The NFL announced last week that five players have been suspended for betting on sports contests. Three are suspended for at least a year. Three can resume playing in game seven of the upcoming season. Four of the players involved are with the Detroit Lions. The team has released two of them.
They aren’t the first. Last year the NFL suspended Calvin Ridley of the Atlanta Falcons for gambling.
The Detroit Lions reportedly (ESPN) organization has fired several staff members from various departments who also might have been gambling.
A few days before that announcement, Ohio residents began wagering on sports. The first bet was placed by former Cincinnati Reds baseball player Pete Rose, who has been banned from the Baseball Hall of Fame because of gambling. As baseball and other sports crawl farther under the covers with gamblers, are they creeping closer to admitting people such as Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson to Halls of Fame? Will fans believe them as much as they once did that the answer is “no.”
One of those lobbying for sports wagering in Missouri has said it will enhance fan participation in the games.
Associated Press columnist Kyle Hightower, however, wonders if our pro sports teams are undermining public confidence in themselves, writing, “The incidents have driven a public conversation about the integrity of pro sports as legalized sports betting takes a greater hold in this country.”
He quotes Professor Declan Hill at the University of New Haven who says “Leagues are dancing with the devil. Here’s what happens. There’ll be one play that’s kind of weird and dubious and sports fans will start to do, ‘Was that legitimate?’ And then there’ll be another one. And another one and another one. And after a few years, the sports leagues will have a problem because their fundamental credibility is being debated by their fans.”
Hightower sees players becoming “ambassadors for gambling companies” by appearing in sports gambling advertisements and promotions.
Huge money is involved here—more than $220 billion since the U. S. Supreme Court legalized sports betting in 2018. Leagues already are providing official stats to the big gambling companies. Some fans already wonder how pure leagues can be when this kind of big money is involved. And the money is going to be even bigger.
Missouri is an island surrounded by states with sports betting. The industry is leaning hard on the Missouri legislature to end that status. So far, internal squabbling among gambling interests has frustrated sports wagering backers. But it seems inevitable that our lawmakers eventually will buckle.
And what will happen to our trust in the games we watch when the fans’ “participation” in the games is “enhanced?”
Humans play these games and humans make mistakes and not always by accident. In the future fans might ask if a mistake really is a mistake? Every suspension for gambling chips away at confidence in The Game, whatever game it might be. What happens when we wonder if that error was accidental or that missed block was really just a miss; that the pass was not intentionally thrown an inch too high or too long or too short; that the goalie really did just miss that puck or that those two free throws that bounced off the rim could have gone in?
Our pro sports teams have spent decades emphasizing the integrity of their games. We worry that the lure of big money will erode the confidence we have as we watch from the games’ grandstand. How can we know?
How can we trust what we see?
It appears to be too late for such concerns to be prohibitive of gambling involvement in sports.
Hightower’s article concludes with a comment from Karol Corcoran, the general manager of FanDuel, one of the biggest online gambling operators, who says, “We’re in an ecosystem with customers, we’re the operators, with the leagues with our data providers. It’s important for all of us that we build together a sustainable industry. And being very careful about integrity is part of that.”
The fox is in the hen house. And it is talking about integrity.
We wish we could say we are comforted.
—-because the fox is always hungry.
We hope we can still love and trust our games five years, ten years, from now.