Guymon Daily Herald

NCAA voices concern on student athlete performanc­e bets

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — An NCAA official voiced concern Thursday over sports betting on the performanc­e of individual studentath­letes, and she suggested that gambling regulators consider restrictio­ns on such wagers to protect the integrity of the games.

Speaking at the Sports Betting USA 2020 online seminar, Naima StevensonS­tarks, the NCAA’s vice president for law, policy and governance, expressed concern about socalled propositio­n bets involving college athletes.

This type of bet concerns whether a given player will or won’t surpass a certain threshold during a game, like whether a quarterbac­k will throw 3 touchdowns or whether a running back will rush for 100 yards.

“Unlike the profession­al leagues, we are now talking about student-athletes attending class with people who may be betting on their efforts on the field or the court,” Stevenson-Starks said.

“That’s a concern. If you can think about missing a field goal or a free throw that might make the difference in a result, that’s not the most settling thought.”

The NFL expressed similar concern about prop bets on its own players a few years ago. But NFL player props are a much larger segment of the sports betting industry than those on college players, something Stevenson-Starks acknowledg­ed.

A survey Thursday of leading U.S. sportsbook­s found little in the way of college player props, although they were more readily available on unlicensed offshore sites that are beyond the reach of U.S. regulators.

A spokeswoma­n for DraftKings said its college props usually involve which team scores first or last, and how many points a team will score. The lone game listed on the site for Thursday, the Colorado State-Boise State football game, did not offer bets on any individual player.

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(Courtesy photo)

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