Proposal To Allow NCAA Members To Gamble On Pro Sports To Be Voted On By D1 Council

The NCAA Division I Council is expected to vote on a proposal that would allow NCAA members to vote on professional sports later this week.

According to Sports Illustrated (SI)‘s Pat Forde, the Division I Board of Directors laid the groundwork for the rule change in April, and they voted 21-1 in favor of directing the D1 Council to “adopt legislation to deregulate the prohibition on wagering on professional sports.”

The Board of Directors also “directed the NCAA staff to develop concepts for the appropriate committees to consider regarding a safe harbor, limited immunity or reduced penalties for student-athletes who engage in sports wagering but seek help for problem gambling,” according to SI’s Forde.

Currently, NCAA athletes, coaches and staff members can not gamble on pro sports that are also sponsored by the NCAA, including football, basketball, baseball, hockey, golf and tennis. If the rule change were to go through, NCAA athletes would still be prohibited from gambling on college sports.

If passed by the D1 Council, the proposal would then be voted on by the D2 and D3 Councils in July, though Forde reported on Monday that the proposal is expected to face some resistance from the 35-member D1 Council this week.

“It’s been hotly debated,” one source familiar with the discussions told Forde. “This is not a slam dunk.”

Gambling as a mental health issue is one aspect that’s reportedly come up in the debate.

Those in favor of removing the ban on sports betting believe that education on addictive gambling should be prioritized over penalizing athletes. “The hope is that gambling addicts would be more willing to admit a wagering problem and seek help if they weren’t afraid of losing eligibility for betting on pro sports,” Forde wrote Monday.

One source said: “One of the big things that’s not really being tracked is gambling as a mental-health issue. We should be helping people instead of whacking them with ineligibility.”

Last August, the Notre Dame men’s swimming program was suspended for the 2024-25 season after an investigation found “numerous violations of NCAA rules prohibiting gambling on intercollegiate swimming and other athletic competitions,” though it’s unclear if any of the gambling was done on professional sports.

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The Screaming Viking!
2 days ago

Hey guys can we think of anything else to suck the soul out of sports, degrade every aspect of amateurism and allow rich people to cheapen all ideals of human achievement?! We are batting a thousand lately with all these great ideas to make sports disgusting.

Virginia Coach
2 days ago

In the early 70’s I bet college football. I had still had friends on college campuses and one Saturday morning made calls to five of them, got the latest info and bet their recommendations. I lost all five bets. Lesson learned.

thezwimmer
2 days ago

Lots of comments mentioning Notre Dame, but their case still wouldn’t be affected. They were betting on the NCAA sports themselves, not professional sports.

Admin
Reply to  thezwimmer
2 days ago

And even further – on their own team.

Bill Price
3 days ago

Prohibiting or regulating gambling is just another example of the NCAA’s hubristic overreach. Why should they be involved in this at all? There are a lot of things that people would be better off if they didn’t do—gambling being one. But that doesn’t mean organizations should step in to prevent members from doing them. Take the libertarian position.

kazoo
3 days ago

This is a very stupid and irresponsible idea by the NCAA.

JimSwim22
Reply to  kazoo
2 days ago

So ‘normal’ for them?

swimster
3 days ago

luck of the Irish right there.

EMG2020Transform
3 days ago

Is it just me or is everything upside down

The levels of Kafkaesque are exponentially growing

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  EMG2020Transform
3 days ago

As an outsider, I have been both concerned and entertained at the same time with what’s been happening in the US.

It seems to me that hatred, fake news and (individual and corporate) greed have taken the country over common sense, science, facts, and common well being.

SwimCoach
3 days ago

I am curious how they define pro sports. Do they specify what leagues are allowed? There are sports books that have odds for Olympics/Worlds for Swimming, Track, etc. would that be allowed or not allowed.

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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