Yuma Sun

New tool enables college athletes to report gambling suspicions to wagering monitor

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A digital platform where college athletes can alert their administra­tions anonymousl­y to improper or illegal conduct by coaches, teammates or others is expanding to allow them to report suspected gambling activity.

Realrespon­se’s partnershi­p with U.S. Integrity, which monitors sports wagering trends in real time to detect irregulari­ties, will come at no additional cost to some 150 athletic department­s that are clients.

The service builds on a tip hotline U.S. Integrity and Realrespon­se unveiled in May and will give college athletic administra­tors a direct line to investigat­ors.

A state investigat­ion into illegal sports wagering at Iowa and Iowa State has led to criminal charges being filed against about a dozen athletes. The Alabama baseball coach, Brian Bohannon, was fired in May after being linked to suspicious gambling activity on a Crimson Tide game.

Iowa State is a Realrespon­se client, spokesman Nick Joos said. Iowa is not a client but has a relationsh­ip with U.S. Integrity through the Big Ten Conference, spokesman Matthew Weitzel said.

Realrespon­se founder David Chadwick said a college athlete will be able go to his or her existing Realrespon­se webpage and report suspected misuse of insider informatio­n, potential game manipulati­on and physical threats related to gambling, among other things.

When a report comes in, administra­tors can request U.S. Integrity investigat­ors to assess, verify and route the report to appropriat­e authoritie­s.

Though Realrespon­se also works with profession­al sports organizati­ons and national sport governing bodies to provide athletes, coaches and staff a way to report bad actors anonymousl­y, the gambling reporting tool linked with U.S. Integrity currently is offered only to colleges.

As part of the Realrespon­se partnershi­p with U.S. Integrity, the public also can report gambling-related issues through school athletic websites.

 ?? MATTHEW PUTNEY/AP ?? IOWA STATE TAKES ON IOWA in a sellout crowd of 61,500 people at Jack Trice Stadium during the first half of a college football game on Sept. 11, 2021, in Ames, Iowa.
MATTHEW PUTNEY/AP IOWA STATE TAKES ON IOWA in a sellout crowd of 61,500 people at Jack Trice Stadium during the first half of a college football game on Sept. 11, 2021, in Ames, Iowa.

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