The NBA is re-evaluating its betting policies as investigations involving Terry Rozier and Chauncey Billups intensify public concern. The league sent a memo to all 30 teams outlining plans to review injury-reporting rules, player education, and integrity monitoring systems.
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The league said the expansion of legal sports betting across most U.S. states makes this the right time to reassess regulations. The memo read:
“Given the spread of legal betting and the recurrence of integrity issues across sports, we must carefully evaluate how to protect players and fans.”
Federal prosecutors recently charged Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier with wire fraud for allegedly manipulating a 2023 game to help others win prop bets. Portland Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups was separately indicted in a poker-game scheme tied to organized crime. Both cases triggered renewed calls for stricter oversight.
The memo highlights how proposition bets on individual player stats pose higher risks for manipulation. “While the unusual betting on Terry Rozier’s ‘unders’ was detected in real time, more can be done from a legal and regulatory standpoint to protect the NBA,” the league wrote.
Since the Jontay Porter scandal, the NBA has already worked with sportsbooks to halt props on players with 10-day contracts and to limit other high-risk wagers. An NBA spokesperson told ESPN, that “protecting the integrity of our game is paramount, and reasonable limitations on certain prop bets should be considered.”
The memo also calls for enhanced monitoring through artificial intelligence and data integration from betting operators and social media. The goal is to detect suspicious trends faster while ensuring players are shielded from harassment and undue pressure from bettors.
Education remains another focus. All personnel, from players to front-office staff, will undergo new training on the personal and professional risks of gambling. The league believes full awareness can deter future violations and reinforce public trust.
The debate has now reached Washington. Lawmakers are pressing NBA executives to explain how such incidents slipped through existing safeguards and what reforms are being planned. Members of Congress have asked the league to brief them on its integrity systems and relationships with sportsbooks
The Rozier and Billups indictments, along with the Porter case, exposed weaknesses in current betting oversight.
Not entirely. The NBA supports limiting high-risk prop wagers but wants legal betting to remain accessible to fans.
Improved injury reporting, advanced AI monitoring, and stronger education programs across all teams.