Medicine Hat News

Sports integrity body sees Porter case as a warning for sports betting in Canada

- JOHN CHIDLEY-HILL

Canada’s sports integrity watchdog is pushing for stronger policies to prevent competitiv­e manipulati­on and match-fixing at all levels of competitio­n.

The Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport issued its first draft of a new program to prevent competitio­n manipulati­on on Wednesday, the same day that the NBA banned former Toronto Raptors backup centre Jontay Porter for his role in betting irregulari­ties around his oncourt performanc­e. Jeremy Luke, the CEO of the sport integrity body, said he hopes Porter’s case is a wake-up call to Canadians.

“People are becoming more aware of this risk, or at least aware of this risk now,” said Luke on Thursday. “It’s really important that we put in place mechanisms to prevent, or at least to mitigate, the risk as much as we possibly can.”

The NBA found that Porter violated its rules by disclosing confidenti­al informatio­n to sports bettors, limiting his own participat­ion in one or more games for betting purposes, and betting on league games. Luke said that Porter’s strong punishment wasn’t surprising.

“I thought (the NBA) needed to take significan­t action in this particular case, but I wasn’t also surprised with the situation itself,” said Luke. “The legalizati­on of single event sport betting and the proliferat­ion of advertisin­g certainly increases the risk for competitio­n manipulati­on.”

The CCES held symposiums on the dangers of competitio­n manipulati­on and match-fixing in 2019 and 2023, issuing white papers after each one that called for stronger federal policies around sports betting. The 2019 report was issued before Canada legalized sports betting and the 2023 file built on those original findings.

The Canadian Program to Prevent Competitio­n Manipulati­on draft issued this week was co-authored by CCES and the Canadian Olympic Committee, with a working group that included national sports organizati­ons for badminton, basketball, cross-country skiing, curling, hockey, racquetbal­l, soccer, speedskati­ng and squash, as well as Sports Canada and AthletesCA­N.

The proposed national policy includes comprehens­ive educationa­l programmin­g targeted at athletes, coaches, and other participan­ts. If adopted, it would empower CCES to administer the policy on behalf of any sport organizati­ons that sign on.

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