Jay Kornegay hosts Thanksgiving

blueline

EOG Master

Kornegay gives his Thanksgiving guests a chance to win money on NFL parlays​



Jenga’s wooden blocks and Balderdash’s intentionally deceptive definitions began boring Jay Kornegay, a Balderdash expert, around Thanksgiving 2010.

A confluence of events led the executive vice president of the Westgate SuperBook to concoct a new holiday tradition, a novel way to enjoy time with friends and family, injecting excitement into the occasion.

On Wednesday, he again will visit the sportsbook at the nearby Red Rock casino. He’ll purchase a potpourri of parlay tickets that use every angle of the day’s NFL action.

Kornegay tries to keep the games’ rotation numbers organized. A teller might try to help, but it can be confusing. After making several wagers, if a line has formed, he will return to its rear to keep the patrons moving.

“Don’t want to be that guy,” he says, “holding up the window.”


He buys $5, $10 and $20 tickets, each with three to six or so legs. Kornegay spends about $175, a pittance to avoid the game closet or deck of cards in the drawer.

He crumples each into a ball and plops them into a hat. Turkey-day visitors pluck two or three. Everyone tracks everyone’s action, adding appeal to the NFL tripleheader.

“I’m now able to watch football,” Kornegay laughs, “instead of playing board games.”

ALWAYS THE LIONS

The Thanksgiving games see the Bears giving three points at Detroit, the Raiders -5.5 at Dallas and the Bills -1.5 at New Orleans.

On the SuperBook’s summer advance list of every game on the NFL schedule, it included respective totals of 45, 53 and 52 points on the aforementioned contests. We use those to show how Kornegay might select the tickets.


For one, he will pick a side and either over or under for all three games. A six-way parlay. He’ll make all opposite selections for another six-leg ticket. The $5 specials.

He’ll pick a side in the first game, an over or under in the second and a side in the third. Those three-way versions might cost $10. He’ll construct two-way parlays for $20 that pay $72.

Money-line options involve no points, picking teams to win outright.

The Bears are -145 (risk $145 to win $100, if solo) to beat the Lions, the Cowboys -210 over the Raiders and the Bills -130 over the Saints. If all three favorites just win, such a $20 ticket returns $68.26.

A $20 ducat on every underdog winning — the Lions at about +125, Raiders +190 and Saints +110 — would return $254.05. The combinations can seem endless.



“I spread it around,” says Kornegay, 58. “No strategy. Just random picks — what the lottery might call quick-picks — scattered all over the board. You never know what you’re going to get.”

He tries to limit the early game to just a few to guard against late arrivals getting stuck with a selection that has already lost.

“That’s the downside,” he says. “Like, ‘Oh, thanks. I’ve got the Lions +10.’ It’s always the Lions, too.”

The Lions have played on every Thanksgiving since it became an NFL institution in 1967. They lost 11 times in a recent 12-year run.

“Most of the tickets will lose,” says

Kornegay, “but there can still be a couple of live ones going into the late game. Everybody roots for them. There’s still interest going into the late game.”


If the Bills and Saints are tied 24-24 late, Kornegay’s might be the hottest, noisiest spot on his block.

He recommends the holiday twist to those in nascent legal sports-betting burgs, such as Chicago and neighboring states, that might be tiring of Jenga and other trivial pursuits.

“I’ve had others who have taken it up and done it for their households,’’ he says. ‘‘They think it’s fun, and it is fun.”

A PAYDAY

A friend had said something off the cuff, about how having a bet on a game would have made it more interesting to watch.


The sports-wagering business had been Kornegay’s career for more than 20 years at that point, and he might have become a bit anesthetized to some of its allure.

About five years earlier, in 2006, the NFL introduced a third Thanksgiving game. A holiday tripleheader. Kornegay put it all together.

Voila!

From the start, the balled-up tickets were a hit. Friends and relatives stroll inside Casa Kornegay and paw into the hat. Probably seven of the last 10 holidays have produced winners, including a run of six in a row.

Someone won $600. A Kornegay niece hit the jackpot, a ticket that paid more than a grand, a few years ago.

Thanks, Uncle Jay!

“I can’t remember the game,” he says. “It was close, real close. She needed a total to go over in the very last game. She hung on, and it went over at the end. Hilarious. She was so excited. It was a payday.”

That fortunate niece lived with family in California and now resides in Colorado, which has legal sports betting. She continues the tradition in the Centennial State.

Jay and wife, Pam, who have an adult daughter and son, usually welcome six to eight visitors to their home. I try to inquire when they might open their doors.

Especially to someone he has known for nearly 20 years, who might arrive cradling an exquisite bottle of Papa’s Pilar limited-edition platinum blonde rum?

“Oh,” he laughs, “about 9:30 in the morning.”

I think he thinks that first knock on his door won’t be mine.
 

John Kelly

Born Gambler
Staff member
Do you feel safer in CR or Chicago. No fence sitting, yea or nea will spare your keyboard wear.

Safer in Chicago.

The language barrier here in CR could pose problems.

Plus, a big white guy from the States wearing shorts and white socks is a target for the hooligans here in Costa Rica.

Advice heard from a fellow American just the other day: Carry only $20 with you and one credit card.
 
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railbird

EOG Master
i hung out with jay at the imperial palace every day back in 1990, would talk tennis at the counter with him. He was only book in town that had Hawaii football halftimes back then, only book that had usopen tennis round of 16 back then.
 

John Kelly

Born Gambler
Staff member
8600 south state?
Berwyn?
Pilsen?

is anyone surprised?

I feel more unsafe walking around vegas

After being born at Jackson Park Hospital in the winter of 1963, my mother and father took me home to the 8300 block of South Peoria.

My old house is now in the gang-infested Gresham neighborhood on the notorious south side of Chicago.

Had my family stayed in the 'hood, I would have attended Simeon High School.

I would have been a senior in high school when star basketball player Ben Wilson was a freshman.

Ben was senselessly shot down the day before his senior basketball season at Simeon in 1984.

The best hoopster produced at Simeon High School was Derrick Rose, who was the last player to ever wear Ben's #25 jersey.

Other notable Simeon alums: Nick Anderson, Jabari Parker, Kendrick Nunn and Talen Horton-Tucker.

I attended Thornwood High School in the late 1970's and I was cut during tryouts for the basketball team in both my freshmen and sophomore years.

Thornwood High was a brand-new high school in the 1970's.

it was located in the lily-white suburb of South Holland, Illinois.
 
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blueline

EOG Master
Matt Youman'sthanksgiving plan

wake up around the 4th quarter of game 1
watch the end of the game
head to McDonalds for 2 mcribs
 

railbird

EOG Master
After being born at Jackson Park Hospital in the winter of 1963, my mother and father took me home to the 8300 block of South Peoria.

My old house is now in the gang-infested Gresham neighborhood on the notorious south side of Chicago.

Had my family stayed in the 'hood, I would have attended Simeon High School.

I would have been a senior in high school when star basketball player Ben Wilson was a freshman.

Ben was senselessly shot down the day before his senior basketball season at Simeon in 1984.

The best hoopster produced at Simeon High School was Derrick Rose, who was the last player to ever wear Ben's #25 jersey.

Other notable Simeon alums: Nick Anderson, Jabari Parker, Kendrick Nunn and Talen Horton-Tucker.

I attended Thornwood High School in the late 1970's and I was cut during tryouts for the basketball team in both my freshmen and sophomore years.

Thornwood High was a brand-new high school in the 1970's.

it was located in the lily-white suburb of South Holland, Illinois.
you would have made the cut at most american high schools, what age did you peak as a basketball player, i played my best tennis at age 38
 

John Kelly

Born Gambler
Staff member
you would have made the cut at most american high schools, what age did you peak as a basketball player, i played my best tennis at age 38

I was a late bloomer, too.

My hoop game was never based on athleticism so I did not decline as fast as most players do.

Standstill shooters can play a long time.

My head-and-shoulder move is now more of an eyebrow fake as the years pass by.
 
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