There's an obvious gambling problem in sports that should cause sports fans to question the legitimacy of every contest



On Tuesday, news broke that San Diego Padres utility player Tucupita Marcano was facing a lifetime ban for having allegedly bet on baseball, including placing bets on the outcomes of Pittsburgh Pirates games when he played for the team last year. The investigation is ongoing, and representatives for Marcano, the MLBPA, and MLB are for the moment staying tight-lipped in public, but the widespread expectation seems to be that Marcano will be lucky to escape with any eligibility to return to professional baseball at all.

Marcano, however, is just the latest in an alarming string of athletes who have been implicated in professional gambling scandals. Nor is the problem limited to baseball. In April, the NBA announced a lifetime ban for Toronto Raptors reserve player Jontay Porter, who not only was alleged to have bet on games, but also allegedly provided illegal inside information to gamblers in exchange for money and on at least one occasion allegedly faked an illness to limit his own participation in a game in order to ensure that a particular proposition bet paid off.

And of course, most embarrassingly, the most exciting player in recent baseball memory, Shohei Ohtani, was caught up in a gambling scandal when his interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, was allegedly busted by the feds for stealing millions of dollars from Ohtani to pay off debts he incurred by wagering on sports with an illegal bookie. Although that investigation also remains ongoing, the likelihood that a person in Mizuhara's situation may have provided inside information to gamblers that he was privy to only because of his position as Ohtani's interpreter seems quite high.

The biggest threat to the future of professional sports is not woke politics or the specter of people who were born biologically male dominating female athletes. It's gambling and the insidious effect that the industry plainly has on the integrity of sports competition.

Sports, at its core, is watchable solely because the audience believes that the athletes involved in the competition are playing an honest game that involves both sides’ best efforts to win. If fans don’t believe that games are on the level, sports cannot survive.

Gambling, at its core, is enjoyable to gamblers because it combines the adrenaline of vicarious fan participation in sport with the allure of a potentially large payday without doing work.

It should be obvious to all that the incentives created by gambling inherently threaten the basis for sport itself.

There is a reason that, in 2018, all four major sports in America petitioned the Supreme Court to keep the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, which effectively banned gambling on single sporting events outside Las Vegas. The leagues knew that sports gambling is a nightmare to police, and from the leagues’ perspective, the more they could outsource that job to the feds, the better.

However, when the Supreme Court struck down PASPA in 2018 on fairly narrow technical grounds, Congress had no appetite to pass a law that fixed the flaws that invalidated PASPA. There was not even a serious discussion to bring a bill to that effect to the floor.

And with shocking speed, the sports leagues and the sports-consuming public embraced the reality of a world in which sports betting could be done anywhere, on anything. Las Vegas, which had long been shunned by the leagues due to the danger of having a team so close to the seat of organized gambling, suddenly got an NFL team to keep its NHL team company. DraftKings and other companies became some of the most prominent sports advertisers. ESPN opened a vertical called ESPN BET that not only covered gambling but allowed people to gamble online in its portal.

And somehow, when news broke that millions of dollars had been siphoned from the bank account of the most famous baseball player since at least Barry Bonds to cover gambling debts, we were all surprised.

It is comforting to believe that the leagues have the situation under control and that Marcano, Porter, and Mizuhara were isolated cases. The leagues have even pointed to their cases as evidence that their control mechanisms are working.

But the Mizuhara case in particular puts the lie to that contention. Here was an individual who was, effectively, the mouthpiece of the most prominent player in baseball. According to investigators, he placed an astonishing number of bets — estimated to be over 19,000 — over a period that lasted three years.

As the story goes, he began siphoning money in the form of public wire transfers that were for huge dollar amounts in September 2023. A total of at least nine of these transactions were authorized and executed over the intervening months. None of this was discovered until January 2024, and even then it was not discovered by the league, it was discovered by the feds. If the feds had not raided the home of Mizuhara’s alleged bookie, who knows how long it would have taken baseball to catch on to what was happening?

The problem does not admit of easy answers. There is little or no appetite for a legislative solution because, perversely, the public at large enjoys betting on sports, as evidenced by the massive growth in the sports betting industry that has occurred since 2018. Additionally, the industry is greasing the wheels of both the media that covers sports and the teams themselves with copious amounts of advertising money. Sports fans and media may well be unwittingly sowing the seeds of destruction for sports with their own desires.

But even if all this were not true, a legislative fix would likely still not be the answer. Trusting the federal government to deal with the problem by making it illegal is a lazy approach that was ineffective while it lasted. Gambling was largely illegal when Tim Donaghy bet on games for two years as an NBA referee before he got caught. Gambling was largely illegal when Pete Rose reportedly bet on baseball in 1987 — something he was not caught doing until 1989.

This problem is not one that the feds could or should solve. But it’s one that the leagues themselves need to wrestle with, and quickly. The steady stream of stories about people who have been caught does and should cause sports fans to question how many more compromised athletes are out there who have not been caught, or at least not caught yet. And it’s only a matter of time before those questions turn to cynicism about the legitimacy of sports' on-field product.

And when that happens, sports as we know them will be over.

Did San Francisco’s Crap And Crime Dissuade Shohei Ohtani From Signing With The Giants?

Buster Posey noted how the 'perception' of San Fran being a crime-ridden city could factor into whether players decide to sign with the Giants.

Couch: Shohei Ohtani can thank Stephen A. Smith and social justice warriors for his soon-bestowed AL MVP award



It was Monday, July 12, when Stephen A. Smith, who is paid to bloviate and set off Twitter, mocked Shohei Ohtani as "a dude that needs an interpreter." Who knew at the time that, in saying that, Smith had clinched for Ohtani the American League Most Valuable Player award?

This is about the power of Twitter and the media's reckless obsession with it. The Twitter mob was so strong in July that it took the usually defiant Smith hostage and forced him to his knees to apologize to the Asian community multiple times. It also rewrote baseball history.

Ohtani, the Los Angeles Angels' slugger/pitcher who reminds everyone of Babe Ruth, has had a transcendent year. If current trends continue for the final two and a half weeks of the baseball season, though, one thing is sure: Ohtani will not deserve to be MVP. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. of the Toronto Blue Jays will. Yet Guerrero will have no chance, even if he wins the coveted Triple Crown — leading the league in home runs, runs batted in and batting average — while lifting his team to the playoffs.

Meanwhile, Ohtani's Angels are out of the playoff race with a losing record and in second-to-last place. Most Valuable Player? How valuable can Ohtani be? His team would have finished second to last without him.

The International Business Times called it "a virtual lock" that Ohtani will be the MVP with Guerrero finishing second, citing FanDuel's lopsided odds: Ohtani is a -7000 MVP favorite with Guerrero at +1500.

No player in baseball history has won the Triple Crown, led his team to the postseason, and not been named the MVP, not since the award was created. It's about to happen now because of the ridiculous state of modern media, which has offered up a historical MVP award in fealty to Twitter as a social statement.

Guerrero is just 22 and will have plenty of chances to win plenty of MVP awards. This is the mob's chance to stand up against anti-Asian hate when it has reared its ugly head again.

Ohtani has been amazing and so fun to watch, in the home run race and also with a 3.36 ERA in 21 starts as a pitcher. Those are the things that should be weighed.

Instead, the hate seems real. And there is nothing wrong with standing up for something. But what does that have to do with the MVP award? How do those things become the criteria?

It's still possible that Guerrero won't win the Triple Crown and that something will stop the Blue Jays' incredible surge and keep them out of the playoffs. If that happens, then fine, the media should vote for Ohtani as MVP.

Don't just hand over the award as an apology for society and Smith's stupidity.

Smith says plenty of dumb things on ESPN's "First Take." He's paid $12 million a year, reportedly, to do it. He is supposed to come as close to the line as possible without stepping over it. Sometimes he and FoxSports 1's Skip Bayless, trying to one-up each other, step over it anyway.

When Smith does that, like when he said that Steve Nash had gotten the Brooklyn Nets' coaching job out of "white privilege," he simply apologizes to make Twitter's overlords happy. Then he moves on, sometimes with a massive pay raise for the attention he got ESPN.

It's a little dance. Nobody on Twitter really wants Smith, or Bayless, to stop saying these things. They just want to be able to show outrage over them. They need Smith to keep talking, actually.

In July, this is what he said about Ohtani:

"... When you talk about an audience gravitating to the tube or to the ballpark to actually watch you, I don't think it helps that the No. 1 face is a dude that needs an interpreter so you can understand what the hell he's saying in this country."

Yes, that was stupid and hurtful. It just shouldn't have locked up the MVP award for Ohtani.

Guerrero leads the league with 45 homers (one ahead of Ohtani) and a .315 batting average. He's third in RBIs with 103, in range of leader Salvador Perez of the Kansas City Royals, who has 109.

The Blue Jays have won 12 of the past 14 games, mostly behind incredible power hitting. Guerrero has driven the playoff push. Over a 15-game stretch before Tuesday's game, he hit .365 with nine homers. The Blue Jays were 9.5 games behind the New York Yankees on Aug. 27 and are now tied with them for the top wild card spot.

Detroit's Miguel Cabrera won the Triple Crown and MVP in 2012, and before that, no one had done it since Carl Yastrzemski in 1967 and Frank Robinson in 1966.

It's true that it's even rarer to have Ohtani in the home run chase and also among the league's better pitchers. I get that. But the Triple Crown on a playoff team? Who could be more valuable?

If that happens, even Stephen A. would think Guerrero deserves to be MVP. I doubt he'd say that, though.

Fearless: Stephen A. Smith’s Shohei apology really bows to globalists, ‘Black Twitter,’ and the black matriarchy



Someone tell Stephen A. Smith it's a mistake to bow to the Twitter mob. Never do it.

Smith, the $12-million-a-year ESPN broadcaster, issued an apology yesterday for no good reason. Twitter pretended that Smith offended Asians when he pointed out that baseball star Shohei Ohtani isn't the ideal marketing face for Major League Baseball because his English is so poor that he speaks through an interpreter.

On his ESPN debate show, "First Take," Smith told co-host Max Kellerman this:

The fact that you got a foreign player that doesn't speak English, that needs an interpreter … believe it or not, I think contributes to harming the game in some degree when that's your box office appeal. It needs to be somebody like Bryce Harper, Mike Trout, those guys. And unfortunately, at this moment in time, that's not the case.

This is not a remotely new or controversial sentiment. Smith wasn't disparaging Ohtani. He was making a factual point about what's undermining the popularity of Major League Baseball in America.

Regretfully, I have experience when it comes to disparaging Asian professional athletes. Nearly a decade ago, at the peak of NBA player Jeremy Lin-sanity, I tweeted an inappropriate joke about Lin. I wrote and delivered a sincere apology for disparaging Lin and diminishing an important moment for Asian sports fans.

I have zero problem with admitting a mistake and apologizing when I've done something wrong. Smith didn't do anything wrong.

Only in these globalist times could someone interpret Smith's comments as harmful. Blue-check Twitter believes everything that comes out of a public figure's mouth must land perfectly at every location on the globe. Blue-check Twitter believes Smith's comments are an extension of Donald Trump's America First agenda.

That is Smith's crime. Prioritizing America above other countries and sharing a thought a Trump supporter might have.

I grew up in Indianapolis, Indiana, home of the former "greatest spectacle in racing," the Indy 500. In the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s, Indy cars lost traction and relevance to NASCAR because American racing fans preferred Dale Earnhardt and Jeff Gordon over Brazilian Emerson Fittipaldi and Dutchman Arie Luyendyk.

In fact, the argument over foreign dominance began raging in the 1970s. Eventually American open-wheel racing had a civil war. A band of revolutionary car owners seceded from USAC, the main governing body, and formed CART, a rebel rival. The war lasted for nearly 20 years before Indy Motor Speedway president Tony George ended the feud by starting the Indy Racing League.

Let me give you a more recent example from the sports world.

From 2006 to 2013, Brazilian Anderson Silva held the title of UFC middleweight champion. It's the longest title streak in UFC history. He defended his title 16 straight times. Silva is arguably the greatest mixed martial arts fighter of all time.

You know what other fighters and fans complained about during Silva's reign? He spoke through an interpreter most of the time. He preferred to do interviews in Portugese. Silva isn't nearly as popular as Conor McGregor, Chuck Liddell, or Ronda Rousey.

Not speaking English hurts American popularity. I'm sure not speaking Japanese would undermine an American baseball player's popularity in Japan.

Stephen A. Smith is being targeted at ESPN. His salary is inflated and problematic. No matter how hard he works, no matter how many shows he fronts, his salary is a problem at ESPN because it dwarfs Maria Taylor's.

Right now, ESPN is Wakanda. A lot of people missed the point of the "Black Panther" movie and fictional Wakanda. T'Challa, the Black Panther, was nothing more than a puppet for the black women of Wakanda. Watch the movie again. At every turn, the Black Panther sought the advice, counsel, support, and approval of black women.

"Black Panther" is a celebration of the black matriarchy. Period.

ESPN is Wakanda. Maria Taylor wants to be the Black Panther. She sees herself as Stephen A.'s equal. She's not. So Stephen A. has to be cut down to Maria's size.

Black Twitter, the power source of the black matriarchy, is assisting Maria in her contract push and the devaluation of Smith.

Yesterday's Stephen A. controversy was a total rig job, orchestrated to create the impression that Smith is problematic. Smith should never have legitimized it with a written apology.

He even let his handlers convince him that his words had some loose connection to a spike in anti-Asian violence. Smith wrote:

"In this day and age, with all the violence being perpetrated against the Asian-American community, my comments — albeit unintentional — were clearly insensitive and regrettable."

Smith is from Hollis Queens, New York. Black bodies have been dropping in Hollis for 40 years. The violence perpetrated, tolerated, and celebrated within the black community is a country-wide pandemic.

No one is apologizing for that. Never apologize to the Twitter mob.