Western Pennsylvania's trusted news source
Editorial: NBA scandal was predictable | TribLIVE.com
Editorials

Editorial: NBA scandal was predictable

The Dallas Morning News
9007285_web1_2025-10-23T153533Z_285953733_MT1USDAYNETNP86853940007_FRTPIP_4_USA-TODAY-NETWORK
USA Today
The NBA has a big mess on its hands in the federal gambling investigation.

Everyone saw this coming except the NBA. It seemed obvious: An industry built on winning money instead of earning it will attract those willing to break the rules to make a buck.

And yet, when news broke last week about FBI arrests, including a current NBA head coach and player, those who have promoted the marriage of sports and gambling said they were shocked and disappointed.

“I was deeply disturbed,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. “There’s nothing more important to the league and its fans than the integrity of the competition. And so I had a pit in my stomach, it was very upsetting.”

Silver has been the matchmaker between bookies and sports. His leadership has brought more leagues to the betting table. And while he has insisted that everything should be above board, he has made statements that sound like punting responsibility for enforcement to others. In 2014, he called on Congress to legalize sports betting nationwide “subject to strict regulatory requirements and technological safeguards.” Let’s face it: Congress is the last place we should go looking for ethical clarity and problem-solving.

Despite apologists minimizing the story, last week’s news was, indeed, extraordinary. Pro sports has had gambling controversies before — the 1919 Chicago White Sox, Pete Rose, etc. — but we’re not aware of any time an active head coach was arrested for something like this.

And yet, it was as predictable as the Cowboys playing on Thanksgiving. Gambling invites bad behavior.

Sports betting can be innocent fun for some, but it’s an existential threat for modern sports and their fans. According to former Louisiana State University researcher Robert Mann, sports gambling has become epidemic on college campuses. A 2023 report from the NCAA found that 67% of students on campus are gamblers. Betting is particularly high among young men who are more likely to take risks.

The lesson here isn’t just about betting. It’s about wisdom. Reaping and sowing.

Collectively, we’ve reached the point where we make foolish decisions and then act surprised when they produce negative results. We’re doing the same thing with marijuana right now, and with violence.

We flood our corner stores, public spaces, internet feeds and gaming consoles with pot and guns and then expect to live in a sober, safe society.

In gambling terms, we are the amateurs betting big before the flop and then hoping for a good card on the river. And there are always canny operators waiting to take advantage of dupes like that.

— The Dallas Morning News

Remove the ads from your TribLIVE reading experience but still support the journalists who create the content with TribLIVE Ad-Free.

Get Ad-Free >

Categories: Editorials | Opinion
Content you may have missed