We've all been in a place where we aren't supposed to use our phone and just want to sneak a quick look, but if you're an NBA player on the bench during a playoff game, it might be better to resist the urge.
Driving the news: Amir Johnson found that out the hard way, as TV cameras captured him looking at his phone during the fourth quarter of Saturday's Sixers-Nets game. League rules prohibit use of cellphones during games and call for a suspension or fine, and Johnson got both a fine and a reprimand from his coach.
With golf legend Tiger Woods just two shots behind leader Francesco Molinari on the last day of the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia, bookmakers worry that a strong performance out of the gate could spark a surge of bets in his favor, Bloomberg reports.
"If the Woods-meister starts shooting the lights out everyone will want a piece of the action and that could mean carnage. We’ll be diving for cover if Woods starts to put on a Masters-class."
— Online bookmaker Paddy Power
By the numbers: Woods, who started the tournament with 14-to-1 odds, has been bumped to 3-to-1 as of Sunday morning. One gambler in Nevada placed an $85,000 bet on Woods that could cost bookmaker William Hill $1.2 million if it pans out.