The Gold Coast Bulletin

Scandals a wake-up call for Australia

- Tom Minear Tom Minear is US correspond­ent

Because sports betting was legalised in Australia before I was born, I gave little thought to that decision until I moved to the US, where an effective ban was only lifted in 2018.

Fans here have not grown up like I did being bombarded by the odds at stadiums and on TV.

So did the Supreme Court make the right decision?

There was a sound argument for it. Americans were already illegally gambling $US150bn ($A230bn) a year on sports.

Creating an authorised industry enabled protection­s for punters and integrity measures for the codes.

But the US is now starting to comprehend the other consequenc­es that critics warned of at the time – and which Australia has tried to combat.

Legalising betting makes it a legitimate part of the sports we love. In turn, it creates incentives that almost inevitably corrupt the reasons we love them. Here’s some examples from the past month alone.

The NBA launched an investigat­ion into Jontay Porter, a bench player for the Toronto Raptors whose poor statistics generated unusually big returns for punters in several games. Cleveland Cavaliers coach JB Bickerstaf­f revealed he was constantly harassed by gamblers sending “crazy messages about where I live and my kids”.

On the eve of the March Madness college basketball tournament, Temple University’s team was probed over suspicious betting on one of its losses.

Shohei Ohtani, perhaps the greatest baseball player ever, fired his translator and accused him of stealing $US4.5m to pay off his betting debts. But oddly, Ohtani only made that allegation after he and his translator said the star willingly paid the bookie.

Amid all this drama, the NBA announced it would build live odds into its streaming service, in what a league executive called a “really good first step” towards in-game microbetti­ng.

And America’s betting giants announced that for the first time, they would share informatio­n about problem punters in a new responsibl­e gambling body.

It only took them six years. That is the point. Legalising betting has made the lure of profits – for fans, leagues, broadcaste­rs and probably even athletes – more appealing than harm minimisati­on.

There’s no going back now.

But as the Albanese government dithers over new restrictio­ns on gambling advertisin­g, recent events in America should jolt its ministers into action.

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