carrrnuttt
Didactic
Eat your hearts out:
http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070723/SPORTS/707230329
I doubt, if the NBA did know of the FBI investigation, that they'd try to overlap it with their own private one. This means that even before the FBI went to Stern, they had an idea about the man, yet still consider him one of their "top" referees, considering he's reffed playoff games the last 2 seasons.
Also, what inferences do you guys think can be made from the last sentence? The NBA investigating one of its own referees, yet blatantly avoiding to ask questions about its own games?
More ammo against that cornholio: http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?page=expertexplainsNBAbets
Yeah, great "secret system" Stern has, aye?
http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070723/SPORTS/707230329
NBA knew of zebra's gambling all season
By New York Daily News
July 23, 2007
West Chester, Pa. — The NBA sicced a private investigator on disgraced referee Tim Donaghy more than a year ago, but then let him work games all season long anyway, friends and neighbors said yesterday.
Officials had the investigator question neighbors and friends of Donaghy about what they knew about his gambling habits — especially his penchant for the Borgata in Atlantic City.
"(The private investigator) asked, 'Does he gamble?' " said Kit Anstey, 60, a real estate agent in West Chester, Pa. "I said, 'Yes.' "
Anstey told the investigator — who said she worked for a local firm hired by the NBA — that Donaghy bet on golf games, neighborhood poker games and at an Atlantic City casino.
The prober never asked Anstey whether Donaghy bet on pro basketball games.
I doubt, if the NBA did know of the FBI investigation, that they'd try to overlap it with their own private one. This means that even before the FBI went to Stern, they had an idea about the man, yet still consider him one of their "top" referees, considering he's reffed playoff games the last 2 seasons.
Also, what inferences do you guys think can be made from the last sentence? The NBA investigating one of its own referees, yet blatantly avoiding to ask questions about its own games?
More ammo against that cornholio: http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?page=expertexplainsNBAbets
ESPN.com: So explain then, how a referee could control the outcome of a game so that he or associates of his could win a bet?
BL: Totally with the fouls he calls. If he has fixed the total and has a number he's thinking of, he can get the team in the bonus earlier in the quarter. Let's say he wants a final score where both teams tally more than 205 points and he needs 59 points in the fourth quarter to make that happen. If he puts both teams in the penalty with 8:00 to go and every foul is a free throw, it's not too hard to have a 60-point quarter.
ESPN.com: So what do you think, given your experience, might have happened with Tim Donaghy?
BL: You see a lot of calls in the NBA, "Hey -- he didn't even touch him." But he's [under suspicion] because they will go back and watch every game he officiated, know the spread, know the totals, they'll watch the fourth quarter and they'll know exactly what games he [allegedly] fixed. One hundred percent, no questions asked, they'll know exactly.
(My feelings exactly - yet Stern's "system" can't catch the same things? - carrrnuttt)
They just have to look at the fourth quarter. That's where you'd be able to tell. I'm telling you -- it would have to be the total, not the winners or losers. You can't dictate a side, especially in the NBA. He couldn't take that chance. If someone gets injured or doesn't show up or is having a terrible night or whatever, you can't do it. But manipulating the total you can control from the very tip. If you need an over, a referee can dictate a high- or low-scoring game just by how he's calling it. It's going to come out.
ESPN.com: Given your expertise in watching and wagering on games, what influence does a referee or official have in the gambling outcome?
BL: If he has action on the game and wants something in particular to happen, I'd say 75 percent. I've been asked for years if games could be fixed. And I always told people not by players. Because the guys in the key positions who could get something done, your quarterbacks and running backs, are making millions and aren't going to risk it all to help some friend make $100,000. An official, though, could do it. In the NFL, there's a task force that on Monday reviews every critical call that came anywhere near the point spread. I don't believe that's ever been done in the NBA.
Yeah, great "secret system" Stern has, aye?