Gambling scandal is evidence of much larger issues in sports
While the alleged theft of Shohei Ohtani’s funds by his assistant is deplorable if true, it should not come as any great surprise that a scandal involving illegal betting and MLB has emerged.
Given the all-too-cozy relationship between MLB and enterprises such as Draft Kings, and the inescapable proliferation of odds posting and online betting advertisement, not to mention the approval of the Oakland Athletics’ move to Las Vegas, one can infer that MLB has not grown any wiser since the 1919 World Series and the Pete Rose banishment fiasco.
It must be nice to have so much money that you don’t notice that $4.5 million is missing.
Let’s see Julio Urías, Trevor Bauer and now maybe Ohtani. Perhaps the Dodgers should think about changing whatever vetting system they’re using or not using.
So we are to believe that Shohei Ohtani’s interpreter — not his agent, attorney or anyone with any fiduciary access — was able to siphon close to $5 million for alleged gambling debts without the slugger’s knowledge? Somewhere Pete Rose must be smiling.
Safe to bet that it will come down to how much risk — and potential embarrassment — the leagues are willing to incur in exchange for the sponsorship windfall that comes with embracing “legalized” gambling. The lines are blurred because sports wagering is easier and more pervasive than ever and the money speaks loudest of all.
Get in the game
It is estimated that slightly more than $2.7 billion is expected to be wagered in legal American sportsbooks for the men’s and women’s NCAA basketball tournaments.
Once again, legal California sports will see none of this because the nation’s most populous state is stuck in the 16th century regarding this subject. I know a large part of the reason is because of the complex agreement the state struck with Indian casinos, but the time has long since come and gone for the world’s fifth-largest economy to work something out so residents don’t have to drive to Nevada or gamble at illegal or offshore sportsbooks.Erik
Fountain Valley
College sports is dead ... or not
Ben Bolch’s column on the future of UCLA basketball, “Everybody’s a free agent,” should be wrapped around a blazing stake and driven through the heart of any lingering fantasy about college sports.
I’ve been a Bruins fan for 70 years and sat midcourt for every game at Pauley Pavilion as an undergrad in 1966-70. It’s not worth caring anymore. John Wooden’s statue should be recast with the program unrolled and covering his eyes in shame at what his legacy has become.
I couldn’t agree more with coach Cori Close and her comments in Bill Plaschke’s column. I’ve been a women’s basketball season-ticket holder for over 10 years. It’s the best bargain in town. Plus, as Coach Close said … you get connected to the women’s basketball team because they stay for four years. The chemistry is better and you know the players.
One and done
would be unanimous on the coaching change.
I’ve sat through 16 years of Dan Monson’s coaching in which he got to the Dance exactly once. In most seasons he either got outcoached, outrecruited, or put the team in outmatched situations to get appearance money. No better was the new athletic director playing with the kids’ emotions with the in-tournament firing to “spark” the team. Long Beach State fans deserved better on all fronts. The “Seinfeld” storyline was enough to get this show canceled, as it was by Arizona.
Long Beach State coach Dan Monson became “Done” Monson but was an exemplary role model to the end by persevering through his adversity and doing it in a very classy manner.
Now he knows Xs and O’s
As Lincoln Riley commences with spring practice at USC, he pats himself on the back in how engaged he has been with the defense. Last that I looked, he’s the head coach, the CEO, not the offense-only coach. Did he just discover he oversees the defense too? Did he not read the fine print in the job description from HR? Expectations couldn’t be higher this year.
Bench the coach Sho’s over, nothing to see here
The Angels lose two-time MVP Shohei Ohtani and replace him with … nothing. Even the normally calm Mike Trout is asking for help. Is owner Arte Moreno trying to kill off the fan base and move the team a la Georgia Frontiere with the
Don’t believe the hype
When Dylan Hernández refers to Mookie Betts, Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman as the most anticipated lineup in Dodger history, I assume he means in L.A.
The Brooklyn lineup of Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Gil Hodges and Roy Campanella, all Hall of Famers, takes a back seat to no one.
After Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s complete disaster on the mound in his major league debut, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said, “You know he’ll bounce back from this.”
Didn’t the captain of the Titanic say something similar to that after the ship hit the iceberg?
Per Jack Harris, to the contrary, Shohei Ohtani is not yet a Dodgers star.
The old bawl-game
I cannot help but feel sorry for the letter writer who can only view something as welcome as the Dodgers’ season opener in South Korea through the lens of climate activism. I’d like to paraphrase Tom Hanks in “A League of Their Own,” “There’s no crying over carbon footprints in baseball!”
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