‘Jeopardy!’ contestant’s massive payday breaks single-day record

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There is an interesting article about his wife at Heavy.com. She was on "Who wants to be a Millionaire" and won $28,000.

As far as his sports betting is concerned the article says he placed a wager for $75,000 that Ken Griffey Jr. would be inducted into the HOF with more than 80% of the vote. I assume it won but the story didnt say
 

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He understands the game theory behind what to wager which gives him a huge leg up in making money on the show. All of the other contestants on the show are way too risk averse in those spots.
 

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There is an interesting article about his wife at Heavy.com. She was on "Who wants to be a Millionaire" and won $28,000.

As far as his sports betting is concerned the article says he placed a wager for $75,000 that Ken Griffey Jr. would be inducted into the HOF with more than 80% of the vote. I assume it won but the story didnt say

Sounds kinda odd

75k on a prop ? What Vegas book takes that kind of action ?

28 k on millionaire is not one of the amounts you can win !
 

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I have no way to prove this but I believe the more Holzhauer plays the more information the staff who put together the categories learn his strength and weaknesses. They can devise topics where he is weakest at and load the board with them making it more likely that he will eventually lose. I'm sure Holzhauer knows this too and he can make adjustments by studying the areas where he is deficient for future games. They film five shows a day. It's got to be grueling. Ken Jennings says they film two days a week every other week. There is about a 3 month lag between filming and airing the shows. It's got to be weird. People see him in Las Vegas and he can't say anything. Also the studio audience has to sign an NDA. It is amazing how the results doesn't get out. I know two people who were on game shows. One was on Millionaire the other the Price is Right and Wheel of Fortune. One person won nothing the other crushed the Price is Right and Wheel of Fortune.
 
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My buddy was on wheel of fortune and won $25k. It was 4 or 5 months from taping the show to when it actually aired. If they found out he leaked the outcome he risked not getting his prize as they didn't pay out the prize until a few weeks after the show aired. I'm sure other game shows are pretty much doing the same thing.
 

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Sounds kinda odd

75k on a prop ? What Vegas book takes that kind of action ?

28 k on millionaire is not one of the amounts you can win !


The Millionaire amount was $28,800 to be precise. The video is on that article at heavy.com.

As far as his 75 k wager...I was wondering the same thing. Maybe he bet it offshore or at multiple places in Vegas
 

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I have no way to prove this but I believe the more Holzhauer plays the more information the staff who put together the categories learn his strength and weaknesses. They can devise topics where he is weakest at and load the board with them making it more likely that he will eventually lose. I'm sure Holzhauer knows this too and he can make adjustments by studying the areas where he is deficient for future games. They film five shows a day. It's got to be grueling. Ken Jennings says they film two days a week every other week. There is about a 3 month lag between filming and airing the shows. It's got to be weird. People see him in Las Vegas and he can't say anything. Also the studio audience has to sign an NDA. It is amazing how the results doesn't get out. I know two people who were on game shows. One was on Millionaire the other the Price is Right and Wheel of Fortune. One person won nothing the other crushed the Price is Right and Wheel of Fortune.

I think they want the guy to keep winning, has to be great for ratings !

If anything they'd customize the questions to his strengths
 

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Guessing that for Trebec's last show it will be Jennings vs this guy.
Hard not to be skeptical that this isn't all a setup.
 
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[h=1]James Holzhauer is a 'Jeopardy!' sensation. The pro-gambler is also a winning hand for Las Vegas[/h]
Who are Cher, Wayne Newton and Celine Dion?


Aside from being three people who have never been in James Holzhauer’s kitchen, they are also a trio of people who have never had a key to the Las Vegas Strip presented to them by Clark County officials. Unlike James Holzhauer, who received one Thursday.

Holzhauer is the current “Jeopardy!” phenomenon who has racked up more than $1.6 million in winnings since his first episode in early April. He’s made national news with his strategic wagering and aggressive style of attacking high-dollar-value clues early on the show. He is rapidly closing in on Ken Jennings — the Hank Aaron of “Jeopardy!” who holds the all-time record for most money won at $2.5 million over a 74-day run.


But it’s in Las Vegas where the spotlight seems to be brightest for the 35-year-old professional sports gambler, and the city appears to be treating him the way it treats any hot trending item — by capitalizing on him.


The key to the Las Vegas Strip has only been given out 27 times before, and recipients include Britney Spears, Tony Bennett and the Killers — though Clark County officials say it’s a tradition that only goes back a little more than a decade. Still, for Las Vegas, a city that is constantly remaking and reshaping itself, a decade might as well be an eon.


“This is something I would’ve bet heavily against if I had the opportunity,” Holzhauer said when asked if he’d ever have wagered one day he’d be handed a key to the Las Vegas Strip.

Wearing a Las Vegas Golden Knights hockey jersey, shorts and sunglasses, Holzhauer stood in front of the Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign, then posed for pictures with the giant key and shook fans' hands. They'd come to see the man who has largely dominated on the game show — only once coming close to losing by $18 to a man who appeared to mimic Holzhauer’s high-wager strategy.


Rebekah Niccolson, 36, managed to sidle up to him after he got the key and told him that she watched religiously every night and thought he was the greatest thing she’d ever seen on the show. She had an envelope for him that contained her father-in-law’s birthday, and she handed it to him in case he might want to make a wager using those numbers.


“I’m such a nerd,” she said after he smiled and took the envelope from her.


The city has been reaping the rewards of Holzhauer’s success — both in high-profile places and some other, less-known corners of the region.

The Golden Knights, which made a magical run at the Stanley Cup trophy, were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs last month, but the team managed to get Holzhauer to sound the air horn before one of their playoff games.


Eric Tosi, a vice president of communications for the team, said they also filmed some promotional spots with Holzhauer that will air when the next season starts in the fall. Holzhauer said the loss to the San Jose Sharks in seven games was “a gut punch.”


“There’s a lot of pride seeing him doing what he’s doing,” Tosi said. “It’s unbelievable and impressive what he’s doing on the show with the breadth of knowledge and how quick he is. It’s like watching Tiger Woods in his prime.”


Holzhauer has also been a boon for the local CBS affiliate.


Lisa Howfield, vice president and general manager for KLAS, said the ratings have spiked since Holzhauer has been on the air and that local advertisers are regularly trying to shoehorn their way into the 30-minute program. One of the advertisers, furniture store RC Willey, is running a spot congratulating Holzhauer on his run.


Holzhauer said he doesn’t feel like the local fame has made getting around difficult.


Yet.

“Until a month ago nobody (aside from sportsbook employees) recognized me in public,” he said in an email to the Los Angeles Times. “Now I'm getting used to some level of recognition, but thankfully it's not too much to handle and I can still get on with my day-to-day life.”


He has also begun spreading his winnings around town, too — though he was coy about whether that would include wagers at sports books, where he had made his living after moving to the city not long after graduating from the University of Illinois about 15 years ago.


Holzhauer said he’s given to the Las Vegas Library District, Ronald McDonald Home of Las Vegas and the Las Vegas Natural History Museum.


Marilyn Gillespie, executive director of the museum tucked away north of downtown, said half of the $10,000 donation would be used to help fund admission costs for students in low-income areas and half would cover costs for animal care.

The museum is a favorite spot for Holzhauer, his wife and daughter and is home to a variety of animals, including bamboo sharks, lizards and exotic insects such as hissing cockroaches.


Holzhauer’s ride doesn’t appear to have peaked just yet, either.


At the key ceremony, Holzhauer said he was surprised his run has gone as long as it has. “I thought I’d win a few episodes, but I did not expect this level of play.”

[FONT=&quot]He also has avoided mirroring Cliff Clavin, the character on “Cheers” who famously blew it on Final Jeopardy with the incorrect response “Who are 3 people who’ve never been in my kitchen?” Host Alex Trebek, playing himself, chuckled at Clavin before revealing the correct answer of Cary Grant, Joan Crawford and Tony Curtis.



[/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]Holzhauer laughed at the “Cheers” reference and confirmed no celebrities had, in fact, ever been in his kitchen.



[/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]“It did occur to me to bet everything in Final Jeopardy on my first episode — known as a ‘Cliff Clavin’ — since I could have set the single-day winnings record that way,” he said in the email to The Times.



[/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]As the gambler finished up a short interview with the local CBS station after getting the key to the Strip, a line of tourists — mostly from Europe — waited to take their picture in front of the Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas Sign. Few had any idea who Holzhauer was. One couple Googled the name on the back of his Golden Knights jersey and assumed he was Mark Stone, a right winger on the NHL team.


Holzhauer shook a few more hands and was heading back to his car with a group of people, when an Elvis impersonator in a white jumpsuit and dark shades saw the “Jeopardy!” star and pointed at him.


“You’re doing great, but I’m still the King,” he said.

https://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-james-holzhauer-jeopardy-vegas-20190503-story.html

[/FONT]
 

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I think they want the guy to keep winning, has to be great for ratings !

If anything they'd customize the questions to his strengths

Up to a point. If he keeps blowing out his opponents where the games aren't competitive viewers eventually tire of total dominance. I missed the game where he only won by $18. It was a player who mimicked his strategy.
 

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In the game he won by $18, he had a $6517 lead going into final jeopardy. The only way he could have lost was not betting enough and missing the last answer.
 

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Up to a point. If he keeps blowing out his opponents where the games aren't competitive viewers eventually tire of total dominance. I missed the game where he only won by $18. It was a player who mimicked his strategy.

I dont think that will matter when he gets close to the all time record many casual viewers will tune in to see whats going on. Especially with it making news evrywhere.
 

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In the game he won by $18, he had a $6517 lead going into final jeopardy. The only way he could have lost was not betting enough and missing the last answer.

I missed that show too, so he had it won going into the final question just by betting the right amount, correct ?

I read he won't be back on until 5/20 or something like that. They have some kind of special rounds scheduled. I won't watch that, I rarely even remember to watch James !

Watch the ratings sink like the Titanic until he's back. I still don't think he breaks the 74, but likely will become the all-time money leader pretty soon !

I can't believe he gets 75k down on baseball props either no matter how many outs he has. He sure isn't getting that down with maybe dead Tony !
 

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I rarely watch, flipped over and it's some teacher week...nope, flipped to MLB network
 

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There is a really good 18 minute interview with Holzhauer on Youtube where he goes in depth on his sports betting skills and knowledge.

I am not sure how to post the link but it is called: Jeopardy James One on One with Darren Rovell: full interview Action Network

Says he likes to bet futures and enjoys betting college football on Saturdays. Claims to have been 86ed from several Vegas casinos in the past
 

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