• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

An Australian View of the New Trump Iran Deal

June 23, 2026

Vance Takes Center Stage In White House Push To Protect GOP Majority

June 23, 2026

Players Will Not Be Fined for Wearing Bible Verses

June 23, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Tuesday, June 23
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    Vance Takes Center Stage In White House Push To Protect GOP Majority

    June 23, 2026

    House Republicans Threaten Contempt After Dem Cash Cow ActBlue Ignores Subpoenas

    June 23, 2026

    Trump Admin Threatens To Pull Critical Federal Funds Unless States Adopt Election Integrity Measures

    June 23, 2026

    White Democrat Women Dance Across America For Juneteenth

    June 23, 2026

    Joy Reid Claims Black People Aren’t Excited For July 4th, Juneteenth Is The ‘Real Thing’

    June 23, 2026
  • Health

    HHS Ebola trial, retatrutide, suicide treatment: Morning Rounds

    June 23, 2026

    This Startup Says It Saves Medicare More Than $2 Million A Week

    June 23, 2026

    7 Signs You Need Physical Therapy (And How To Find the Right Provider)

    June 23, 2026

    Kidney transplant, livestock disease, Texas: Morning Rounds

    June 22, 2026

    The Hidden Hormone Controlling Your Energy, Mood, And Recovery

    June 22, 2026
  • World

    Iran MOU Doesn’t Address ‘Very Important’ Ballistic Missiles, Terror Proxies

    June 23, 2026

    DEA Reportedly Did Nothing As Staggering Amounts Of Fentanyl Hit The Streets

    June 23, 2026

    One Dead, Nine in Critical Condition After Train Collision in England

    June 23, 2026

    MS NOW Analyst: Trump Broke Biggest ‘Taboo’ In Diplomatic History

    June 23, 2026

    Puberty Blockers to Be Given to Girls as Young as 11 in UK Medical Trial

    June 23, 2026
  • Business

    Influential Economic Policy Center Bankrolled By Shady Dating App Founder

    June 19, 2026

    Dem Senator‘s 22-Year-Old Son Raises Eyeballs After Raking In $30 Million Investment

    June 19, 2026

    Jeff Bezos Claims AI Boom Will Actually Lead To Labor Shortages

    June 17, 2026

    Are You Gay Enough To Get A California Utilities Contract? Here’s The Test

    June 17, 2026

    Jersey Mike’s Overtakes Chick-Fil-A As Highest Rated Fast Food Chain

    June 17, 2026
  • Finance

    An Australian View of the New Trump Iran Deal

    June 23, 2026

    MoonPay buys Entendre in digital finance infrastructure push

    June 23, 2026

    U.S. fights with Brazil for China’s giant soybean market

    June 23, 2026

    What Will ETFs Look Like in 2027? State Street Gazes into Its Crystal Ball

    June 23, 2026

    Intel CEO gives investors a reality check

    June 23, 2026
  • Tech

    Elon Musk’s SpaceX IPO Spurs Momentum for Orbital AI Data Centers

    June 23, 2026

    Netflix’s Mega Podcast Venture Failing to Earn Fans

    June 23, 2026

    Texas Grandma Killed by Tesla Crashing into Home, Driver Claims ‘Autopilot’ Active

    June 22, 2026

    Asbestos Discovered in 1,000 UK Wind Turbines Imported from China

    June 22, 2026

    ‘F**k These Weird Ass Vultures’

    June 22, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Sports»NFL Suspensions Expose the League’s Problem With Sports Gambling
Sports

NFL Suspensions Expose the League’s Problem With Sports Gambling

April 22, 2023No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
NFL Suspensions Expose the League’s Problem With Sports Gambling
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

When the Supreme Court legalized sports gambling in 2018, the N.F.L. rushed to embrace a lucrative line of business it had denounced for decades as bad for the sport. There was, after all, new money to be made. The consequences of that about-face are now coming due.

The league on Friday handed down some of the strictest penalties it has ever issued, banning three players for at least the 2023 season for betting on N.F.L. games and suspending two others for six games for other violations of the league’s betting policy. The scale of the latest scandal and the terse verdict from the league rekindle questions about the precarious line the N.F.L. is trying to walk on gambling.

The indefinite suspension of three players — receiver Quintez Cephus and safety C.J. Moore of the Detroit Lions and defensive end Shaka Toney of the Washington Commanders — means that five players in the past four years have received at least season-long bans for betting on N.F.L. games, after decades without any such punishments. This week’s investigation ended with two more Lions players, receivers Stanley Berryhill and Jameson Williams, suspended for six games for lesser gambling violations that did not include betting on N.F.L. games.

This kind of scandal may have been what the N.F.L. was guarding against during the 25 years it spent inveighing against legalized sports betting. “We should not gamble with our children’s heroes,” Paul Tagliabue, then the league’s commissioner, testified to Congress in 1991 in support of legislation that effectively banned sports betting nationwide. In 2012, it was Roger Goodell’s turn to take up the cause.

“The N.F.L. cannot be compensated in damages for the harm that sports gambling poses to the goodwill, character and integrity of N.F.L. football,” Goodell wrote in a declaration for a court case about sports betting.

See also  Rays Star Wander Franco Missing After Police Conduct Two Raids over Child Sex Allegations

Yet in 2018, when the Supreme Court overturned the law that Tagliabue had championed, clearing the way for states to legalize sports betting, the N.F.L. quickly reversed course and sought to profit. Once a critic of everything Las Vegas stood for, the league in short order permitted the Raiders to build a stadium just off the Strip with a view of Luxor’s pyramid, held the Pro Bowl and the draft in the city, and will conclude the 2023 season with a Super Bowl there.

In the process, the league swung the door open to the very harm its leaders spent a quarter century warning against.

“Now, the young athletes are coming up in professional sports leagues with mixed messaging, not just from society and gambling companies, but from the sports leagues themselves,” said Marc Edelman, a law professor and director of sports ethics at Baruch College. As long as the N.F.L. has partnerships with betting companies, advertises betting during its games and encourages betting to the point of having sportsbooks on-site at N.F.L. stadiums, there will be “a level of cognitive dissonance for some players,” who may not fully realize the ramifications if they do bet on sports, Edelman added.

The N.F.L., which says it educates all personnel annually about its gambling policies, has justified its stringent penalties as being necessary to protect the “integrity of the game.” Yet the N.F.L. did not disclose enough information about the violations for the public to know whether the players bet on their teams’ games, or bet in coordination with one another, or how they were caught. There’s been no clarity from the league on whether, or how, the integrity of that game or others were at risk.

See also  NFL Safety Rodney Thomas' Father Arrested for Killing Bald Eagle

The seriousness of the discipline, on par with that levied against players who have previously bet on their own teams, seemed aimed at deterring others. But the league’s explanation of its penalties fell short of another purpose: ensuring public trust.

In a 181-word statement, issued on the cusp of the weekend, the league asked fans to take at face value its single-sentence assertion that “a league review uncovered no evidence indicating any inside information was used or that any game was compromised in any way.”

But the league has a track record of not being forthcoming about damaging information. The N.F.L. destroyed the videotapes and other evidence it collected as part of the 2007 Spygate investigation, which showed that the New England Patriots had filmed their opponents’ sideline to steal signals. And it refused to compel and release a written report detailing the findings of the league-sponsored investigation into accusations of workplace abuse and harassment under Daniel Snyder’s leadership of the Commanders.

Though sports betting has been widely legal in the United States for only a few years, today’s players have effectively been raised on gambling as entertainment. Sports betting apps borrow from the micro-transactions and loot boxes that are widespread in video games, and many are created by the same companies that once saturated the N.F.L.’s airwaves with advertisements for daily fantasy sports.

“The ease with which people can bet on sports on their phone is a boon to the sports gambling industry, because it puts a casino at the tip of everybody’s hand,” Edelman said. “But it is much easier for somebody to make an instantaneous decision to place a single bet of a small amount without thinking twice about it, and only realizing afterward that’s a violation.”

See also  Goodell Defends Decision To Air NFL Games On Paid Streaming Platforms Amid Trump Admin Scrutiny

Many sports betting experts argue that catching players betting is evidence the system is working. With sports leagues, betting data companies and law enforcement aligned, their monitoring, they say, is more effective at rooting out illicit activity now that betting is legal.

The partnerships the N.F.L. has forged with sports betting companies are estimated to be worth hundreds of millions annually. Instead of the “damages” Goodell warned of in 2012, the N.F.L. has reaped spoils, including massive sponsorship deals with casinos — while a handful of players have paid a steep price as the league heralds its integrity.

Arizona Cardinals defensive back Josh Shaw, who was suspended in 2019 for more than a season for betting on N.F.L. games, has never played in the N.F.L. again. Former Atlanta Falcons receiver Calvin Ridley, a former first-round pick, was traded to the Jacksonville Jaguars during his season-long suspension and was reinstated in March. The Lions promptly cut Cephus and Moore on Friday.

Bob Boland, a sports law professor at Seton Hall who teaches subjects that include gaming law, described the influx of new gambling money to the N.F.L. as having a “steroidal effect” that hastened the league’s abandonment of its view of gambling as an existential threat.

“That probably will dissipate with time,” Boland said. “But it’s certainly sent a message that we’re no longer treating this with the amount of fear and trepidation that we used to, so maybe you shouldn’t worry about it, either.”

Finding a palatable way to embrace something long viewed as a vice, Boland added, “is a difficult challenge,” particularly when the change happened so quickly.

Goodell was right in 2012 that there would be a cost to legalizing sports betting. But the N.F.L. continues to hope it won’t be the one to pay it.

Expose Gambling Leagues NFL Problem Sports Suspensions
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Players Will Not Be Fined for Wearing Bible Verses

June 23, 2026

‘The Most Wonderful People in the World’

June 23, 2026

Linda Cohn Plans To Retire From ESPN After 34 Years

June 23, 2026

Golf Channel Analyst Calls Long Island Fans a ‘Stain’ on the Game

June 23, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Air National Guard Marksman Allegedly Tried To Get Job As Hit Man: Prosecutors

April 14, 2023

Oil Price Resurgence Has Further to Run After the Saudis Turn the Screw

September 9, 2023

Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic Issued Foul for Shoving Suns Owner Mat Ishbia

May 8, 2023

The N.C.A.A. Once Eschewed Las Vegas. Times, and Prospects, Have Changed.

March 23, 2023
Don't Miss

An Australian View of the New Trump Iran Deal

Finance June 23, 2026

The establishment of a peace and ceasefire framework between the United States and Iran following…

Vance Takes Center Stage In White House Push To Protect GOP Majority

June 23, 2026

Players Will Not Be Fined for Wearing Bible Verses

June 23, 2026

Iran MOU Doesn’t Address ‘Very Important’ Ballistic Missiles, Terror Proxies

June 23, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,386)
  • Entertainment (5,264)
  • Finance (3,890)
  • Health (2,329)
  • Lifestyle (1,893)
  • Politics (3,657)
  • Sports (4,621)
  • Tech (2,296)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (5,172)
Our Picks

Vladimir Putin Invites North Koreas Kim Jong Un To Russia Summit What To Watch Out For

September 11, 2023

When Daughters Estrange From Their Mothers

March 29, 2024

Don’t Call China and Russia ‘Hostile States’, Says UK Foreign Office

August 28, 2023
Popular Posts

An Australian View of the New Trump Iran Deal

June 23, 2026

Vance Takes Center Stage In White House Push To Protect GOP Majority

June 23, 2026

Players Will Not Be Fined for Wearing Bible Verses

June 23, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.