Sports are Being Destroyed by Gambling and Being Brought to You by Gambling

On a recent episode of our podcast RD and I talked about gambling and how detrimental the effects are going to be in professional sports. We were both in agreement, although I did feel like legalized gambling was inevitable and we would have to deal with early hiccups. Well, it didn't take that long until this all blew up in athletes faces, and I have to say, RD was pretty much right on the money.

Look, I have no issues with athletes gambling the millions of dollars they have if that is what they want to do with their money. They have earned the right to spend it anyway they want. Where I have a problem is when they bet on the sport they plan and can change the outcome of a certain game. That is messing it all up. Sports is the one thing that is supposed to be unpredictable. It's the best show on tv because of all the drama involved in each and every game. But now, with gambling running rampant, some athletes have taken it upon themselves to change that.

Terry Rozier is one of the hot names in this current NBA gambling saga. Apparently he would tell some of his buddies that he was going to check himself out of a game early, say he was injured and have his friend bet on the under for minutes played. Then he had the audacity to film himself on the internet holding stacks and stacks of cash. That is stupid. When you put stuff on the internet it is going to be there forever and someone knows how to find it. Also, why does Las Vegas need to have prop bets on guys like Terry Rozier? That is wild. If you need to have prop bets, and I think that prop bets are the dumbest thing ever, it should only be done for star players. There's no need for a deep bench player or a fifth starter to have prop bets being placed. This is the reason that Johntay Porter is now banned from the NBA. He fixed games to help his friends win money, thus having a hand in changing the outcome of a game. That's messed up and I fully agree with Johntay Porter getting a lifetime suspension. This is what Pete Rose did as a manager, and Johntay Porter is no Pete Rose. And as everyone would have expected, all the big time websites and tv shows have taken these guys to task. They are running their names through the mud at every chance they get. They talk about the sanctity of the game and say that these guys have ruined it.

All of this is leading to my biggest issue with all of this, every single ad on most of these shows has to do with gambling. I was listening to Zach Lowe's podcast when this news broke and, I kid you not, the first ad read of the episode was centered around gambling. I don't remember what site they were talking about because I was so appalled that the very first ad was about the very same thing Lowe was chastising. Then he comes back from break and immediately starts to rip into these players again for gambling. It's almost as if he doesn't know what ads will be on his show, and he probably doesn't care. Those ads help pay his salary, so why take the time to know which ones are going to be on his show that day. It is insane to me that no one involved at The Ringer vetted the ads on the day Zach Lowe was going to rip sports gambling a new one. And it hasn't stopped these from showing up time and again. I live in Saint Louis and the gambling ads are now telling me how easy it will be to gamble on professional sports in Missouri any day now. I just don't know how these writers can do a podcast where they crush players for gambling, and in the very next breath, they're doing an ad for FanDuel. The same goes for ESPN. When they broke the Terry Rozier thing, they may as well have had a gambling ad on the lower left or right hand side of the screen. Every time I turn on ESPN or the NFL Network or NBC or CBS or ABC to watch college football, 99 percent of the ads are for free gambling sites. My television is basically begging me to gamble. But when pro athletes do it I'm supposed to be disgusted by them.

The commissioners and owners had to know this was going to happen the moment sports betting was made legal. I have to imagine the employees at The Ringer and ESPN had to know this was coming. Hell, Bill Simmons openly talks about gambling and does an annual over/under podcast for the NFL and NBA every year. Yet he feels like he has to bash these pro athletes for doing the exact same thing he and all his buddies are doing. Going on your show to minimize and degrade pro athletes for gambling, then having ads for nothing but gambling makes them hypocrites in my eyes. Either scrap all the ads from gambling sites, or understand that they're part of the problem. A

s long as this is legal, pro athletes are going to find a way to gamble and there's nothing The Ringer or ESPN can do about it as long as they keep running the same ads time and time again. RD was right. Gambling is going to take all the fun away from pro and college sports and that will make me sad because I don't gamble and I love watching live games for the endless drama. We live in a weird timeline. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Thoughts on the Jontay Porter Saga

Jontay Porter was banned for life from the NBA yesterday. Let’s discuss.

This is a way bigger deal than most will make it out to be. Jontay Porter isn't a big name. He isn't an all star. He doesn't have big numbers. He was undrafted and played very sparingly. But what he did is the exact same thing that Pete Rose did to get booted from the MLB. He bet on tons of games with tons of parlays and gave insider info to other gamblers. In fact, what Porter did may be worse than what Pete Rose did when you break it down. He placed an 80,000 dollar bet that, if it had cashed, he could have won 1.1 million dollars. He placed 13 separate bets with an associates online betting account. He also placed a prop bet, I guess based on minutes played, for a game in which he only played a few minutes. He checked himself out because he said that he "wasn't feeling well". I mean, how dumb do you have to be?

Seriously, how did it get this bad for Porter? Why did he have to gamble on these games? What was there to gain for him, basically shaving points? I get that he was a two way player. I understand that he was probably making whatever the league minimum is for NBA players. I'm sure he was making as much as the last few players on the bench. But he was still getting paid pretty well for a bench guy in the NBA. The league minimum for an NBA player is 1.1 million dollars. So, by just being a deep bench player, after getting called up to the Raptors in a down year for them, he was still a millionaire. He was still making six figures. His family was making money hand over fist. His brother, Michael Porter Jr, makes a ton of money playing for the Nuggets. So, I have to believe this was not about the money. There is something else at stake here.

I, if I had to guess, would say that Porter liked the thrill, and by playing in some of these games that were being bet on, he could control the outcome. I have to think that by putting 80 grand on a prop bet, he was excited by the thrill of making close to his base salary on one single bet. I would guess that he is a gambling addict, and I wonder how deep this goes for him. He had no reason to do it. He has more than enough money. So, to continually bet over and over again, that is the sign of a true addict. He couldn't get enough of it. And when he could control some of the bets a little bit, he got greedy. He took it too far. He went way over the line. This could have been stopped. He could have told the people he was placing bets with that he was done. His brother could have tried to stop him. But, like a true addict, he just had to bet. I wonder if the 80 grand bet was him thinking, this is the last one and then I'm out. But, I have to venture to think that it wasn't the last one. Not by a long shot. And now Jontay Porter is paying the price for his addiction. He is no longer allowed in the league that he worked so hard to make it to. He can't even play in the G League. He is going to have to settle for a professional league overseas, if any team will even sign him.

This is a bad look for Jontay Porter. He is done. His NBA days are officially over, and all for some stupid bets. There are many reasons not to gamble, and Porter may have found the main reason why not. His NBA career is over and he did it to himself. That is a bummer. 

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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