
The NBA delivered big fines to two teams for sitting players and affecting the integrity of games. Another concern may be the integrity of NBA bets.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver said the league was considering "every possible remedy" for tanking at his All-Star Saturday news conference. An NBA insider suggested that the league's concern wasn't simply due to issues of competitiveness, but a result of pressure from the league's gambling partners, FanDuel and DraftKings.
Silver told reporters that tanking, meaning overt behavior by teams to lose games to improve draft position, was "worse this year than we've seen in recent memory." That was the stated reason that the league fined the Utah Jazz $500K for repeatedly benching star Lauri Markkanen in the fourth quarter, and why the Indiana Pacers drew a $100K fine for sitting starters, albeit on a back-to-back game.
NBA insider Ben Golliver, formerly of the Washington Post, claimed that one reason the commissioner acted was that when teams are tanking, "you're going to have a lot of angry gamblers and a lot of gambling companies."
Adam Silver is reportedly cracking down on late-game tanking due to the NBA’s “heavy ties” to gambling, per @BenGolliver
— NBA Base (@TheNBABase) February 17, 2026
“We know how much the NBA has gotten in bed with gambling... If coaches are just willy-nilly not playing guys the entire game and they’re not letting people… pic.twitter.com/QEQN7NV96R
The rise of gambling and the NBA's embrace of gambling companies creates a precarious position for the league. There's increased interest in the NBA due to betting and increased revenue as well, but the league has to worry about the negative influence of so much wagering.
Already, the NBA gave Jontay Porter a lifetime ban for violating their gambling rules. They're still investigating allegations of gambling involving Terry Rozier of the Miami Heat and the still-unsigned Malik Beasley. Porter and Rozier allegedly alerted bettors they would be leaving NBA games early with supposed injuries so they would bet the under on their totals.
What tanking teams are doing is far different. They're angling for better draft position, or in the case of the Jazz and Pacers, to make sure they keep their protected picks. From a gambling perspective, the effect is the same — the integrity of bets involving tanking teams is compromised.
It's also an opportunity for anyone with advance knowledge of these tanking efforts to cash in. Essentially, any time there's a gap in the public's knowledge and insider's information about NBA players, it's rife for exploitation.
Silver's concern should be for fans and the competitiveness of late-season basketball. But now that the NBA has become deeply involved with gambling companies, the sportsbooks' interests are also the league's interests. Unless the NBA is willing to forego that income, expect these harsh anti-tanking measures to continue.
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