Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told

  1. Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told Reviews
  2. The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told Goodreads

Worth: (as of – Particulars) Los Angeles Occasions: 'I got here throughout this guide that I feel plenty of you would possibly like. It's mild, it strikes rapidly, it's enjoyable.' 'A crazier-than-fiction story of three younger gamblers, a Mexican drug cartel and the 1988 Kentucky Derby. – Horse Racing Nation A High 10 Amazon Greatest. The release of a rollicking, true adventure yarn- The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told —coincides with a new era of sports betting that will change the face of gambling forever. Prompted by a May 2018 Supreme Court decision to overturn the ban on sports betting, 42 states have now embraced legalizing sports betting.

  1. Now Available in Audio Book, eBook, and Print. 'The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told', an Amazon bestseller, is an inspiring personal narrative about a fill.
  2. The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told is an inspiring personal narrative about a filly who broke through the male-dominated world of horseracing and inspired crowds of men and women alike, along with a trio of gamblers who embark on an unforgettable adventure that's as epic as the history victory of Winning Colors.

Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told Reviews

The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told is an inspiring personal narrative about a filly who broke through the male-dominated world of horseracing and inspired crowds of men and women alike, along with a trio of gamblers who embark on an unforgettable adventure that's as epic as the historic victory of Winning Colors. It's Seabiscuit meets Narcos, and the best true-life gambling story ever told.

In the late 1980s, a spectacular 3-year-old female racehorse named Winning Colors was being groomed for success under her famous 'Hollywood' trainer, D. Wayne Lukas, and the billionaire owner of the San Diego Chargers pro-football team, Eugene Klein. Meanwhile, three fun-loving gamblers, Miami Paul, Dino Mateo, and Big Bernie believed that Winning Colors could be the unlikely female winner of the 1988 Kentucky Derby.

When the gamblers unknowingly place their longshot bet with members of a suspected drug cartel at a racetrack in Tijuana, Mexico, they must figure out how to claim their prize - without getting killed in the process. In a heart-pounding race of their own across the U.S.-Mexico border, the trio come face-to-face with suspected killers, are arrested by the Border Patrol, and fumble their way through the riskiest bet of their lives.

Story

The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told Goodreads

About the Author

Mark Paul lives for action and adventure at locations where gambling occurs. While racing motorcycles at age 15, he was incarcerated in a Mexican jail (he was released after six days, completely rehabilitated). He began his gambling career by sneaking into Hollywood Park and Santa Anita at age 16 by giving degenerate looking gamblers free betting tickets in exchange for pretending they were his parents. Mark made a 5,000-mile sail boat journey through the Panama Canal and then on to the island of Jamaica, to attend Caribbean and South American horseraces. He completed these gambling junkets alone, via bus, to gamble at the local thoroughbred racetracks. Blond and blue eyed, he stood out from the local horseplayers. He was robbed a few times. He was a participant in a $1 million win on the 1988 Kentucky Derby with two other gamblers through a bet placed in Tijuana, Mexico. Cashing this wager and getting back to U.S. soil alive was the adventure of a lifetime. He has owned interests in 34 racehorses. Mark has enjoyed a long career in commercial real estate in Southern California having transacted over $3 billion worth of transactions. With his wife, Renee, Mark raised over $750,000 for City of Hope Cancer research through events held at the Santa Anita racetrack. In May 2018 the Supreme Court ruled to allow State legalized sports betting. Mark believes that public interest in gambling and sports in general will reach new levels, and he plans to chronicle the lives of adventurous risk takers who aim to win the benefits from life-changing horseraces, and other kinds of sporting events.

Mark Paul arguably picked the very best and very worst moment to publish a book about the Kentucky Derby.

The book being about more than just the race makes a difference. “The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told,” a rollicking yarn about his and his cohorts’ prescient yet risky futures bets on eventual 1988 Kentucky Derby winner Winning Colors arrived during the global sports shutdown caused by COVID-19. So maybe readers were thirsting for a sports story from when there were actually sports.

Then again, the impact of the book arriving in the months before the 146th Kentucky Derby was mooted by the traditional Triple Crown opener being moved from the first Saturday in May to Sept. 5.

But it’s the story, Paul asserts, that makes this tale relevant 32 years later.

Winning Colors becoming just the third filly to win the Derby, ’80s nostalgia, high-stakes bets and some intrigue at the Mexican border make this a tale, Paul told PlayUSA, that has already drawn interest for potential development for television — and attracted readers.

Greatest

The book reached No. 1 on Amazon’s sports gambling and horse racing lists and is a best-seller in sports history and sports biographies.

Inside ‘The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told’

It wasn’t a book that Paul, a first-time author, had yearned to write, but the timing felt right for him given the distance from some of the more sordid characters and taxation issues. And being semiretired afforded him more time to write. In many ways, it’s a love letter to horse racing and horse betting, which Paul became infatuated with when sneaking into Santa Anita Park as a teen.

“I started off being fascinated with horse racing, probably from about the time I walked into the track at age 14,” he told PlayUSA. “It was just the most beautiful place.

“I kind of fell in with a fairly educated group of semiprofessional-type gamblers.”

Paul, who admits in the forward that the dialogue in the book has been paraphrased and spiced up to fit the narrative, weaves the reader through instructional but not pedantic passages filling in the background of the horse racing industry. That goes from the auction house with Winning Colors trainer D. Wayne Lukas and owner Gene Klein to the stables and the backstretch.

Paul seems cognizant of the fact that the title is sure to entice horseplayers and gamblers, but attempts to reach a broader audience. In the process, he finds a middle ground by not belaboring what would be basic principles to the veteran gambler, while keeping those attracted to the narrative up to speed and able to follow along.

Perhaps it’s Paul’s description of picking out the perfect Miami Vice suit for a trip to Tijuana or his indulging in other tidbits from his youth, but the tale takes on a standard-def neon vibe that would go well with a score by Phil Collins.

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Twists, turns and Winning Colors

Winning Colors’ rise from a prodigy of Lukas’ West Coast stable to her mainstream breakthrough as a gender-power symbol is chronicled from her auction to her run through the Kentucky Derby, with the excitement of Paul and betting buddies a constant accompaniment.

The story wanders through the betting parlors and dimly lit inner sanctums of the Agua Caliente track in Tijuana, where the bettors laid down a 50-1 future book wager to win a quarter million on the filly, then returned to watch the race and collect their winnings on Derby Day. They hoped. Interspersed with the rise of Winning Colors is the introduction of the antagonist, Jorge Rhon, the track owner they presumed would be displeased to pay out their winnings, with his backwater Tijuana track becoming ever less relevant in the age of simulcasting. Paul chronicles Rhon’s supposed ties to organized crime in the book as a means of amping up the suspense.

The latter half of the book, which is an afternoon’s endeavor at just 168 pages, winds through their adventure attempting to collect their prize, constituting a tale that Paul says has garnered interest from multiple television producers. The book was optioned for television or a possible movie deal, he claims, within five weeks of being written and a year before publication.

“It does probably help that I live in Beverly Hills and my neighbors are in the business,” Paul laughed. “I wrote the book—took me nine months—and I submitted it to a guy who is a big Hollywood guy, [a Creative Artists Agency] agent.

“He said, ‘Well, if you’re writing a book for gamblers, you did a great job.’ He said, ‘But you missed the whole story. The story is about a female winning a world championship. In what sport can a female compete head to head with a male? You’re not going to have a female quarterback beat Tom Brady in the Super Bowl … But my god, you can have a female racehorse go out and win the world’s greatest race. Now you’ll have a story people will want to read everywhere.’”

And, Paul hopes, any time.