involved in this research and the Bath researchers concluded CBD was “no better than a placebo at relieving pain”.
Deacon suggests this is where the conversation about CBD gets confused. She says that while there is anecdotal evidence from some users that CBD can help with mild pain depending on the dosage, chronic pain is a different matter, a problem that is more likely to be managed by controlled use of THC.
According to Deacon, the findings relating to CBD would be different if an assessment was instead made about how it affects stress and anxiety. “Good CBD can have a positive impact on the lives of some people,” she insists.
Deacon’s experience with cannabis is deeply personal. It began when her son, Alfie, suffered from an epileptic seizure at eight months old. Over the next six years, as she became his full-time carer and tried to save his life, they moved from the south of England to the Netherlands, where Alfie started using prescriptive cannabis in an attempt to bring his condition under control. He now plays a fully active role in school and has not had a fit for more than four years.
Having campaigned in the UK to increase awareness about the potential benefits of cannabis, she has since worked with doctors and pharmacies.
“Like any industry, there are responsible companies and less responsible companies,” Deacon explains. “When it comes to the production of CBD, some of the less responsible ones are accused of not paying attention to signposting exactly what is in a product that includes too much THC. So I can understand why current footballers would be reluctant to use it generally.”
Deacon says she does not work with any CBD companies. She stresses the conversation around the compound in football remains controversial because of concerns about its potential risks, quality control and labelling accuracy.
What is undeniable is that CBD is now big business. In 2019, an article in the New York Times suggested that in the United States alone, the CBD industry was projected to be worth $16billion (£12bn) by 2025.
There have since been distribution challenges due to state laws but in 2021, a report commissioned by the Association for the Cannabinoid Industry found the UK’s CBD market had more than doubled in just two years and was now valued at £690m. By 2022, the UK stood as the second-largest consumer cannabinoid market in the world, behind the U.S.
The trigger for CBD going mainstream came in 2018, when the United States passed the Farm Bill under federal law, removing hemp (cannabis with no more than 0.3 per cent of THC) from a list of controlled substances.
Two years later, the Court of Justice of the European Union concluded that CBD should not be considered a narcotic drug and in 2022, CBD was classified as a ‘novel food’ by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and the UK Food Standards Agency (FSA). This created new opportunities for entrepreneurs willing to speculate in an emerging market.
One of them was Anthony Fowler, who won middleweight gold at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. He launched Supreme CBD, which has recently relocated to a bigger site in Liverpool due to its product’s popularity.
Fowler tells The Athletic that in 2018, while he was still boxing, another CBD company approached him about sponsorship but he was nervous because rule changes had only recently come into place. Reassured, he used it for the first time after suffering from jaw pain following a sparring session in the ring. “It was faster than morphine,” he says.
Fowler launched Supreme CBD in 2020 and says he gave up on boxing because of the scale of interest, with 120,000 potential customers now on the company’s database. Jade Jones, Britain’s Olympic champion taekwondo fighter, is another sportsperson listed as a client on its website.
Fowler claims Supreme CBD’s popularity comes down to pricing, the fact that it has the strongest strain of CBD, imported from Las Vegas, and that his product “has no side-effects. It just makes people feel better”.
He is adamant that he has not targeted the football market, even though former footballers are among his product’s most vocal advocates.
Their promotion has caused its own controversy. In February, Supreme CBD was found to have breached UK Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) rules by not making clear that Le Tissier and Hartson were being rewarded for their posts and for making banned medical claims.
Le Tissier, who acknowledged to the ASA that he receives commission on CBD products sold with his personalised online code, and Hartson, who said Supreme CBD paid him a small amount for the use of his social media platforms but that he was no longer working with the company, said they would clearly label any future posts as marketing material, as did Fowler.
Kirkland, an ambassador for Supreme CBD, insists he had taken his time before drawing any conclusions about what their products could do for him, before using social media to highlight what he had found.
In 2022, Kirkland, who retired in 2016, said in an interview with London newspaper The Times that he was over the worst of an addiction to painkillers that almost destroyed his life, leading to him contemplating suicide.
He explained to The Athletic that he is open to paid promotional work for CBD products, but only if they have affected him positively. He says they have helped treat anxiety. “I’d only ever recommend something that has improved the quality of my life,” he says. “I’ve recommended CBD to friends and family and they’ve had similar experiences to me. It’s something I know works.”
Like Aldridge, he insists, “I have never slept so well in my life,” though since turning to Supreme CBD two and a half years ago, he has also committed himself to an exercise regimen, including ice therapy. “CBD is just one of the things that has made me feel better,” he adds.
Kirkland says he can go weeks without using CBD but sometimes, he will take four to five gummies a day before applying oil to his tongue at night. He has also suggested on social media that CBD has helped ease some of the back problems that led to his painkiller addiction.
CBD has many advocates but there is still unease around its use, especially among sportspeople.
When invited to comment by The Athletic about why CBD was removed from the banned list in 2018, WADA said that following “consultation with scientific, medical and anti-doping experts, including a review of medical and scientific evidence, it was determined that CBD did not satisfy two of three key criteria”.
This related to questions about whether it could 1) enhance sporting performance, 2) represent an actual or potential health risk to the athlete or 3) violate the spirit of the sport. WADA reviews its list of banned substances annually and can add to that list at any time, in exceptional circumstances.
In the UK, at least, CBD’s cause has arguably not been helped by some of its higher-profile advocates backing other, more controversial causes. Le Tissier, one of the earliest champions of CBD’s benefits, has been largely ostracised from football after amplifying a wide range of conspiracy theories online, including denying the war in Ukraine. Fowler, meanwhile, has been a vocal critic of the Covid-19 vaccination programme.
One psychologist with a background in medical science, who spoke to The Athletic on condition of anonymity in the interests of client confidentiality, believes CBD tends to be attractive to people who are already inclined to be anti-establishment and, therefore, wary of the big pharmaceutical companies.
“The danger is people start putting faith in that instead of traditional research-based evidence, which isn’t sexy and doesn’t sell,” they said. “You’ve got chronic pain? The option is to go on a 16-day management course. Alternatively, you can take these ‘magic drops’ that are new to the market that the authorities don’t really want you to know about.”
Separately, there are concerns over regulation — or a lack of it. “There are a lot of people out there doing the market harm,” Dom Day, a former rugby union player who set up a CBD company, FourFive, with fellow ex-pro George Kruis, told Forbes in 2020. “There’s a lot of press about companies that have way too high THC levels and too low CBD levels.”
There are broader worries about what happens until the industry reaches a point where there is more control. The psychologist contacted by The Athletic describes this period as being like “the Wild West”, referencing examples of CBD companies that are known for putting very low amounts of CBD, or possibly even none, in the product.
“What you don’t want is people putting their faith into something that doesn’t work at the expense of something that really does,” the psychologist added. “You combine that with a lack of regulation, and there’s a problem.”
In 2023, the FSA in the UK attempted to get a grip on the industry by cutting the recommended daily intake of CBD for adults to 10mg. Yet Fowler is confident that regulation will not harm the growth of his business. He believes that greater education on the benefits of CBD will encourage more people to try it.
If that happens, maybe an active footballer will be among them — and should one emerge as an advocate, perhaps we will discover that interest in CBD has not yet peaked.
(Top photos: Getty; Chloe Knott — Danehouse, iStock; design: Dan Goldfarb)
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