If you haven’t heard by now, this morning the FBI announced arrests on gambling charges. Among the accused: NBA coach Chauncey Billups and former players Terry Rozier and Damon Jones.
There appear to be
two different situations. In the first, four Mafia crime families – the Bonnano, Genovese, Gambino and Lucchese – ran allegedly fixed poker games, using athletes to draw other people in. That’s certainly not good, least of all with a current coach indicted. Billups was arrested right after Portland’s loss to Minnesota. Can you imagine being a player and seeing or learning that your coach was arrested right after the game?
Jones and Rozier have been accused of providing “non-public information” to gamblers to help them wager more successfully.
There has always been gambling in the NBA but generally on a much smaller scale, typically involving card games. There have always been stories about that. The deal where Gilbert Arenas and Javaris Crittenton drew guns in the locker room? That was over a gambling debt (Arenas was also arrested in July on charges of running an illegal, high stakes poker ring out of his home).
Christian Laettner and Jerry Stackhouse took the Duke-UNC thing to new heights when they nearly came to blows on an airplane over a card game. Michael Jordan and Charles Barkley are well-known as high-stakes gamblers and allegations of gambling – not proven – dogged Jordan throughout his career, including the suggestion that he was forced to step away from the game after his first threepeat as a quiet suspension.
That was also never proven, but we mention it to underscore that gambling, or at the very least the perception of gambling – has been around the league for a long time. Give a bunch of 20-somethings millions of dollars and ask them to work for 4-6 hours a day and travel constantly, what are they going to do? It’s basically gambling, sex and drinking when you get down to it, and while gambling is professionally idiotic for an athlete, as long as you don’t cheat, it’s not illegal.
This is an absolutely terrible look for the NBA and while it doesn’t directly affect college basketball, there is a gambling mess on the college side too (see below) and it’s about to get worse as the NCAA is going to allow college athletes to gamble on pro sports, starting on November 1st.
On the one hand, what can you do? Same situation, really: young, virile men making great money are going to seek thrills. Big surprise there.
On the other, this is an existential threat to the game, but it’s no surprise. The NBA has fully embraced gambling and college is inching that way.
Everyone involved had better think this through very carefully.
NBA
- LeBron James dragged into NBA mafia gambling scandal after his private information is ‘leaked’
- NBA stars and mafia among more than 30 arrested in illegal gambling crackdown, FBI says
- Terry Rozier’s attorney issues statement on arrest, NBA gambling scandal
- What we know about Terry Rozier, Chauncey Billups’ FBI investigations
- FBI announces arrests of Terry Rozier, Chauncey Billups, and others in two separate gambling schemes
- Chauncey Billups, Terry Rozier arrests escalate sprawling NBA betting scandal – The Athletic
- Former Charlotte Hornets star among NBA players arrested by FBI in gambling sting
- [BREAKOUT] Damon Jones alleged to have traded info on LeBron James missing 2023 Lakers game
- Popular ESPN host says Trump-driven reckoning is coming to sports: FBI sting on NBA is ‘tip of the iceberg’
- FBI arrests Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups
- NBA Stars, Coach Tied to Mafia Gambling Scandal
- The FBI’s Mass Arrest of NBA Coaches and Players Might Be the League’s Biggest Controversy Ever
- Who is Damon Jones? The other NBA player in middle of FBI betting, poker arrests
- Social Media Is Convinced NBA Star Terry Rozier is “Guilty As Hell” After Incriminating Evidence Surfaces Following His Arrest In FBI Sports Gambling Investigation [VIDEO]
- Former Card Terry Rozier arrested by FBI on illegal gambling charges
College
- NCAA athletes can bet on pro sports from Nov. 1
- Records reveal gambling syndicate targeted NCAA basketball in suspected point-shaving probe
- Records: Gambling group targeted college hoops
- NCAA Investigating 13 Basketball Players For Possible Point Shaving
- NCAA Launches Widespread Gambling Investigation, Targeting Dozens of Players
- NCAA Gambling Scandal Widens With ‘Overlapping’ Cases
- NCAA investigating sports betting violations against 13 college basketball players at six Division I programs
- NCAA Has ‘Permanently Suspended’ Three Men’s Basketball Players After Gambling Investigation
- Federal Point-Shaving Investigation Expands Toward Indictments
- Report: College basketball point shaving investigation nearing end, focused on ‘Southern schools’











