Oddsmaker.com confiscated over $186,000 from its own players in the last two months. See all news on this sportsbook here: http://www.sportsbookreview.com/sb. MyBookie Sportsbook & Casino is the top Online Sports Betting destination in the world created to cater all type of bettors. As a fully licensed online betting site, we provide customers a qualified and professional service complete with betting odds and lines on all major sports leagues around the world.

2021 THE PLAYERS Championship Odds

THE PLAYERS Championship - Betting Resources

  • Date: March 11-14, 2021
  • Venue: TPC Sawgrass
  • Location: Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
  • Defending Champion: Rory McIlroy

Odds to Win 2021 THE PLAYERS Championship

Odds To Win 2021 THE PLAYERS Championship (3/11/21)
GolferAmericanFractional
Dustin Johnson+120012/1
Bryson Dechambeau+130013/1
Rory McIlroy+130013/1
Jon Rahm+150015/1
Justin Thomas+160016/1
Collin Morikawa+200020/1
Webb Simpson+200020/1
Xander Schauffele+200020/1
Patrick Cantlay+240024/1
Viktor Hovland+240024/1
Jordan Spieth+290029/1
Tony Finau+290029/1
Tyrrell Hatton+330033/1
Hideki Matsuyama+360036/1
Tommy Fleetwood+360036/1
Scottie Scheffler+370037/1
Patrick Reed+390039/1
Daniel Berger+400040/1
Matthew Fitzpatrick+470047/1
Paul Casey+470047/1
Sung-Jae Im+470047/1
Jason Day+480048/1
Joaquin Niemann+500050/1
Cameron Smith+650065/1
Will Zalatoris+650065/1
Adam Scott+700070/1
Louis Oosthuizen+700070/1
Christiaan Bezuidenhout+800080/1
Abraham Ancer+850085/1
Lee Westwood+850085/1
Max Homa+850085/1
Sergio Garcia+850085/1
Billy Horschel+950095/1
Corey Conners+950095/1
Harris English+950095/1
Jason Kokrak+950095/1
Justin Rose+11000110/1
Lanto Griffin+11000110/1
Russell Henley+11000110/1
Francesco Molinari+13000130/1
Kevin Na+13000130/1
Sam Burns+13000130/1
Si Woo Kim+13000130/1
Branden Grace+15000150/1
Cameron Davis+15000150/1
Cameron Tringale+15000150/1
Carlos Ortiz+15000150/1
Chris Kirk+15000150/1
Doug Ghim+15000150/1
Ian Poulter+15000150/1
Keegan Bradley+15000150/1
Kevin Kisner+15000150/1
Marc Leishman+15000150/1
Matt Kuchar+15000150/1
Rickie Fowler+15000150/1
Ryan Palmer+15000150/1
Shane Lowry+15000150/1
Bubba Watson+16000160/1
Alex Noren+18000180/1
Andrew Putnam+18000180/1
Brendon Todd+18000180/1
Brian Harman+18000180/1
Byeong-Hun An+18000180/1
Sebastian Munoz+18000180/1
Talor Gooch+18000180/1
Wyndham Clark+18000180/1
Jhonattan Vegas+19000190/1
Cameron Champ+22000220/1
Charley Hoffman+22000220/1
Emiliano Grillo+22000220/1
Gary Woodland+22000220/1
Henrik Norlander+22000220/1
Kevin Streelman+22000220/1
Mackenzie Hughes+22000220/1
Maverick McNealy+22000220/1
Phil Mickelson+22000220/1
Robert MacIntyre+22000220/1
Victor Perez+22000220/1
Bernd Wiesberger+24000240/1
Brendan Steele+24000240/1
Chez Reavie+24000240/1
Harold Varner+24000240/1
Henrik Stenson+24000240/1
Luke List+24000240/1
Matt Jones+24000240/1
Matthew NeSmith+24000240/1
Richy Werenski+24000240/1
Russell Knox+24000240/1
Ryan Moore+24000240/1
Zach Johnson+24000240/1
Kyle Stanley+27000270/1
Martin Laird+27000270/1
Charles Howell+30000300/1
Danny Willett+30000300/1
Dylan Frittelli+30000300/1
J.T. Poston+30000300/1
James Hahn+30000300/1
Kyoung-Hoon Lee+30000300/1
Lucas Glover+30000300/1
Patrick Rodgers+30000300/1
Keith Mitchell+32000320/1
Aaron Wise+35000350/1
Adam Hadwin+35000350/1
Adam Long+35000350/1
Brandt Snedeker+35000350/1
C.T. Pan+35000350/1
Doc Redman+35000350/1
Joel Dahmen+35000350/1
Michael Thompson+35000350/1
Nate Lashley+35000350/1
Nick Taylor+35000350/1
Peter Malnati+35000350/1
Rory Sabbatini+35000350/1
Scott Piercy+35000350/1
Sepp Straka+35000350/1
Tom Hoge+35000350/1
Tom Lewis+35000350/1
Andrew Landry+42000420/1
Mark Hubbard+44000440/1
Adam Schenk+45000450/1
Danny Lee+45000450/1
Denny McCarthy+45000450/1
Graeme McDowell+45000450/1
Hudson Swafford+45000450/1
Pat Perez+45000450/1
Sam Ryder+45000450/1
Scott Stallings+45000450/1
Stewart Cink+45000450/1
Vaughn Taylor+45000450/1
Anirban Lahiri+50000500/1
Harry Higgs+50000500/1
Jason Dufner+50000500/1
Scott Brown+50000500/1
Austin Cook+65000650/1
Beau Hossler+65000650/1
Bo Hoag+65000650/1
Brian Gay+65000650/1
Brian Stuard+65000650/1
Brice Garnett+65000650/1
Robby Shelton+65000650/1
Robert Streb+65000650/1
Ryan Armour+65000650/1
Sung-Hoon Kang+65000650/1
Troy Merritt+65000650/1
Tyler Duncan+65000650/1
Tyler McCumber+65000650/1
XinJun Zhang+65000650/1
Jim Herman+90000900/1
Jerry Kelly+1000001000/1
Jimmy Walker+1000001000/1
Scott Harrington+1000001000/1

Updated Mon, Mar. 8, 12:15 PM ET - Odds Provided by FanDuel - Subject to Change

  • Where to Bet:
Oddsmaker

How To Read the Golf Futures Odds Market

The 'Odds to Win' wager in golf is very simple to understand. Put simply, you just need to select the golfer that will capture the victory. Select any of the golfers in the tournament and your payout for the bet will depend on the odds given at the time of the wager. Plus, you can bet online with legal US sportsbooks up until the event begins. There may even be some in-game wagers.

To figure out your Win Amount, take the odds and multiply by the amount wagered. Ex. Jason Day (10/1) - Jason Day is listed as a 10/1 betting choice. If you wager $100 on Day to win the event and he comes in first, then you would win $1,000 (5 ÷ 2 x 100). You would collect $1,100, which includes your win and stake ($100).

What does the FIELD mean? Many golf tournaments will include a betting selection called the Field. This bet consists of all golfers not listed in the 'Odds to Win.' Most races have a set number of golfers but it’s rare to see oddsmakers put a price on every golfer that will tee off. Golfers that are given the least opportunity to win the tournament will be grouped into the 'Field' odds and paid out accordingly if they win.

2021 Golf Major Schedule

2021 Masters Tournament

  • Date: April 8 to April 11
  • Venue: Augusta National Golf Club
  • Location: Augusta, Georgia
  • Futures Market: Odds to win 2021 Masters
How

2021 PGA Championship

  • Date: May 20 to May 23
  • Venue: Kiawah Island Resort (Ocean)
  • Location: Kiawah Island, South Carolina
  • Futures Market: Odds to win 2021 PGA Championship

2021 U.S. Open

  • Date: June 17 to June 20
  • Venue: Torrey Pines South
  • Location: La Jolla, California
  • Futures Market: Odds to win 2021 U.S. Open

2021 The Open Championship

  • Date: July 15 to July 18
  • Venue: Royal St. George's Golf Club
  • Location: Kent, England
  • Futures Market: Odds to win 2021 British Open

Oddsmaker is a scam book that has a long history of dishonesty and outright theft. Oddsmaker is the perfect example of how criminals can rebrand and continually rip off players in an unregulated environment. Oddsmaker.ag, formerly Oddsmakers.com is in no way a legitimate online sportsbook. Their parent company, FutureBet Systems has been running scams against gamblers since 1998. FutureBet has a large network of sites, several hundred, all facades in attempts to steal bankrolls from bettors.

Oddsmaker.com

Last updated: February 2021

Two Way Street

Unfortunately, if it were not for the affiliates promoting and profiting off this theft, there would likely be no FutureBet/Oddsmaker. Affiliates promoting Oddsmaker are doing quite well. Often times, they are making several hundred dollars per deposit for each player they refer. The affiliates promoting them will give Oddsmaker an A+ review and will recommend them to new sports bettors. Of course, it is easy to pay your affiliates well, when you are stealing every dollar your customers deposit. Are these affiliates just ignorant to OddsMaker’s scam? I wish that were the case. In mostly all cases, they are well aware. These affiliates are really the ones responsible for keeping the crooks at Oddsmaker in business. The affiliate portal used by FutureBet/Oddsmaker is www.referincome.com and if you check out their site, their program is quite lucrative. Once again, all of this is made possible by the deliberate theft of depositing players’ funds.

Sleek but Sleazy

Com

A visit to Oddsmaker’s site www.oddsmaker.ag, would make one think they are a large legitimate online bookmaker. Their interface, the games they offer and the overall look would suggest Oddsmaker is great for gamblers who want to be able to bet sports, play poker, and bet at a casino. Obviously, this is not the case. They even try to entice players with a 100% sign up bonus, weekly reloads, and a 15% refer a friend bonus. Oddsmaker matches your first deposit, seemingly regardless of the amount. Seems too good to be true? Yes, it is. These types of outlandish claims are how Oddsmaker sucks in uninformed bettors. Your account can have $30,000 in it but it might as well be monopoly money. Oddsmaker has no respect for your bankroll or your rights.

Most sportsbook watch dog sites such as SportsbookReview.com have Oddsmaker listed under the F rating or note it as a scam book. A quick search on SBR, for “Oddsmaker” will uncover dozens of complaints going back to 2007. Just this past February, Oddsmaker stole 45,000 from a recreational sports bettor[1]. What was his crime, you may ask? He simply, threatened to contact an attorney after they ignored his emails and continued to hold his balance hostage. SBR took a phone call from the man, who seemed completely distraught. The man is deep in debt and his life savings are stuck in Oddsmaker, with no hope of getting it back. Of course, attempts to contact Oddsmaker have gone unanswered and they are silent on the issue, what a shame.

Hard Numbers

Oddsmaker/Futurebet Systems is continually rebranding and looking for more players to scam. They confiscated $200,000 from players, whose only crime according to Oddsmaker was being part of a betting syndicate[2]. Oddsmaker spends about a million a year marketing their scam operation, which is of course funded by player deposits they receive and then never payout.

As far as a physical base of operations, Oddsmaker is an incorporated company in the Philippines. At this location, they operate their customer support center, including their live chat and phone service. They also have marketing offices out of Quebec and a server based in Canada. Oddsmaker claims they are licensed by the Government of Curacao Netherlands Antilles. SportsBookReview.com and other watch dog sites have proven this is not the case. Their license expired in September of 2011, yet on their website, they still claim they are regulated and are meeting the standards of their gaming sub-license.

In the mid 2000s, FutureBet began licensing their “brand” for players to invest in. This resulted in a business plan, which only benefitted Futurebet and left both the licensees and customers out in the cold. FutureBet charged a licensee standard $30,000 fee for building a FutureBet website. In addition, they had royalties on all profits, 30% on sports revenue and 40% on poker. They then never paid winners, nor did they pay licensees. Many licensees were good people, who simply just didn’t know FutureBet were just criminals. Many used their own money to pay out players when FutureBet was making up excuses. This left players and site owners at the mercy of FutureBet, who of course, ultimately never paid up.

Oddsmaker.com

A high profile example of this is in 2006, an OnGame network site called Pokes Poker was licensed by FutureBet. Unlike many other network sites at the time, FutureBet, not the OnGame network handled the cash outs. Overall, FutureBet is estimated to have stolen 1 million dollars from poker players through PokesPoker. There have been many threads over the years bringing light to this subject[3], and an ex-exployee of the company even came out and told his story in an expose of the sites business practices[4]. FutureBet, kept the money of course and to this date have not paid players. No one is completely sure how much these crooks stole from bettors since their inception. By most accounts, FutureBet has stolen at least $5 million from bettors across the world.

Continuously Rebranding

FutureBet and Oddsmaker have continuously rebranded themselves in efforts to find new groups of people to run their scams on. They’ve tried to distance themselves from the FutureBet name and have operated under many different aliases. These include but are not limited to: GDI Software Services, Steel Head Games, New Wave Marketing, and JP Gateway. Recently, they were known as IGaming Software (IGS) and in 2010 they once again rebranded as GameTech Solutions.

The FutureBet/Oddsmaker network has over 100 sites around the web, all taking deposits but never paying out. The most notable online sportsbooks are www.oddsmaker.ag and www.betonusa.ag. They also run a Merge Network online poker room called, Felt Stars, at www.feltstars.eu . Needless to say, these all should be avoided. For a more expansive list of over hundreds of sites, check out Casinomeister’s list of FutureBet related online sportsbooks and casinos[5].

Final Thoughts

Oddsmakers Nfl

Oddsmaker should not even be called an online sportsbook because that gives the criminals that run the outfit way too much credit. They are simply extortionists. Unfortunately, they are still promoted by many affiliates and until that stops they will continue to scam bettors. As always, research each bookmaker before you deposit. Just a few minutes of searching on Google would have likely saved thousands of bettors from depositing on Oddsmaker, don’t make the same mistake.

References

Http://oddsmaker.com

[1]Oddsmaker steal $45000 from US sports bettor – Reported on the SBR forums.
[2]Oddsmaker’s steal funds referencing professional bettors or betting syndicates as the reason – News report by SportsbookReview.
[3]FutureBet Pokes Poker complaint thread – Large collection of complaints on the 2+2 forum.
[4]Former FutureBet employee speaks out – Another 2+2 thread in which an ex employee reveals more about the shady goings on at FutureBet.
[5]Full list of known FutueBet sites – Regularly updated list maintained by the guys at CasinoMeister.