Current:Home > NewsAthletes beware: Jontay Porter NBA betting scheme is a lesson in stupidity -Aspire Money Growth
Athletes beware: Jontay Porter NBA betting scheme is a lesson in stupidity
View
Date:2025-04-16 03:06:02
In all of Jontay Porter’s idiocy, he provided a service to other professional athletes who might consider placing bets on games in which they are direct participants or in which they have insider knowledge to provide to gamblers.
It’s almost impossible to pull it off in a world of legal, regulated and monitored gambling. It’s even more impossible when you’re as blatant as the NBA says Porter was.
This isn’t like placing an illegal bet with Bill the Bookie and paying losses or collecting wins at the local burger bar on Monday evenings.
That doesn’t mean this won’t happen again. Someone always thinks they can beat the system, and maybe someone can but not Jontay Porter and his simple attempt at trying to make extra money. It’s inevitable, just as it was inevitable it happened in the first place.
The league’s investigation turned up stunning evidence against Porter, the younger brother of Denver Nuggets forward Michael Porter Jr., who was on a two-way NBA/G-League contract with the Toronto Raptors worth about $410,000.
The NBA found Porter told a gambler about his health; another gambler Porter knew placed an $80,000 prop bet on Porter to underperform in specific statistical categories; Porter limited his participation in a game to influence the outcome of one or more games; he placed bets on NBA games through an associate’s online account and though none of the bets involved games Porter played in, one bet included a Raptors game in which Porter bet the Raptors would lose.
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver had no choice but to deliver Porter a lifetime ban from playing in the league.
MORE:Zion Williamson out for Pelicans play-in elimination game against Kings
MORE:2024 NBA playoffs: First-round schedule, times, TV info, key stats, who to watch
Gambling is everywhere, and the leagues (just not the NBA) have embraced it. You can’t watch a game without gambling being part of the advertising or on-air discussion.
“We limit the amount of sports betting advertising in our games,” Silver said at the conclusions of last week’s NBA owners’ meetings. “Whether that’s at the right line, others may have a different opinion, but we limit it. But that’s just a fraction, of course, of the amount of sports betting advertising we see.
“I live in the New York market. It’s constant in terms of promotions for people to bet on sports.”
It’s a money-maker. It’s good for business. Revenue from the NBA’s gaming partners is shared with the players, and the NBA made it possible in the 2023 collective bargaining agreement for players to have partnerships with gaming companies.
The league can’t prevent a Jontay Porter situation, and that’s why there are safeguards, such as monitoring, to identify improper wagering.
“The alternative is illegal sports betting, and I think at least in a legalized structure, there’s transparency. Just as in cases we’ve dealt with where very sophisticated computers, when there’s aberrational behavior, you become aware of that rather than betting that takes place in the shadows or underground.”
The concern from Silver is real. You can hear it in his voice and read it in his statement he issued announcing Porter’s ban.
“This matter also raises important issues about the sufficiency of the regulatory framework currently in place, including the types of bets offered on our games and players,” Silver said.
Silver has long proposed federal regulation, and he is also suggesting limiting or eliminating prop bets involving players, namely players with non-guaranteed or nominal contracts who might be more easily influenced to break rules.
Can the NBA and other leagues find a way to do that, or will they just have to live with the consequences? Because even if the league didn’t have relationships with the sports books, the sports books would still be in business and someone would still be looking for a quick payout.
Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Florida gymnastics coach accused of having sexual relationship with 2 young girls: Reports
- Sinbad Makes First Public Appearance 3 Years After Suffering Stroke
- Archaeologists in Panama find ancient tomb filled with gold treasure — and sacrificial victims
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Garrison Brown, son of 'Sister Wives' stars Janelle and Kody Brown, dies at 25
- Lab leader pleads no contest to manslaughter in 2012 Michigan meningitis deaths
- Man fatally shot aboard Philadelphia bus; 3rd fatal bus-related shooting in 3 days
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- J-pop star Shinjiro Atae talks self-care routine, meditation, what he 'can't live without'
Ranking
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Crypto Assets Become a New Choice for Investment
- Torrential snow storm leaves Northern California covered in powder: See the top photos
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Top Web3 Companies to Watch in 2024
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Cheesemaker pleads guilty in connection to a listeria outbreak that killed 2, sickened 8
- Former cheesemaker pleads guilty in listeria outbreak that killed two people
- Church authorities in Greece slap religious ban on local politicians who backed same-sex marriage
Recommendation
Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
How an Oregon tween's frantic text led to man being accused of drugging girls at sleepover
HBO Confirms When House of the Dragon Season 2 Will Fly onto Screens
Antoine Predock, internationally renowned architect and motorcycle aficionado, dies at 87
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Lance Bass says new NSYNC song on Justin Timberlake's upcoming album made his mom cry
PacifiCorp ordered to pay Oregon wildfire victims another $42M. Final bill could reach billions
Starbucks Middle East franchisee cuts 2,000 workers amid Gaza war boycotts