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Plain English with Derek Thompson

The Problem With Sports Gambling

Plain English with Derek Thompson

The Ringer

News Commentary, News

4.81.8K Ratings

🗓️ 31 October 2025

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Last week, an FBI investigation into gambling led to the arrest of several prominent basketball stars, raising questions about the state of legalized sports betting, which has enriched professional sports and sports media. The problems with sports gambling extend far beyond the integrity of the game. A 2024 working paper from economists at UCLA, Harvard, and USC found that states that legalized sports gambling after the 2018 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court saw “a substantial increase in average bankruptcy rates, debt sent to collections, use of debt consolidation loans, and auto loan delinquencies. We also find that financial institutions respond to the reduced creditworthiness of consumers by restricting access to credit.” A separate analysis found that nearly one in five men aged 18-24 is on the spectrum of having a gambling problem. There’s no question that sports betting has taken over sports. It’s all over ESPN, all over my favorite sports podcasts. This podcast is a part of The Ringer Podcast Network, which has close relationships with the sports book FanDuel and has several shows devoted to gambling. I listen to them. Quite a lot, actually. It would be easier for me as the host of this episode if my position on gambling had the clarity of pure outrage. If I thought that gambling was a pure vice, a mere nuisance, and a total drag, I would say: Let’s just be done with it. On the opposite end, if I thought that legalized sports gambling posed no risk to bettors, didn’t threaten the integrity of professional sports, and represented an obvious improvement to the previous regime of black-market betting, I’d say: Ignore these moralizing bozos and place your 15-part parlay. The trouble is that I don’t have the advantage of clear outrage on this issue. I think that sports gambling is fun. And I think that it threatens the integrity of professional sports. And I think that it ruins some people’s lives. Today’s guest is Jonathan Cohen, the author of 'Losing Big: America’s Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling.' Like me, Jon is worried about the effect that legal sports gambling is having. Also like me, he sometimes bets on sports. Also like me, he listens to Ringer podcasts. If you have questions, observations, or ideas for future episodes, email us at [email protected]. Host: Derek Thompson Guest: Jonathan Cohen Producers: Devon Baroldi Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

What's up? It's Todd McShay, host of the McShay Show at the Ringer and Spotify.

0:04.7

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0:15.1

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0:19.8

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scouting content you can't get anywhere else. It's going to be a great season.

0:39.5

And I hope you'll be with us at the McShay show every step of the way.

0:44.2

Today, gambling. Last week, an FBI investigation into sports betting led to the arrest of several

0:53.8

prominent basketball stars.

0:56.0

A former player was accused of leaking updates about LeBron James's injuries to co-conspirators.

1:01.6

The point guard, Terry Rozier, was accused of taking himself out of the game to help a betting partner.

1:07.3

And Portland Trailblazers head coach, Chauncey Billups, was accused of telling gamblers that his team planned to lose seemingly on purpose.

1:16.2

In response to these arrests, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said Friday night that he was, quote, deeply disturbed.

1:25.1

Deeply disturbed.

1:27.0

Now, consider an alternative view that requires us to turn back the clock 11 years.

1:32.3

In 2014, the New York Times ran an op-ed entitled, quote, legalize and regulate sports betting, end quote.

1:41.3

For more than two decades, the NBA had opposed the expansion of legal sports betting,

1:46.6

forcing betters to use illegal bookmaking operations in shady offshore websites. But the laws on

1:52.3

sports betting should be changed, this author wrote. Quote, I believe sports betting should be brought

1:57.5

out of the underground and into the sunlight.

...

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