College players among those charged in point-shaving scheme


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Summary

College basketball scheme

More than a dozen college basketball players have been charged in connection with a point-shaving scheme involving 17 NCAA Division I teams.

The indictment

The indictment, unsealed Thursday, says the scheme has been going on since 2022 and involved players being offered $10,000 to $30,000 to point-shave.

Sports betting and cheating

The new indictment comes as sports betting in the U.S. sees an all-time high. This is not the first cheating scandal for the industry, and one expert told SAN it won’t be the last.


Full story

More than a dozen current and former college basketball players have been charged in connection with a point-shaving scheme involving 17 NCAA Division I teams. A federal indictment unsealed Thursday in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania alleged that the scheme involved 39 college basketball players, 15 of whom were charged. 

ESPN is reporting that those charged played in the 2023-24 and/or the 2024-25 seasons, and CBS Sports said a few have played this season. 

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Among the top-tier basketball programs affected by the alleged gambling scheme were Butler, DePaul, Georgetown, St. John’s and Tulane.

The point-shaving scheme

The indictment says the scheme began in September 2022 and primarily involved fixing games in the Chinese Basketball Association. However, over time, the people behind the scheme began targeting college basketball players, allegedly offering them $10,000 to $30,000 to compromise games for betting purposes. 

“In placing these wagers on games they had fixed, the defendants defrauded sportsbooks, as well as individual sports bettors, who were all unaware that the defendants had corruptly manipulated the outcome of these games that should have been decided fairly, based on genuine competition and the best efforts of the players,” the indictment said.

The NCAA sanctioned two of the players listed in the indictment in November for fixing New Orleans ’ games. Four other players played in games as recently as this past week. 

Current players named in the indictment are Simeon Cottle of Kennesaw State, who was named Conference USA’s preseason Player of the Year; Camian Shell of Delaware State; Carlos Hart of Eastern Michigan; and Oumar Koureissi of Texas Southern.

According to ESPN, two of those named in the indictment were also charged in a federal case centered on gambling schemes in the NBA. Portland Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups and Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier were among those charged in that indictment. 

After the indictment was unsealed on Thursday, NCAA president Charlie Baker issued a statement. He said the pattern of conduct revealed is “not entirely new information.”

“Through helpful collaboration and with industry regulators, we have finished or have open investigations into almost all of the teams in today’s indictment,” Baker’s statement reads. 

Sports betting in the US

The new indictment comes as sports betting in the U.S. sees an all-time high. As of October 2025, sports betting is legal in 39 states either online or in retail locations. In 2024, the industry posted a record $13.7 billion in revenue, as Straight Arrow News previously reported. 

Officials in the NBA and NCAA have taken precautions and launched investigations into cheating. However, risks have not stopped leagues from cashing in on the industry. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver previously told ESPN that the choice isn’t whether people want sports betting, but whether it’s legal or illegal.

“With this regulated structure of legalized betting, we can monitor it in ways that were unimaginable years ago,” Silver said.

The NBA isn’t alone, either. Major League Baseball and the National Football League both have partnerships with online betting platforms. 

In an interview with Straight Arrow News in October, Jonathan Cohen, author of “Losing Big: America’s Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling,” warned that cheating scandals are going to continue. 

“We’re going to keep having scandals like this,” Cohen said. “It’s just a matter of how much is too much. How much the public is willing to take before we really have a blowback on the whole sports betting infrastructure.”

History of point-shaving in basketball

These college players are not the first, and as Cohen stated, won’t be the last involved in a betting scandal. 

In 1951, point-shaving and match-fixing allegations flew around major colleges and universities surrounding New York City. The scandal involved dozens of players across seven teams. 

Another major college basketball scandal came around 10 years later, during the NCAA University Division men’s basketball season. It involved a former NBA All-Star and members of organized crime. There were 37 arrests, and 22 students from different colleges were involved. 

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Why this story matters

Federal indictments alleging the rigging of NCAA and Chinese Basketball Association games highlight ongoing concerns over sports integrity, athlete vulnerability, and the impact of legalized sports betting on fair competition.

Sports integrity

Allegations of game fixing raise questions about the fairness of competition in collegiate and professional basketball, with authorities and organizations emphasizing the importance of maintaining public trust in the outcome of sporting events.

Legalized sports betting

The proliferation of legalized sports betting in many states has increased opportunities and risks, as highlighted by the scale and sophistication of schemes defrauding sportsbooks and bettors, according to federal indictments and expert commentary.

Athlete exploitation

According to prosecutors, athletes were targeted with financial incentives that, in some cases, exceeded their legitimate earning opportunities, demonstrating how vulnerable players can be drawn into illicit activity in a rapidly changing sports economy.

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Context corner

Point-shaving scandals have recurred throughout sports history, with previous large-scale incidents, such as the 1951 college basketball scandal, influencing public perception and regulation of gambling in sports.

Oppo research

Opponents of widespread legalized sports betting have pointed to this and similar scandals as evidence supporting tighter regulation and stricter penalties for betting-related offenses in amateur and professional sports.

Policy impact

According to NCAA President Charlie Baker, the association is pushing regulators to ban collegiate prop bets as a preventative measure and has increased investigations related to betting integrity.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

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Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left emphasize the "sweeping" nature of the scandal and detailing specific financial aspects, including "hundreds of thousands of dollars" in bets and naming alleged gamblers.
  • Media outlets in the center while also labeling it a "Major Scandal" and "large-scale sports integrity issue," maintain a more procedural tone, detailing the alleged conspiracy's timeframe and prior investigations.
  • Media outlets on the right frame the charges through a lens of "law and order" and "accountability," highlighting institutional "corruption" and the serious breach of trust implied by "rigging" games, de-emphasizing financial specifics.

Media landscape

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194 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Federal prosecutors charged 20 individuals with rigging college basketball games in the U.S. and pro games in China, according to court papers unsealed in Philadelphia.
  • The charges include bribery in sports and conspiracy to commit wire fraud, involving more than 39 college basketball players and over 17 NCAA Division I teams.
  • The indictment reveals that the scheme compromised at least 29 games, as indicated by the federal indictment.
  • Key figures in the case include several former college players and high-stakes gamblers involved in a broad point-shaving scheme.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Thursday, federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania unsealed court papers charging dozens of defendants in a scheme to fix NCAA college basketball and Chinese professional league games.
  • Beginning around September 2022, the scheme targeted the Chinese Basketball Association before recruiting college players with bribes of $10,000 to $30,000, prosecutors say.
  • The indictment details involvement across more than 17 Division I teams, describing 39 players and bettors wagering millions on at least 29 games, with Fifteen defendants active in 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons.
  • The indictments allege the defendants committed bribery and wire‑fraud offenses, citing large wagers at Rivers Casino in Philadelphia and a $200,000 cash payment to Antonio Blakeney.
  • The indictment arrives amid a wider FBI probe into sports gambling, with officials calling it the latest scandal linked to Terry Rozier's Oct. 23 arrest and gamblers Shane Hennen and Marves Fairley.

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Key points from the Right

  • The Department of Justice charged 20 people for allegedly rigging college basketball games involving dozens of players and more than 17 NCAA Division I men's basketball teams.
  • Federal prosecutors stated that the players "fixed and attempted to fix" over 29 games in the indictment.
  • The indictment revealed that the fixers recruited players with "bribe payments" usually ranging from $10,000 to $30,000 per game.
  • Concerns about gambling and college sports have risen since 2018, when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a federal ban on sports gambling, leading to states legalizing it.

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