Why is Joel Embiid not playing tonight? What to know about 76ers star's injuries
Joel Embiid will not play in Game 2 against the Knicks due to injuries.
Former Knicks president Dave Checketts expresses concern over the growing relationship between sports leagues and sportsbooks, suggesting it may not be beneficial for the industry.
Mentioned in this story
Dave Checketts was working in pro sports when gambling was largely illegal and leagues kept sportsbooks at armâs length. Now, he worries the proliferation of sports bettingâand the industryâs increasing comfort partnering with sportsbooks and prediction marketsâisnât healthy.
âIâm not sure thatâs a good thing, this coziness that weâve established,â the longtime sports executive told Front Office Sports during the latest episode of Portfolio Players.
âIâm kind of old school when it comes to that,â he added.
Checketts was president of the Jazz in the 1980s and the Knicks in the 1990s, when sports betting was mostly contained to Nevada and the black market. He recalled how sensitive the NBA was to gambling exposure during that era. When the Jazz played a series of games in Las Vegas in the 1980s, he said he âhad this fightâ with the Nevada Gaming Commission âbecause we had to pull all of the NBA games off their books.â
Las Vegas wasnât happy about that, because revenue from sports betting has long been a main source of income for the city. âItâs why they have no state income tax,â Checketts said.
The Jazz ended their Las Vegas experiment after just 11 games. âWe were completely barking up the wrong wall to get any support in Vegas,â Checketts told FOS.
In another sign of how much things have changed, today the NBA is actively exploring a potential expansion team in Las Vegas.
Checketts had a front row seat to this dramatic evolution. Since the U.S. Supreme Courtâs 2018 decision striking down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA), 40 states and Washington, D.C., have legalized some form of online sports betting.
In tandem, leagues have entered into big-money partnerships with sportsbooks like FanDuel and DraftKings, consumers are blitzed with ads for those and other companies, and apps allow fans to bet on everything from the outcome of a game and whether a given player will score more than 20 points to micro-events inside games, down to the outcome of a single possession or the next pitch.
Dave Checketts worries that the increasing comfort between sports leagues and sportsbooks may not be healthy for the industry.
During Checketts' tenure in the NBA, sports betting was largely illegal and leagues maintained a distance from sportsbooks.
In the 1980s, the NBA was very sensitive to gambling exposure, leading to conflicts like the one Checketts had with the Nevada Gaming Commission.
Dave Checketts served as president of the Utah Jazz in the 1980s and the New York Knicks in the 1990s.
Joel Embiid will not play in Game 2 against the Knicks due to injuries.
Will PSG and Bayern recapture the magic in the Champions League semifinal?
Luka Doncic shares concerning news about his injury return timeline for the Lakers.
Shamil Gasanov promises an explosive finish against Tang Kai at ONE Fight Night 43!

El Atlético de Madrid pide explicaciones a la UEFA tras un incidente en el Emirates.
Could Bryson DeChambeau Choose YouTube Over PGA Tour?
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
The proliferation of wagering on sports took center stage last year with major scandals across the NBA, MLB, and college basketball. Checketts acknowledged that advancements in technology have made it easier for leagues to âtrack unusual patternsâ and catch alleged perpetratorsâlike the NBAâs Terry Rozier and MLBâs Emmanuel Clase. But that doesnât mean opening up sports betting even further is a positive outcome, he said.
Checketts, who nowadays runs a private-equity fund that is seeking to raise $1.2 billion to invest in a range of sports-related areas, isnât blind to the scale or staying power of sports betting. Heâs similarly uneasy about the rise of prediction-market companies like Kalshi and Polymarket, which took the country by storm last year. Their platforms allow users to put money on sports in all 50 states, minus Nevada right now, which has scored tentative legal victories prohibiting those companies from offering sports event contracts in the state. Many other states have contested platformsâ right to offer what they view as synonymous with sports betting, and experts expect the issue will eventually reach the Supreme Court.
âItâs just one more bedfellow, just cozying it up,â Checketts told FOS.
The post Former Knicks Pres: Leagues Have Gotten Too Cozy With Sportsbooks appeared first on Front Office Sports.