Billy Walters talks relationship with Phil Mickelson on No Laying Up podcast

Walters wants to set the record straight with regard to his insider trading conviction and his relationship with Lefty.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8171″]

The anticipation for the upcoming release of the book “Gambler: Secrets from a Life at Risk” from noted gambler Billy Walters hit a new high after a recent excerpt highlighted Phil Mickelson’s gambling habits.

On the latest episode of the No Laying Up podcast, Walters said he wanted to write the book because he thought he could help those who come from similar backgrounds and battle addiction like he does. He began betting on sports at an early age when there was an “ignorant perception” of those who gambled. Now that gambling is legal across a majority of the United States, Walters wanted to share everything he knows about handicapping and betting with sports fans.

“I wouldn’t have sold this information for $30 million 10 years ago, but I’m 10 years older and I want to share this with sports fans,” said Walters. “It’s my legacy so to speak.”

He also wanted to set the record straight with regard to his conviction in the Southern District of New York for insider trading and his relationship with the six-time major champion Mickelson.

Walters was once regarded as one of the most successful sports bettors in the country. He was sentenced to five years in prison for conspiring to commit insider trading from at least 2008 through 2014, was convicted on all 10 counts against him, fined $10 million and sentenced to five years in prison in 2017. His book, which also goes into greater detail on the insider trading charges related to Dean Foods that sent him to jail, will be released on Aug. 22. Mickelson was a relief defendant in the civil suit, and agreed to pay back $1.03 million, including profit and interest.

[pickup_prop id=”34337”]

Walters did partnerships with many people over the years both before and after Mickelson. The two met at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in 2006 and didn’t see each other again until two years later at the 2008 Wachovia Championship in Charlotte. Walters ran into Mickelson in the locker room and he asked him how his partnerships worked.

The pair began a five-year betting partnership – a simple 50-50 split where each put up the same money – and a friendship that lasted about eight years.

Walters said Mickelson had nothing to do with the selections and the pair were successful enough that the bookmakers closed their accounts. Walters became concerned when he learned Mickelson had previously done business dating back to 1995 with two other men that led to a money laundering investigation.

“I was completely unaware of that, if I had been aware of that prior to starting our partnership I never would have had a partnership with him,” said Walters, who claimed one of the men went to federal prison for a $2.8 million wire transfer sent as a favor for Mickelson. As Walters tells it, the money was a gambling debt. From the podcast:

My understanding is the banks wouldn’t wire the money to these offshore bookmakers, so he asked one of the men to wire the money to him and then he would pay the offshore bookmakers. The guy agreed to do it as a favor and he wired him $2.8 million. The bank turned it in as suspicious activity, and that led to an investigation which included federal authorities.

The partnership then ended when the case with Walters and his Dean Food stock was investigated. Walters said the SEC wanted to interview Mickelson about some stock he had purchased and he took the fifth amendment. Walters said he confronted Mickelson to ask why and claims Lefty said his lawyers were concerned there would be questions about the separate money laundering investigation.

Walters then said Mickelson hired an attorney in Washington, D.C., and a settlement was worked out that saw Mickelson’s money laundering investigation go away. The one man went to prison and a statement was issued that Mickelson gave back $1 million made in a stock transaction. Walters argues that made him look guilty.

“Why would someone give $1 million back in a financial transaction if you or someone hadn’t done something wrong?” he asked.

During interviews with the FBI Walters claimed Mickelson told him he denied Walters had ever given him insider information. Walters also alleges Mickelson said he would testify. He did not.

“In retrospect the biggest mistake I made is myself not testifying,” admitted Walters. “But if Phil had testified, I am as sure as I am looking at you that I would’ve never gone to prison.”

Walters ran his betting operation like a business and kept detailed records:

  • when a bet was made
  • who it was made with
  • who it was on
  • did they win or lose and how much

In the book he has detailed accounts of tens of thousands of six-figure bets. Part of the bets in the book are ones Mickelson made with his other two associates and the rest are with his partnership with Walters.

“The reason I put that in the book was I wanted to, to me, life’s all about one that and that’s credibility. You either have it or you don’t. Either you’re truthful or you’re not truthful,” he said. “(Alan Shipnuck’s) book came out and disclosed the fact he had lost $40 million, and then later on (Mickelson said) ‘yeah I lost $40 million,’ but clearly he didn’t come clean about the entire thing. I felt we needed to set the record straight and tell the truth.”

The biggest revelation from the excerpt was where Walters alleged that Mickelson wanted to bet on the 2012 Ryder Cup, of which he was a member of the U.S. team.

“I couldn’t believe it,” said Walters. “Up until that time there had never even remotely been any kind of discussion about betting on golf.”

“I’m fairly confident he came to his senses and probably never made the bet. I didn’t say he ever made the bet, I just said he called me and attempted to make the bet,” he added. “I think he just got carried away in the moment and was so sure they were going to win.”

After initially declining to comment when approached during the LIV Golf Bedminster event, Mickelson released a statement saying he never bet on the Ryder Cup.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=451198867]

Phil Mickelson responds to Billy Walters excerpt from gambling book

Walters alleged Mickelson wanted to bet on the 2012 Ryder Cup while Lefty was a member of the team.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8171″]

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — Just as Phil Mickelson was beginning his pro-am round for LIV Golf’s event this week at Trump National Bedminster, a juicy excerpt from a new book written by gambler Billy Walters was released by Golf Digest and the Fire Pit Collective.

Walters, a former gambling partner of Mickelson’s, claimed the 53-year-old Lefty made tens of thousands of six-figure bets and also alleged Mickelson called him from the 2012 Ryder Cup at Medinah Country Club near Chicago and asked him to place a $400,000 wager for him on the U.S. team, of which he was one of 12 members, to win.

After a nine-hole pro-am Thursday, Mickelson was asked for comment on the allegations in the excerpt and declined, saying “I’m gonna pass today. We’ll talk later.”

Later in the evening, Mickelson posted the following statement:

Walters was once regarded as one of the most successful sports bettors in the country. He was sentenced to five years in prison for conspiring to commit insider trading from at least 2008 through 2014, was convicted on all 10 counts against him, fined $10 million and sentenced to five years in prison in 2017.

His book, which also goes into greater detail on the insider trading charges related to Dean Foods that sent him to jail, will be released on Aug. 22. Mickelson was a relief defendant in the civil suit, and agreed to pay back $1.03 million, including profit and interest.

[pickup_prop id=”34337″]

Contributing: Adam Schupak, Golfweek

Stunning revelations about Phil Mickelson’s gambling in Billy Walters new book

Phil Mickelson’s gambling habit is more extreme than you might have imagined.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8171″]

Phil Mickelson’s gambling habit (problem?) is more extreme than you might have imagined. That is if the contents of Billy Walters’ upcoming book “Gambler: Secrets from a Life at Risk” are true.

Walters, who is known for his success as a gambler and entrepreneur, dedicated a section of the book to Mickelson. Golf Digest and The Fire Pit Collective published an excerpt Thursday.

According to the book, Walters sparked a friendship with Mickelson after being paired with him at the 2006 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Mickelson was familiar with Walters’ gambling success and approached him in 2008 about forming a partnership.

That’s when Walters learned just how much of gambler Mickelson was. These are the biggest revelations from the excerpt, claiming Mickelson had bet more than $1 billion in the last three decades. BILLION with a B.

Walters said the only other person he knows with that volume of betting is himself.

If true, this is just an absurdly large amount of money to have bet. I can think of a few ways Mickelson could have put that money to better use.

And his losses are closer to $100 million

Reports place Mickelson’s gambling losses at around $40 million, according to Walters. But he says, based on their relationship and what he’s learned from others, Mickelson’s losses are much closer to $100 million.

[pickup_prop id=”34337″]

Mickelson tried to bet on the Ryder Cup

From the book:

In late September 2012, Phil called me from Medinah Country Club just outside Chicago, site of the 39th Ryder Cup matches between the United States and Europe. He was feeling supremely confident that the American squad led by Tiger Woods, Bubba Watson, and Phil himself was about to reclaim the Cup from the Euros. He was so confident that he asked me to place a $400,000 wager for him on the U.S. team to win.

I could not believe what I was hearing.

“Have you lost your [expletive] mind?” I told him. “Don’t you remember what happened to Pete Rose?” The former Cincinnati Reds manager was banned from baseball for betting on his own team. “You’re seen as a modern-day Arnold Palmer,” I added. “You’d risk all that for this? I want no part of it.’’

“Alright, alright,” he replied.

I have no idea whether Phil placed the bet elsewhere. Hopefully, he came to his senses, especially considering the “Miracle at Medinah.” Trailing 10-6 going into the final day of singles matches, the Europeans pulled off the greatest comeback in Ryder Cup history. They won eight matches and tied one to beat the Americans by a single point, 14½ to 13½.

2012 Ryder Cup
USA’s Phil Mickelson looks over the third green during a practice round at the 2012 Ryder Cup at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Illinois. (Photo: Charles Rex Arbogast/Associated Press)

3,154 bets in 2011 alone

That number is not a typo. According to Walters, Mickelson placed over 3,000 bets in one year. That number comes to an average of nine bets per day in 2011.

Between 2011 and 2014, Mickelson placed 7,065 bets on football, basketball, and baseball, according to the excerpt.

On one day in 2011 (June 22), he made forty-three bets on major-league baseball games, resulting in $143,500 in losses.

Bets regularly exceeded five- and six-digit dollar amounts

More from the book:

After my betting partnership with Phil ended in the spring of 2014, I learned a lot more about his sports gambling from two very reliable sources.

They said it was nothing for Phil to bet $20,000 a game on long-shot, five-team NBA parlays. Or wager $100,000 or $200,000 a game on football, basketball, and baseball.

Walters said Mickelson bet $110,000 to win $100,000 a total of 1,115 times, and he bet $220,00 to win $200,000 on 858 occasions. The sum of all those bets was $311 million.

Gambler: Secrets from a Life at Risk is set to release on Aug. 22.

Did Phil Mickelson bet on 2012 Ryder Cup? Gambler Billy Walters dishes in new book

“I could not believe what I was hearing, ‘Have you lost your [expletive] mind?”

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8171″]

Did Phil Mickelson place a substantial wager on the U.S. Ryder Cup to win in 2012?

That is the claim of noted gambler Billy Walters in an excerpt to his forthcoming book “Gambler: Secrets from a Life at Risk.”

According to Walters, who once was regarded as one of the most successful sports bettor in the country, he and Mickelson formed a betting partnership around 2008 that lasted five years. Walters, who was sentenced to five years in prison for conspiring to commit insider trading from at least 2008 through 2014, was convicted on all 10 counts against him, fined $10 million and sentenced to five years in prison 2017.

In an excerpt to the book, which was published Thursday at Golf Digest and the Fire Pit Collective, Walters claims that Mickelson called him from Medinah Country Club near Chicago, site of the 39th Ryder Cup, and asked him to place a $400,000 wager for him on the U.S. team, of which he was one of 12 team members along with Tiger Woods, to win.

2012 Ryder Cup
Phil Mickelson talks to Keegan Bradley on the 12th tee during a foursomes match at the 2012 Ryder Cup at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Illinois. (Photo: Charlie Riedel/Associated Press))

“I could not believe what I was hearing, ‘Have you lost your [expletive] mind? Don’t you remember what happened to Pete Rose?'” Walters writes, referring to the former Cincinnati Reds manager who was banned from baseball for betting on his own team.

Walter continued to recount the story: “You’re seen as a modern-day Arnold Palmer,” adding, “You’d risk all that for this? I want no part of it.’’

 “Alright, alright,” Walters said Mickelson replied.

Walters goes on to say that he can’t confirm whether Mickelson placed the bet elsewhere.

“Hopefully, he came to his senses, especially considering the ‘Miracle at Medinah,'” Walters wrote.

Team Europe rallied from a 10-6 deficit going into the final day of singles and won 14 ½ to 13 ½, matching the largest comeback in Ryder Cup history (Team USA in 1999).

Mickelson lost his singles match to Justin Rose, who sank a long-range birdie putt at 17 to tie the match. Mickelson walked off the green shaking his head in disbelief. Rose won 18, too, and flipped the match in his favor.

2012 Ryder Cup
USA’s Phil Mickelson congratulates Europe’s Justin Rose after a singles match at the 2012 Ryder Cup at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Ill.

While Walters can’t be sure whether Mickelson placed such a massive bet on the Ryder Cup, he reveals that Mickelson’s gambling losses, previously believed to be $40 million, were actually much closer to $100 million and that over the last 30 years he bet a total of $1 billion.

He goes into details such as that Mickelson “in 2011 alone, made 3,154 bets— an average of nearly nine per day, on one day in 2011 (June 22), he made 43 bets on major-league baseball games, resulting in $143,500 in losses, and he made a staggering 7,065 wagers on football, basketball, and baseball.”

The Walters bio, which also goes into greater detail on the insider trading charges related to Dean Foods that sent him to jail, will be released on Aug. 22. Mickelson was a relief defendant in the civil suit, and agreed to pay back $1.03 million, including profit and interest.

After a nine-hole pro-am Thursday, Mickelson was asked by Golfweek for comment on the allegations in the excerpt and declined, saying “I’m gonna pass today. We’ll talk later.”

Mickelson issued a statement instead, denying he ever bet on the Ryder Cup and saying, “I would never undermine the integrity of the game.”

[pickup_prop id=”34337″]

Sports bettor Billy Walters to break silence on ‘long and complicated relationship’ with Phil Mickelson in book this summer

Walters went to prison in 2017 for insider trading but his sentence was commuted by President Trump in 2021.

Mark your calendars for Aug. 15, golf fans.

A book by Billy Walters, the famed sports bettor who went to prison in 2017 for insider trading, is expected to include details of his relationship with six-time major champion Phil Mickelson that may not paint the Lefty in the most positive light. Co-written by Armen Keteyian, author of Tiger, Gambler: Secrets from a Life at Risk will be published by Simon & Schuster and be available later this summer.

“In addition to an against-all-odds American dream story, it reveals in granular detail the secrets of Walters’s proprietary sports betting system, which will serve as a master class for tens of millions of recreational gamblers in America and around the world,” according to a press release. “Walters also breaks his silence about his long and complicated relationship with Hall of Fame professional golfer Phil Mickelson.”

Alan Shipnuck, who authored a biography on Mickelson released last year, said on the Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz in May of 2022 that Walters elected not to speak with him in order to save his thoughts for his own book.

“Phil’s nervous about that book, and he probably should be,” said Shipnuck.

Mickelson’s connection to Walters – reports said he once owed Walters $2 million in gambling debts – was brought to light in 2017 when Walters was found guilty of insider trading. Walters was convicted on all 10 counts against him, fined $10 million and sentenced to five years in prison while Mickelson was ordered to pay back trading profits totaling $931,738 plus interest of $105,292, but otherwise skated free on a technicality.

Walters was released from prison in May 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and was serving the rest of his five-year sentence at home. In 2021, President Donald Trump commuted Walters’ sentence with one of his final acts in office. A White House statement claimed Mickelson – as well as swing instructor Butch Harmon and TV commentators David Feherty and Peter Jacobsen – helped with the commutation.

Mickelson’s attorney refuted the claim, calling the press release “erroneous” and stating “Phil had nothing to do with this.”

Now a face of the LIV Golf League, Mickelson and his Hy Flyers will return to action later this month with the upstart circuit’s first event of 2023 in Mexico.

[pickup_prop id=”31652″]

[listicle id=778320920]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

Attorney calls out White House, says Phil Mickelson ‘had nothing to do with’ one of Donald Trump’s final actions

Phil Mickelson’s attorney called out the White House, saying his client “had nothing to do with” one of Donald Trump’s final commutations.

Tournament host Phil Mickelson was in the headlines ahead of this week’s American Express for saying that if he doesn’t play well early on, he’d re-evaluate his future on the PGA Tour.

Lefty’s name was also thrown around by the White House, which said in a statement that Mickelson – as well as swing instructor Butch Harmon and TV commentators David Feherty and Peter Jacobsen – helped with the commutation of gambler Billy Walters’ sentence. Walters, 74, went to prison in 2017 but was granted clemency in one of the final actions of President Donald Trump.

On Thursday afternoon, ESPN published a story that quotes Mickelson’s attorney, Glenn Cohen, as saying the following: “The press release referencing Phil Mickelson is erroneous. The reason we are upset is because its untrue.”

“Phil had nothing to do with this,” said Cohen.

[listicle id=778056090]

The famed sports bettor was found guilty of insider trading in a scheme that brought to light ties to Mickelson, who at one time owed $2 million in gambling debts to Walters, according to published reports. Mickelson avoided criminal charges while Walters was sentenced to five years in prison and fined $10 million – but only after a protracted legal fight.

Walters was released from prison in May 2020 due to the COVID-19 crisis and was serving the rest of his five-year sentence at home. Trump commuted that sentence, meaning that the remainder, a little less than a year, has been wiped out.

“I am thankful to the President and extremely grateful for the longstanding support of friends and family, especially my wife, Susan,” Walters said in a statement provided to USA TODAY Sports. “I have tried to lead a life marked by concern for others and I hope those qualities, along with the government misconduct that led to my wrongful conviction, convinced the White House to grant me clemency. I also hope this sends a strong message to law enforcement to refrain from illegal misconduct in pursuing their targets. I look forward to vindication as I pursue my civil damages case in federal court.”

[vertical-gallery id=778059761]

USA TODAY Sports’ Josh Peter contributed to this story.

Billy Walters, famed sports bettor, granted clemency in final hours of Donald Trump’s presidency

Billy Walters, the famed sports bettor who has been in prison since 2017, received one of the final pardons issued by Donald Trump.

Billy Walters, the famed sports bettor who went to prison in 2017, will be out in time to bet on the Super Bowl thanks to outgoing President Donald Trump.

Walters, 74, received one of the final pardons issued by Trump, as did the brother of Chicago Bears Hall of Fame linebacker Brian Urlacher. Casey Urlacher faced federal charges of recruiting for a multi-million dollar illegal offshore gambling ring.

Walters, by contrast, was known to have placed massive wagers in Las Vegas. He also developed a relationship with golfer Phil Mickelson that coincided with his legal problems.

In 2017, Walters was found guilty of insider trading in a scheme that brought to light his ties to Mickelson, who at one time owed owned $2 million in gambling debts to Walters, according to published reports.

Mickelson avoided criminal charges while Walters was sentenced to five years in prison and fined $10 million – but only after a protracted legal fight.

Walters was released from prison in May 2020 due to the COVID-19 crisis and was serving the rest of his five-year sentence at home. Trump commuted that sentence, meaning that the remainder, a little less than a year, has been wiped out.

According to a White House statement, several individuals sponsored the action on Walters’ behalf, including a handful on the golf industry. That included not only Mickelson but also swing instructor Butch Harmon and TV commentators David Feherty and Peter Jacobsen.

“I am thankful to the President and extremely grateful for the longstanding support of friends and family, especially my wife, Susan,” Walters said in a statement provided to USA TODAY Sports. “I have tried to lead a life marked by concern for others and I hope those qualities, along with the government misconduct that led to my wrongful conviction, convinced the White House to grant me clemency. I also hope this sends a strong message to law enforcement to refrain from illegal misconduct in pursuing their targets. I look forward to vindication as I pursue my civil damages case in federal court.”

Though parts of Walters’ gambling history remain unverified, his exploits allegedly included a 30-year winning streak that included a $2.2 million win in 2007 on USC beating Michigan in football and $3.5 million win in 2009 on Super Bowl XLIV.

In 2014, he told the Wall Street Journal that in a good year he could make up to $60 million betting sports.

On Tuesday he won back his freedom, as one of 144 people to receive last-minute pardons from Trump.

Billy Walters, successful sports bettor tied to Phil Mickelson, released from federal prison

Bill Walters reportedly amassed a $500 million fortune but was convicted on insider trading charges.

Billy Walters, perhaps the most successful professional sports gambler in the U.S., is out of a federal prison in Pensacola, Florida, and will finish the rest of his five-year sentence under home confinement in Carlsbad, California.

Walters got five years in prison and was ordered to pay a $10 million fine after being convicted of insider trading in 2017.

He is out of prison, according to a Casino.org report, because at 73, Walters is vulnerable to COVID-19, which is surging in prisons across the U.S. His original release date was Feb. 14, 2022. His sentence will now end Jan. 22, 2022.

Walters, whose personal fortune is reportedly $500 million and included ownership golf courses and auto delearships, was profiled by 60 Minutes in 2011, where the headline was that he had never had a losing year betting on sports.

Walters was also linked to Phil Mickelson.

A 2017 New York Post report said that Mickelson paid $1.95 million to Walters to settle gambling debts, information that emerged in federal court as part of Walters’ insider trading trial.

Walters was accused of making $43 million using insider trading tips, allegedly received those tips from Tom C. Davis, then the chairman of Dean Foods Co.

Mickelson, a golfing buddy of Walters, was reportedly passed inside information by Walters and earned $931,000 as a result. Mickelson was not called to testify, paid the money back to settle a lawsuit and did not face criminal charges.

Mickelson reportedly told the FBI he had no knowledge of insider trading involving Walters but also didn’t go to court to help Walters.

Walters let loose on Mickelson in a 2018 interview with ESPN.

“Here is a guy that all he had to do was come forward and tell the truth,” Walters said in October, as he leaned forward in a chair behind his nearly 10-foot-wide office desk, its marble top home to three computer monitors. “That was all he had to do. The guy wouldn’t do that because he was concerned about his image. He was concerned about his endorsements.

“My God, in the meantime a man’s life is on the line. He’s going to go to prison. And you got prosecutors up there during the entire trial, the entire month — all they talked about over and over was me giving my friends insider information. That is all they talked about. And they knew those jurors were all up on the internet reading that stuff about Phil [profiting from the Dean Foods stock purchase].”

Still to be decided, according to the Casino.org report, is the $25.4 million fine imposed on Walters. That’s the amount prosecutors say he made on the alleged insider trading.