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tk13
11-13-2014, 08:06 PM
This is big. The first major sports commissioner to take this stance.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/14/opinion/nba-commissioner-adam-silver-legalize-sports-betting.html?smid=tw-share&_r=0

Legalize and Regulate Sports Betting
N.B.A. Commissioner Adam Silver: Allow Gambling on Pro Games

By ADAM SILVER

NOV. 13, 2014


BETTING on professional sports is currently illegal in most of the United States outside of Nevada. I believe we need a different approach.

For more than two decades, the National Basketball Association has opposed the expansion of legal sports betting, as have the other major professional sports leagues in the United States. In 1992, the leagues supported the passage by Congress of the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, or Paspa, which generally prohibits states from authorizing sports betting.

But despite legal restrictions, sports betting is widespread. It is a thriving underground business that operates free from regulation or oversight. Because there are few legal options available, those who wish to bet resort to illicit bookmaking operations and shady offshore websites. There is no solid data on the volume of illegal sports betting activity in the United States, but some estimate that nearly $400 billion is illegally wagered on sports each year.

Times have changed since Paspa was enacted. Gambling has increasingly become a popular and accepted form of entertainment in the United States. Most states offer lotteries. Over half of them have legal casinos. Three have approved some form of Internet gambling, with others poised to follow.

There is an obvious appetite among sports fans for a safe and legal way to wager on professional sporting events. Mainstream media outlets regularly publish sports betting lines and point spreads. Voters in New Jersey overwhelmingly voiced their support for legal sports betting in a 2011 referendum. Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey recently signed a bill authorizing sports betting at local casinos and horse racetracks, a law the N.B.A. and other leagues have opposed — and a federal court has blocked — because it violates Paspa.

Outside of the United States, sports betting and other forms of gambling are popular, widely legal and subject to regulation. In England, for example, a sports bet can be placed on a smartphone, at a stadium kiosk or even using a television remote control.

In light of these domestic and global trends, the laws on sports betting should be changed. Congress should adopt a federal framework that allows states to authorize betting on professional sports, subject to strict regulatory requirements and technological safeguards.

These requirements would include: mandatory monitoring and reporting of unusual betting-line movements; a licensing protocol to ensure betting operators are legitimate; minimum-age verification measures; geo-blocking technology to ensure betting is available only where it is legal; mechanisms to identify and exclude people with gambling problems; and education about responsible gaming.

Without a comprehensive federal solution, state measures such as New Jersey’s recent initiative will be both unlawful and bad public policy.

Let me be clear: Any new approach must ensure the integrity of the game. One of my most important responsibilities as commissioner of the N.B.A. is to protect the integrity of professional basketball and preserve public confidence in the league and our sport. I oppose any course of action that would compromise these objectives.

But I believe that sports betting should be brought out of the underground and into the sunlight where it can be appropriately monitored and regulated.

-King-
11-13-2014, 08:06 PM
Adam Silver is fast becoming the best commissioner in sports by far.

Why Not?
11-13-2014, 09:31 PM
Adam Silver is fast becoming the best commissioner in sports by far.

By a wide margin

ChiefsCountry
11-13-2014, 09:35 PM
NBA wants in on that new arena in Las Vegas is my take away.

Its also surprising because basketball is also the easiest sport to manipulate since one player can take over a game unlike other team sports.

cosmo20002
11-13-2014, 09:48 PM
So, he must think making it easier to bet on games would increase ratings.
Otherwise, why would he be in support of it?

cosmo20002
11-13-2014, 09:50 PM
NBA wants in on that new arena in Las Vegas is my take away.

Its also surprising because basketball is also the easiest sport to manipulate since one player can take over a game unlike other team sports.

Why would that impact its position on nationwide sports betting?

LoneWolf
11-13-2014, 09:53 PM
So, he must think making it easier to bet on games would increase ratings.
Otherwise, why would he be in support of it?

Did you read the OP? Hell, just read the last couple of sentences. He makes his opinion pretty clear.

cosmo20002
11-14-2014, 12:03 AM
Did you read the OP? Hell, just read the last couple of sentences. He makes his opinion pretty clear.

You really believe that his main concern is to ensure that gambling is properly regulated? He says it will help the integrity of the league, but if anything, I think it would increase speculation about fixing, point shaving, etc.

I'm not against legalizing it, I just don't think he's being honest about his reasons. I think he believes that making it easy to wager on NBA games will increase interest in the NBA.

RobBlake
11-14-2014, 01:10 AM
You really believe that his main concern is to ensure that gambling is properly regulated? He says it will help the integrity of the league, but if anything, I think it would increase speculation about fixing, point shaving, etc.

I'm not against legalizing it, I just don't think he's being honest about his reasons. I think he believes that making it easy to wager on NBA games will increase interest in the NBA.

Honestly, I think its both.

Chiefs=Champions
11-14-2014, 04:22 AM
What is the reasoning behind the current laws? We allow betting on pro sports here in Australia, seems a foreign concept to me...

CoMoChief
11-14-2014, 05:53 AM
How could this not corrupt the sport?

Basketball is by far and away the easiest sport to manipulate.

People could be bought off to have "off nights" and nobody would be able to prove it.

Refs can call fouls, non calls at their own discretion, and the NBA is already horribly shitty at officiating as it is, you wouldn't be able to notice if any fixing is taking place.

It's actually just easier to pay off a player though.

Johnny Vegas
11-14-2014, 07:13 AM
So you're telling me since there's an underground sports betting market that there hasn't been corrupt refs or athletes to manipulate a game? Once it's legalized and regulated it'll be easier to manipulate games? Am I reading this right? Kinda like legalizing pot will give the kids eaiser access to get it right?

Bewbies
11-14-2014, 07:21 AM
To be fair, NBA players are also the highest paid. Do folks think a guy making $5m a year will take an envelope with $5,000 in it and risk his career?

Very few places out there would have the cash necessary to buy these guys off.

the Talking Can
11-14-2014, 07:21 AM
nba bought in on fanduel...they're already supporting gambling

ChiliConCarnage
11-14-2014, 07:25 AM
Look Silver... The goal was to get the players to like you
You were supposed to come out for legalization of MARIJUANA

cosmo20002
11-14-2014, 07:31 AM
nba bought in on fanduel...they're already supporting gambling

I've noticed those ads on the NFL website, and I thought it was odd. They know this fantasy football stuff increases interest. But the Fanduel thing is actually considered a "game of skill" and not gambling, which is why it's legal here. Really, if that is a game a skill, I don't know why picking a winning team against the point spread isn't a game of skill.

Why Not?
11-14-2014, 08:37 AM
How could this not corrupt the sport?

Basketball is by far and away the easiest sport to manipulate.

People could be bought off to have "off nights" and nobody would be able to prove it.

Refs can call fouls, non calls at their own discretion, and the NBA is already horribly shitty at officiating as it is, you wouldn't be able to notice if any fixing is taking place.

It's actually just easier to pay off a player though.

I'm not sure how it would corrupt the sport? Betting on NBA games is already legal in Nevada and online. He's just talking about making it legal everywhere.

mr. tegu
11-14-2014, 08:47 AM
Making betting illegal would not affect the integrity of the game. First off, if there was any type of motivation or way to shave points or what have you, then it would be already happening.

Secondly, making betting legal would actually increase the scrutiny on the players and the games, making point shaving less likely, and it would all but remove any notion of the games being shady. If the lines are no longer taboo, then everyone will be aware of them and they will be a common topic of conversation. It would be virtually impossible for players to get away with anything.

You may have a little more trouble with scrutinizing refs due to judgement calls, but they have already been down that road and the refs know the consequences and that they likely wouldn't be able to get away with anything they attempt. The refs will do their best to not appear biased by making questionable calls so as to not give anyone any reason to believe they are doing something shady.

Garcia Bronco
11-14-2014, 09:40 AM
Once you legalize sports betting you'll see more and more game fixing. Just look at Futbol in Asia

Garcia Bronco
11-14-2014, 09:42 AM
I've noticed those ads on the NFL website, and I thought it was odd. They know this fantasy football stuff increases interest. But the Fanduel thing is actually considered a "game of skill" and not gambling, which is why it's legal here. Really, if that is a game a skill, I don't know why picking a winning team against the point spread isn't a game of skill.

It depends on how statistically random it is.

Hootie
11-14-2014, 09:46 AM
He knows legalized betting would take the NBA to an all new level. Same with the NFL and even the MLB. The average Joe would start betting and start tuning in because a bet gets the old adrenaline pumping...and let's be honest...there aren't a big percentage of sports fans that know a bookie

Eleazar
11-14-2014, 10:35 AM
They have it in the UK for the premier league. Everywhere you go, "bet on this, bet on that".

I don't really care, if people want to hand their money over to gambling companies then go ahead.