NCAA to debut Web site with anti-gambling initiatives
to talk to players about gambling. It became clear they were needed when a
couple of athletes got text messages from gamblers seeking inside
information, an NCAA official said Friday. In further efforts to stem
wagering among athletes, the NCAA launched a Web site Friday narrated by
former college and NBA star Clark Kellogg and is advising schools against
such things as gambling ads in arenas and "Las Vegas night" fundraisers.
Kellogg's video tells student-athletes they should know two things: they
can't bet on any college or pro sporting event or provide information to
anyone who does. The NCAA has been pushing a strong antigambling message
since a 2003 survey showed a staggering number of athletes were involved in
some form of gaming. Deana Garner, the NCAA's associate director of agent,
gambling and amateurism activities, said some players questioned the gaming
speeches during the tournament. "This is a very real issue. It is a dark
issue, it's an issue that a lot of people don't like to talk about," she
said.
The Friday launch of dontbetonit.org came on the first day of the NCAA
convention, an annual event in which college sport's governing body votes on
rule changes and organizes talks on student-athlete issues. Before it ends
Monday, the NCAA is expected to consider a number of new rules. One of the
more talked-about proposals would ban or limit coaches' use of text messages
and social networking Web sites to contact recruits. A 2004 change allowed
text messages with much fewer limits than phone calls, under the impression
they'd be less intrusive. However, some of the nation's top recruits say
they are getting inundated with texts, many with dozens per day. Division
III is expected to consider limiting the participation of male players in
female practices, a decision that could prompt similar changes in the NCAA's
two upper tiers. The association's Committee on Women's Athletics issued a
statement last month saying men in women's' practices "violates the spirit
of gender equity and Title IX." Proponents of males in practice say they've
made women more competitive players. Sportsmanship and ethics were also
expected to play a prominent role, after the sideline-clearing melee between
Miami and Florida International in which 31 football players were suspended.
On Saturday, NCAA president Myles Brand was scheduled to give his state of
the association speech. The Web site narrated by Kellogg, a former Ohio
State player who now does television analysis, has separate tracks for
coaches and players, and tells athletes they can't wager in pools, on
Internet sports books or even on games that don't involve their colleges.
They're also instructed not to tell gamblers about things like injuries or
team morale.
Garner said the NCAA was focusing on Divisions II and III, despite the fact
that their games are lower-profile, because they showed a higher incidence
of wagering. She said surveyed athletes indicated it was partly because they
didn't understand the rules against gambling.
Eric Toliver, associate athletic director at UNLV, said he'd been forced to
investigate one report of an athlete gambling in 14 years, and it was bogus.
However, he said the effort to clear the students' name exposed to him a
dangerous gambling underworld.
"I've been on stakeouts, we've followed people around, and it is a dark,
murky world for people involved in sports wagering," he said. "They're
always changing cars, they have five different licenses. You'd be shocked to
know that these people don't just live in Las Vegas. These individuals are
on your campus."

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