Talking to a retired DDA friend of mine today, he had this "early take" on shocking betting scandal involving numerous NBA subjects (players, coaches, etc) and involvement with Italian mafia. If games were "fixed" and proven in court which should be relatively easy to get convictions this could not just rock NBA but lead to its downfall my longtime friend said. Anyone who attended (paid for tix) could claim cheated as games were "fixed." Civil suits on massive scale could result NBA having to pay millions if not billions of dollars in damages for NBA licensed merchandise fraud, other criminal violations. I want my money back for all the Kings games in the time frame that rigged games happened and cheated in this massive fraud. 30 individuals arrested today my retired prosecutor said very telling evidence FBI has to go forward at this scale.
NBA scandal draws Kings into outrageous corrupt fray. As I said earlier in a post - Want my money back from Kings organization and NBA for fixed outcome of games I paid for tix!
https://www.abc10.com/article/news/...ad491d22-9ae2-4b7a-9ab5-22af561c9074?tbref=hp
You and your friend seem to be misunderstanding here. This article you've cited is in relation to a
prop bet. These kinds of bets are placed on in-game occurrences that have
no direct impact on the outcome of the game. That's part of the reason that modern legal sports gambling is so insidious and so addictive. The prop bet menu is so insanely large that you can bet on the most inconsequential of occurrences, like Jontay Porter's point total. This is not evidence that the
outcomes of NBA games have been "fixed".
As far as we currently know, the outcomes of
games weren't fixed in the cases uncovered, but the outcomes of
bets were fixed. If you know your team is angling to lose a game toward the end of the season for draft pick positioning by sitting your most talented players, you can influence
betting outcomes. The NBA has already done much to try and curb tanking as a practice, but even the return of a blanket ban on NBA gambling isn't going to stop tanking. Teams would try their hand at tanking regardless.
And plenty of fans are, indeed, unhappy when they pay to go to a game and star players are sitting. It's why the league office has instituted fines for the practice of DNP: Tanking. But again, this is a different concern than, say, Chauncey Billups using insider knowledge to influence
betting outcomes.