Davies turns gambling own goal into net gain for others

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Scott Davies stood in his kitchen and held a knife to his chest as he contemplated the wreckage of his football career due to an obsession with gambling.
Now he makes a career out of warning other players of the perils of betting.
The 31-year-old former Ireland under-21 international, who describes himself as a “pathological gambler”, has found salvation and a vocation working for EPIC Risk Management, touring English Football League clubs.
EPIC chief executive Paul Buck was jailed in 2012 after stealing more than œ400,000 ($525,000, ) from a client at the bank he worked for to help pay his gambling debts.
Davies, who estimates in seven years he lost œ300,000, including œ60,000 he borrowed from his parents, told AFP he began playing poker when he went on loan to Aldershot from Reading aged 19 as he wanted to feel part of the group.
“Obviously you put three things together – time, money and opportunity. It is a recipe for disaster,” he said after appearing on a panel at the Betting on Football conference at Chelsea’s Stamford Bridge ground this week.
“When I did have the time I would not use it wisely. The money, I wasted it and any opportunity I had to gamble I gambled.”
He said the lies that addicts tell eventually prove costly, as happened with him at Reading, where he was playing under then-manager Brendan Rodgers, now boss at Leicester City.
All seemed rosy after the midfielder broke into the first team and played the first four league games of the 2009/10 campaign, and he somehow hid his addiction from Rodgers.
“Brendan Rodgers said ‘You are younger than the other players in the first team so I think you should stay later and do extra training’,” said Davies.

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