Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Saturday, October 25, 2025

Since the U.S. Supreme Court opened the door to legalized gambling in 2018, and most states permitted people to wager on their phones, gambling scandals, once rare in sports, have become a new American pastime. And prop bets have proved particularly ripe for manipulation.

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"Professional-sports leagues would like you to believe they have the gambling problem under control," Keith O'Brien writes. "But they are clearly no match for the highly addictive, always-intriguing prop bet":

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-- The Atlantic (@theatlantic.com) Oct 24, 2025 at 3:15 PM

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Author Keith O'Brien argues "prop bets pose a particular threat to the integrity of the game."

As long as one athlete can fix the outcome of a wager, the temptation will continue to prove irresistible to some players. This temptation comes at a time when millions of Americans are betting billions of dollars on sports, and sometimes more than a billion on a single game. At some point, according to gambling-addiction experts, an athlete will manipulate their performance during one of these big games, if it hasn't happened already. That leaves those who love sports with only one sensible option. It's time to kill"or at least reel in"the prop bet.

However ...
[E]liminating the prop bet entirely will be challenging. Since the first single-player prop bet was invented in the lead-up to Super Bowl XX, in January 1986"when William "The Refrigerator" Perry, a defensive tackle, opened at 20 to 1 to score a touchdown for the Chicago Bears"prop bets have become popular among degenerate gamblers and casual fans alike. If legal gambling platforms didn't offer them in 2025, gamblers would probably turn instead to illegal bookies and illegal websites"a still-thriving world where oversight hardly exists at all.

#1 | Posted by Doc_Sarvis at 2025-10-25 05:51 AM | Reply

Does the lottery pay out? No.

#2 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-10-25 09:36 AM | Reply

Does the lottery pay out? No.

#2 | POSTED BY LEGALLYYOURDEAD

My dad won the lottery a couple times!

It's only about $50 each time. But I was impressed.

It ruined him for life. He never stopped buying tickets after that. He also never won again.

#3 | Posted by donnerboy at 2025-10-25 10:35 AM | Reply

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