The National
Basketball Association playoffs are under way and the New York Knicks are in
them. That means rumors are aswirl that they are fixed for them to win. There
always are.
What’s that you say? The Knicks
didn’t make the playoffs in the previous seven seasons and haven’t won a league
championship since 1973, a 48-year span that is assuming Cubsian
dimensions? Nate McMillan, coach of the
Knicks’ first-round opponent Atlanta Hawks, wasn’t about to let such things get
in his way when before the series began he said “there’s going to be a lot of
[referees’] calls that probably won’t go our way.”
The whispers no doubt will continue
despite the fact the Hawks are off to a three-games-to-one lead in the
best-of-seven series. I’m not given to
making predictions but I feel safe saying the Knicks, which had the NBA’s
eleventh-best won-lost record (41-31) during the regular season, won’t go all
the way this year.
Indeed,
facts rarely stand in the way when the subject of “fixed” games arises in
sports, as it does with the least prompting. That may be particularly true
these days, when all sorts of conspiracy theories abound. New York teams usually
are at the center of them because the city is the nation’s largest, with the
most television sets, and it stands to reason that the success of its teams
means higher TV ratings, more ad revenues for the airing networks and, ultimately,
larger rights fees for the leagues involved. There’s no simpler equation.
And there’s no simpler statement of
fact that when it comes to the integrity of our sports’ outcomes the major
American professional leagues are second to none. We don’t know everything
that’s happened behind the scenes in the many thousands of games those entities
have staged, but it requires a deep study of history to find solid examples to
the contrary.
To find one in baseball you have to go back more
than a century to the “Black Sox” scandal of 1919, when eight members of the Chicago
White Sox confessed to “throwing” the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds. Pete
Rose bet on games as a player and manager but never was accused of trying to fix
one. The National Football League’s skirts have been clean since a couple of
New York Giants entertained bribe offers to lose to the Chicago Bears in the
1946 title game (one of them, quarterback Frank Filchock, played anyway and
threw a touchdown pass in the 24-14 Bears’ win), and the National Hockey
League’s slate is marred of late by only the 2006 revelation that several
players and coaches (including the great Wayne Gretzky) were involved in a
betting ring but one that put its money on football games, not hockey.
Big-league athletes today are
considered conspiracy-proof because they make too much money to risk their
careers and freedoms to further one. Thus, it was no surprise that the
splashiest U.S. sports-betting scandal of recent years concerned an NBA
referee. In 2007 Tim Donaghy, a 13-year veteran in the league, was convicted of
shaving points and otherwise aiding gambler-confederates during the last two
seasons of his tenure. He served a 15-month prison term. A conspiracy theorist
himself, Donaghy accused league officials of asking refs to steer games in
certain ways, but produced no evidence to support that claim.
Horse racing is the sport
most-often linked to fixes in the public mind, but most race-altering schemes
involve furtive drug use rather than the jockey-conspiracies of popular
imagination. Further, animals being animals, even those aren’t sure to succeed.
Sam “The Genius” Lewin, the racing lifer and legendary bettor with whom I wrote
a 1968 (gasp!) how-to-book, liked to tell about being a technical adviser for a
racing movie in which a scripted race had to be run a half-dozen times before
the right horse won.
College athletes don’t get paid by
check, and then usually not much, so it should be no surprise that most American
“fix” episodes concern them. The New York-based 1947-50 point-shaving scandals
encompassing some 30 college-basketball players is the granddaddy of the genre,
and more-recent schemes have involved basketball or football players at
Northwestern U., Tulane, Boston U. and the U. of Toledo, among other schools.
Northwestern footballer Dennis Lundy admitted to intentionally fumbling in a
1994 game against Iowa, and NU basketballers Kenneth Lee and Dewey Williams
said they shaved points in several 1995 games. Interestingly, all three got off
with one-month jail terms and probation. Other recent college-game fixers were
treated similarly, indicating that the courts don’t find such behavior
especially heinous.
To find evidence of multiple fixes
one must look abroad to soccer and international tennis, which Betfair, the
English bookmaking firm, rank with horse racing as the world’s three most-bet-upon
sports. Most soccer betting schemes have involved low-level leagues, but the
big boys also can play; the Italian world-power Juventus team had its 2005 and
2006 Serie A titles stripped away in a gambling scandal the involved its top
management.
Tennis hardly is noticed in the
U.S. outside the four “Grand Slam” tournaments, but among European and Asian
plungers it’s a much-bigger deal, with minor-league tournaments galore and
thousands of players scratching to earn a living. With only one player on each
side of the net in singles it’s a fixer’s ideal, and on-line bets can be made
on individual points, games and sets as well as matches, if you can believe it.
Tennis blogger Ben Rothenburg has
written that there’s an informal pay scale for finaglers in the minor leagues,
starting at $300 to $500 for service breaks, $1,000 to $2,000 for sets and
$2,000 to $3,000 for matches. The International Tennis Federation, the sport’s
governing body, took note of the bad press match dumping was generating by
setting up a Tennis Integrity Unit to police that end of the sport. In 2019,
its first full year of operation, the group cited 26 players for violations and
issued lifetime bans against the Egyptian brothers Youssef and Karim Hassan.
Moral of the story: you bet on tennis at your
peril. But, then, who bets on tennis?
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