Times-Call (Longmont)

Views from the nation’s press

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The Philadelph­ia Inquirer on how gambling, not Taylor Swift, is ruining football:

Contrary to complaints from some sports fans, Taylor Swift is not ruining football. But gambling is.

The National Football League, like other sports leagues, once abhorred gambling. But this year’s Super Bowl shows the NFL is now all-in.

For the first time, the big game will be played in Las Vegas, the still-seedy gambling capital that rose from the desert thanks to mobsters. The NFL long avoided Vegas because gambling undermined the games’ integrity.

Now, the NFL has a team in Vegas — as does profession­al hockey, with baseball coming soon. After approving four sportsbook­s and partnering with Caesars, Draftkings, and Fanduel in 2021, the NFL is literally in bed with the gambling industry. Hence the weeklong Super Bowl extravagan­za featuring parties and concerts to go with tickets that start at $5,000.

Sadly, the profession­al sports leagues’ addiction to gambling makes us all losers.

More than $245 billion has been lost since the U.S. Supreme Court loosened sports betting laws in 2018. There has been a sharp increase in teens and 20-somethings becoming addicted to sports gambling. Families are also upended, as studies show gambling leads to more bankruptci­es, divorce and suicide.

Even fans who don’t gamble must endure the relentless ads from sportsbook­s like Draftkings and Fanduel. One study found gambling messages fill an average of 21% of sports broadcasts. That’s much less than the 25 seconds of airtime dedicated to Swift when she attends games to watch her boyfriend, Travis Kelce, play for the Kansas City Chiefs.

In addition to the gambling commercial­s, pregame betting shows and continuous odds updates clutter broadcasts. Football legends like Paul Hornung and Alex Karras were once suspended for betting on games. Now, former NFL greats like the Manning brothers are gambling pitchmen.

Much like someone struggling with a gambling addiction, the NFL is trying to hide its problem. In the run-up to Sunday, the two teams competing in the Super Bowl stayed 25 miles away from the Vegas strip, and the players were prohibited from betting during the week. Instead of the usual advertisin­g barrage, only three gambling commercial­s are slated to be aired during the game.

Such window dressing does little to conceal a growing concern. The NFL suspended 10 players over the past two years for violating its gambling policy. A Jacksonvil­le Jaguars employee pleaded guilty last year to stealing $22 million from the team to fuel his gambling addiction. A former NFL officiatin­g executive said referees have been approached about fixing games, which adds to the conspiracy that the NFL is scripted ....

In a perfect world, repealing sports betting is the best course. At the very least, more must be done to study the impact of online gambling and how to prevent addiction. Some argue individual­s are free to gamble and should be responsibl­e for their losses. But just as slot machines are designed to addict users, the sophistica­ted technology behind the betting apps leaves gamblers overmatche­d . ...

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