The company also added $1,ooo to the accounts of 82 random customers. FanDuel chief operating officer Kip Levin told the Associated Press that FanDuel wanted 'to use this as a learning experience for our new customers about how sports betting works.' When bettor Anthony Prince wasn't paid the $82,000 he won because of the error, he took his case to the media and FanDuel eventually agreed to pay him and other bettors the full amount of their winning tickets, despite the erroneous line. Instead of the odds being 1-6, they were 750-1. Of course, that infamously came true in a way the sportsbook never intended when several bettors took advantage of an 18-second computer glitch that spit out the wrong odds as Denver was getting into position for an eventual game-winning field goal at Oakland on Sept. 'We are offering customers more ways to win each night with in-game betting.'
'Live in-game betting is what sets New Jersey apart from the rest of the United States,' said FanDuel senior director of industry relations and retail operations Jeff Lowich.