ESPN: Many college players among 20 charged in point-shaving scheme

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Per ESPN:

Twenty men have been charged in a point-shaving scheme involving more than 39 college basketball players on more than 17 NCAA Division I teams, leading to more than 29 games being fixed, according to a federal indictment unsealed Thursday in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

Fifteen of the defendants played college basketball during the 2023-24 and/or 2024-25 seasons, according to the indictment. Some have played this season. Two of the players named in the indictment, Cedquavious Hunter and Dyquavian Short, were sanctioned in November by the NCAA for fixing New Orleans games.

The other five defendants were described by authorities as fixers. At least two of the defendants, Shane Hennen and Marves Fairley, were also charged in a federal indictment in the Eastern District of New York centered on gambling schemes in the NBA.

Former NBA player Antonio Blakeney was named but not charged in the indictment. The indictment describes Blakeney as being "charged elsewhere."

The scheme, according to the 70-page indictment, began around September 2022 and initially was focused on fixing games in the Chinese Basketball Association. The group later targeted college basketball games, offering bribes to college players ranging from $10,000 to $30,000 to compromise games for betting purposes, according to the indictment.

"In placing these wagers on games they had fixed, the defendants defrauded sportsbooks, as well as individual sports bettors, who were all unaware that the defendants had corruptly manipulated the outcome of these games that should have been decided fairly, based on genuine competition and the best efforts of the players," the indictment said.


Go Gophers!!
 




What are the FanDuel odds of the 2 named having almost identical unpronounceable names?
 





Per ESPN:

Twenty men have been charged in a point-shaving scheme involving more than 39 college basketball players on more than 17 NCAA Division I teams, leading to more than 29 games being fixed, according to a federal indictment unsealed Thursday in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

Fifteen of the defendants played college basketball during the 2023-24 and/or 2024-25 seasons, according to the indictment. Some have played this season. Two of the players named in the indictment, Cedquavious Hunter and Dyquavian Short, were sanctioned in November by the NCAA for fixing New Orleans games.

The other five defendants were described by authorities as fixers. At least two of the defendants, Shane Hennen and Marves Fairley, were also charged in a federal indictment in the Eastern District of New York centered on gambling schemes in the NBA.

Former NBA player Antonio Blakeney was named but not charged in the indictment. The indictment describes Blakeney as being "charged elsewhere."

The scheme, according to the 70-page indictment, began around September 2022 and initially was focused on fixing games in the Chinese Basketball Association. The group later targeted college basketball games, offering bribes to college players ranging from $10,000 to $30,000 to compromise games for betting purposes, according to the indictment.

"In placing these wagers on games they had fixed, the defendants defrauded sportsbooks, as well as individual sports bettors, who were all unaware that the defendants had corruptly manipulated the outcome of these games that should have been decided fairly, based on genuine competition and the best efforts of the players," the indictment said.


Go Gophers!!
Let’s let all the college athletes make as much money as they want from any source they can get it from. And then let’s make gambling legal for college kids. What’s the worst that could happen?
 





More info from The Athletic
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/69...ge-basketball-gambling-investigation-charges/

On a separate track, the NCAA has been investigating some of the schools and athletes mentioned in the indictment. Over the past year, the NCAA has ruled more than a dozen Division I men’s basketball players permanently ineligible for manipulating game results and their own performances, making impermissible bets, providing information to gamblers and not cooperating with investigations.

“Protecting competition integrity is of the utmost importance for the NCAA,” NCAA President Charlie Baker said in a statement on Thursday. “We are thankful for law enforcement agencies working to detect and combat integrity issues and match manipulation in college sports.”
:
The NCAA has also been pushing for a ban on prop bets in college sports. Its lobbying helped lead four states to remove prop betting on college players, but many others still allow bettors to wager on the performance of individual players.

“Our enforcement team uncovered student-athletes who manipulated their performance to win bets, and we caught coaches trading inside information, and we took action, and we banned those responsible,” Baker said during his address to membership at the convention Wednesday. “But the sports betting community’s response to that was a shoulder shrug. While sports books announced they’re taking some prop bets off the market for NBA games, because, in their own words, the bets are too risky, they refuse to do the same for college prop bets. In some respects, the sports betting industry’s drive for profits is coming at the expense of our student-athletes, and it must stop.”
 




Let’s let all the college athletes make as much money as they want from any source they can get it from. And then let’s make gambling legal for college kids. What’s the worst that could happen?
Yep, not allowing kids to make money would definitely make them far less likely to engage in this sort of scheme. Brilliant logic.
 




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