Point Blank: The Pro Sports Advice Files – Threats, Lies, and a Trail of Silence
Part 3 of 3: The Subscriber Testimonies PSA Doesn't Want You To See
This isn't my story. It's theirs.
The punters who paid Pro Sports Advice (PSA).
Who bought the dream.
Who got burned.
And when they dared to speak—were silenced.
Part 1 exposed the money: €523,178 in profit while punters got nothing but a €95,275 car for the bosses. Part 2 unmasked Rob Heneghan: a TikTok personality with rented yachts, selling a lifestyle built on your losses. Now, Part 3 rips the curtain down.
This is testimony.
From 20 former subscribers.
Their words. Their screenshots. Their scars.
The Silenced: A Pattern of Fear
"I paid on a Friday. Blocked by Wednesday."
"I asked why I was down £800. Banned. No reply."
"They messaged me: 'We have your full name—don't make this worse for yourself.' I haven't bet since."
These aren't random complaints. They're from 20 punters who reached out, strangers to each other, all with the same story. They weren't banned for abuse. They were banned for asking questions.
Nor is this intimidation limited to subscribers. After publishing Parts 1 & 2, an industry source confirmed Rob Heneghan contacted them seeking my contact details, stating it would "save his lawyers and private detectives time." The request was refused. It’s the same playbook he uses on punters: silence dissent at all costs.
The Tips: A Mirage of Value
The tips? A sham.
During the 2023 Cheltenham Festival, one punter lost €150 betting on three horses in the same race—per PSA's advice. None placed. When they asked why, they were told, "Your fault for not understanding the staking plan." Then muted.
Prices are a lie too. A 5/2 "winner" on TikTok was advised at 13/8. Each-way bets hyped as wins. Odds shift before you can bet.
The verdict from inside:
"He backs favorites, booms when one wins. Smoke and mirrors."
The Stateside Reality
PSA openly boasts about "Stateside" as a premium service, but former subscribers tell a different story.
One member, sharing screenshots of unusable tips, revealed:
"It's their cash cow, but worthless without a Bet365 account. Most races only have odds on 365, and they limit winners within days."
Another was blunt:
"You need to stalk betting apps for 4-6 hours daily to catch these 'tips'—they're that random."
The truth? PSA isn't offering exclusive insight. They're recycling a 25-year-old tactic: exploiting early international tote prices before markets correct. This isn't proprietary knowledge—it's basic arbitrage that any experienced US racing punter knows.
The real cost? Your Bet365 account. The bookmaker's algorithms detect this activity fast:
5-10 successful bets before limits hit
Complete account bans for consistent winners
No recourse when your edge evaporates
You're not buying expert analysis. You're renting a temporary loophole—one that sacrifices your betting future for PSA's monthly fees.
Testimonial Bribes: Buying Silence
PSA offers refunds—but only if you sell your praise. Subscribers showed screenshots of PSA promising months of free tips in exchange for glowing video testimonials and positive Trustpilot reviews. These aren’t authentic endorsements; they’re purchased silence.
No Refunds, No Questions: The PSA Terms of Silence
PSA's Terms of Service lay bare their philosophy:
"All payments are non-refundable unless otherwise stated."
That exception never materializes. Dozens of subscribers reported identical experiences:
Blocked within days of questioning losses
Cut off from the service they paid for
Denied refunds without explanation
The legal red flag:
Under UK Consumer Contracts Regulations 2013, digital services must provide a 14-day cancellation window. PSA—an Irish company actively targeting UK punters—ignores this outright.
Their terms go further, mandating silence:
"No negative comments towards staff, other members, or comments that disparage the service."
"Violations result in timeout or instant removal."
In practice:
Question a losing streak? → Banned
Ask why odds changed? → Banned
Request promised refund? → Banned
No appeals process. No customer service. Just a Patreon/Discord blackhole where payments vanish and critics disappear.
This isn't customer protection—it's a financial gag order.
The Cost of the Rented Glow
Part 1 showed the €523,178 profit. Part 2 showed where it went. Part 3 shows what happens when you ask why.
Your €30, €50, €80 a month doesn't buy tips. It buys:
Heneghan's next yacht charter
Private plane bookings for "content trips"
TikTok ads targeting more marks
This isn't a service. It's a trap—and you're the one caught in it.
And when you question it? You're out. Silenced. Threatened.
Final Word
This is the method.
Ban the doubters. Bribe the believers. Hide the losses. Hype the wins.
Part 1 gave you the numbers. Part 2 gave you the man. Part 3 gives you the truth.
With claims of tens of thousands of subscribers and €523,178 in profit, PSA isn't a bad apple—it's a symptom of a rotten industry.
Nobody's telling you what to do with your money.
But if someone you know is eyeing PSA for Aintree this week, show them this series.
Don't fall for the glow—demand proof, or walk away.
Because once you're in, you're not a punter. You're prey.
This isn't betting. It's theatre.
And no one claps at the end when they're the one who paid for the lights.
Icy - A modern day philosopher.
Excellent analysis of El Creepo.
It’s the likes of my nephews that I need to show this too - that’s who he targets mostly, young bucks.
👍 🎯