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NBA Bars Jontay Porter for Betting

Joe Vardon, reporting for The Athletic:

The league said that Porter, who spent part of his time in the NBA
and part of it in its developmental G League, privately told a
sports bettor he was hurt, removed himself from a game to control
prop bets on his own play, and placed his own wagers on NBA games.

He is the first active player or coach to be expelled from the NBA
for gambling since Jack Molinas in 1954.

According to the results of a league investigation, Porter, 24,
gave a confidential tip about his health to a person he knew to be
a sports bettor, prior to the Raptors’ game on March 20 against
the Sacramento Kings. A third individual, connected to both Porter
and the original recipient of Porter’s health information, placed
an $80,000 parlay bet to win $1.1 million, betting that Porter
would underperform against the Kings.

To make sure that the bet hit, the league found, Porter pulled
himself out of that game against the Kings after just three
minutes, claiming he was ill. The investigation also showed that
from January through March, while either playing for Toronto or
the Raptors’ G League affiliate, Porter placed at least 13 bets on
NBA games using an associate’s online betting account. While none
of those bets were on games in which Porter played, he did bet on
the Raptors to lose as part of a parlay bet. The wagers ranged in
size from $15 to $22,000, and totaled $54,000. He netted nearly
$22,000 in winnings on the wagers, the league said.

Porter is a bench player, but in the NBA bench players do well. Porter’s salary this season was $411,000, and he’s earned close to $3 million since he made the NBA four years ago. But how much do you want to bet he’s not the last player in a major sport to get caught up in a point-shaving scam like this?

 ★ 

Joe Vardon, reporting for The Athletic:

The league said that Porter, who spent part of his time in the NBA
and part of it in its developmental G League, privately told a
sports bettor he was hurt, removed himself from a game to control
prop bets on his own play, and placed his own wagers on NBA games.

He is the first active player or coach to be expelled from the NBA
for gambling since Jack Molinas in 1954.

According to the results of a league investigation, Porter, 24,
gave a confidential tip about his health to a person he knew to be
a sports bettor, prior to the Raptors’ game on March 20 against
the Sacramento Kings. A third individual, connected to both Porter
and the original recipient of Porter’s health information, placed
an $80,000 parlay bet to win $1.1 million, betting that Porter
would underperform against the Kings.

To make sure that the bet hit, the league found, Porter pulled
himself out of that game against the Kings after just three
minutes, claiming he was ill. The investigation also showed that
from January through March, while either playing for Toronto or
the Raptors’ G League affiliate, Porter placed at least 13 bets on
NBA games using an associate’s online betting account. While none
of those bets were on games in which Porter played, he did bet on
the Raptors to lose as part of a parlay bet. The wagers ranged in
size from $15 to $22,000, and totaled $54,000. He netted nearly
$22,000 in winnings on the wagers, the league said.

Porter is a bench player, but in the NBA bench players do well. Porter’s salary this season was $411,000, and he’s earned close to $3 million since he made the NBA four years ago. But how much do you want to bet he’s not the last player in a major sport to get caught up in a point-shaving scam like this?

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