About the Book
A Post Hill Press Publication
Founded in 2013 by a team of seasoned entrepreneurs and book industry professionals, Post Hill Press has successfully published a wide spectrum of books, with a focus on the categories of pop culture, business, self-help, health, current events, memoirs, and political books. Our entrepreneurial spirit makes Post Hill Press a nimble publisher, willing and able to move quickly and take advantage of opportunities in the marketplace.
About the Author :
A Post Hill Press Author
Review :
"A unique, often riveting account of Jay Cohen's battle against a government bent on destroying his brainchild, the pioneering online sports book WSEX. With a supporting cast including future Chief Justice John Roberts and the most famous whale since Moby Dick, Odds Man Out is a cautionary tale for anyone who doubts that behind-the-scenes forces can decide who wins and who loses in our courts."--Kevin Cook, author of Titanic Thompson, Waco Rising and The Tiger Slam
"Blazing the trail in internet sports betting, Jay Cohen's World Sports Exchange offered sports betting exchange-traded futures twenty-five years before they became the rage. Jay chronicles the bullet he took for the offshore industry in his six-year legal odyssey fighting the federal government at his own personal loss."--Roxy Roxborough, iconic Las Vegas oddsmaker
"Entrepreneurs who are twenty years before their time merely lose. They don't go to jail. In a horrible stroke of irony, the men of World Sports Exchange, invented live betting as we know it and are the forefathers of a now legal American betting industry that brings in billions of dollars every month, but were tortured by a government who chose to fix the game of regulation, which was, at best, ambiguous in its interpretation. In Odds Man Out, Jay Cohen gives a first-hand account of the rise and fall of WSEX and assures us that we will never forget how lives were ruined over merely being first."--Darren Rovell, sports business reporter for ESPN, CNBC, and The Action Network
"It's not often that we get to hear about an inflection point in history, straight from the mouth of the man at its center. In Odds Man Out, Jay Cohen tells the story of how he and others pioneered online sports betting--today an industry seamlessly enmeshed with professional sports--and paid the price. Taking the reader behind the scenes for the genesis and rise of the World Sports Exchange, his indictment as part of the "March Madness" prosecutions, and his gamble to return to the United States for his day in court, this book offers an invaluable glimpse into how tech, sports, gambling, and the legal system collided. Reading this book drives home just how far the sports betting world has shifted since Murphy vs NCAA, and reminds us that pioneers may not always be celebrated."--David G. Schwartz, historian and author of Something for Your Money: A History of Las Vegas Casinos
"Jay Cohen was a visionary who understood that the Internet would revolutionize gambling--and he was punished for it. His inside look at the creation of an online 'stock market for sports' becomes a harrowing tale of the American criminal justice system gone awry."--Bruce Schoenfeld, author of Game of Edges
"Jay Cohen's fast-paced, well-written memoir, Odds Man Out, tells the harrowing tale of the options-trader turned entrepreneur who helped start the huge business of online sports betting legally in Antigua, and what happened when the American judicial system decided to make an example of him. It should make your blood boil--and will."--William D. Cohan, bestselling author of Power Failure
"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."--Jon Wertheim, Sports Illustrated senior writer and 60 Minutes correspondent
"Viewed through the prism of gambling's overtly symbiotic present day relationship to American professional sports, the story of Jay Cohen's confrontation with the Justice System seems almost comically quaint. He was taken to task, and ultimately sentenced to a prison from which he could see the lights of Las Vegas, for brilliantly innovating a popular and profitable system for betting on professional sports, something millions of Americans now do every day without fear of recourse or restraint. But because of the time at which he did this, and the vortex of personalities and ambitions his activities then touched, he lost everything. His story is tragic and poignant. I won an Emmy Award for covering it on HBO's RealSports with Bryant Gumbel. It was an award I would gladly have returned if Jay Cohen had been treated fairly, but he was not."--Jim Lampley, Hall of Fame broadcaster