Gambling
Study: One-Third of High-Profile NCAA Athletes Threatened By Gamblers
In January, Dayton men’s basketball coach Anthony Grant made headlines by directing a blunt message to gamblers he said were using social media to send hateful messages to his players.
“I have to say something because I think it’s just necessary at this point,” Grant told reporters. “When we have people that make [the game] about themselves and attack kids because of their own agenda, it sickens me.”
Now, the NCAA has provided data to demonstrate how widespread the practice is.
According to a study commissioned by college sports’s governing body and published Friday, nearly a third of high-profile college athletes have received “abusive messages from someone with a betting interest” this academic year.
An artificial-intelligence service utilized by Signify Group, a London-based data science company, flagged some 540 gambling-related abusive comments during the NCAA basketball tournaments alone.
In a year rife with gambling scandals throughout North American sports, the relationship between sports and an increasingly destabilizing sports betting industry will be closely studied for years to come.