Why would 7m.cn crown these odds? Jung-ho had followed the site for years — it was ugly, clunky, but faster than any API feed. It had saved him twice from late goals in live betting. If 7m said crown, you wore it.

Jung-ho didn’t scream. He just opened wap.7m.cn one last time. The crown was gone. The site looked ancient again — simple tables, slow refresh. But at the bottom, a tiny footer appeared: “7m crowns no more. You wore it well.”

His balance jumped to ₩402,500. The crown vanished from the odds page, replaced by a single sentence in Korean: “Crown moves to next anomaly.”

The final was madness. Liverpool went down 2–0 by half-time. Jung-ho almost threw his phone into the Han River. But in the 78th minute — goal. 87th minute — goal. 2–2. Extra time. 112th minute — a deflection, a scuffed shot, a goalkeeper’s nightmare. 3–2 Liverpool.

Kickoff. 0–0 at halftime. Lommel hit the post. Jung-ho’s hands trembled. Then, 78th minute — penalty Westerlo. Saved. 82nd minute — header. Goal. 1–0. Full time whistle.

One chilly November night, the site flashed something strange — not the usual red-down or green-up arrows beside a second-division Belgian match, but a tiny golden crown icon next to the odds for .

But sometimes, at 2 a.m., he opens wap.7m.cn on his old phone. Just to see if the crown returns. It never does. But the odds still load — honest, ugly, true — and Jung-ho smiles.

The crown odds were ridiculous — Westerlo to win, 1.75. But the "crown" adjustment suggested the real chance was closer to 1.85. A 10% inefficiency. In betting, that was gold dust.