As sports gambling scandals ripple through Major League Baseball, the NBA, and college basketball, the NCAA faces a critical deadline: by November 21 at 5 p.m. ET, two-thirds of Division I schools must reject a proposed rule that would allow college athletes and staff to bet on professional sports—or the change takes effect on November 22.
Currently, college athletes, coaches, and staff are barred from betting on any NCAA-sanctioned sport. Horse racing is the only exception. But with sports betting now legal in more states and widely accessible to students, the NCAA argues that banning bets on professional leagues no longer aligns with today’s landscape. Betting on college sports will remain prohibited.
Roberta Page, NCAA Division II Management Council chair, emphasized the balance the rule aims to strike: “This change recognizes the realities of today’s sports environment without compromising our commitment to protecting the integrity of college competition or the well-being of student-athletes.”
The proposal, originally slated for November 1, was delayed after less than 75% of NCAA cabinet members voted in favor, triggering a 30-day rescission period. Despite pushback from the Southeastern Conference, which called on the NCAA to maintain strict gambling prohibitions, votes within the SEC and other power conferences were split.
The timing is tense: recent indictments link professional athletes, coaches, and organized crime to gambling schemes, and several college players have already been permanently banned for game-fixing. New Jersey authorities have also charged 14 individuals, including student athletes, in connection with an illegal online betting ring linked to the Lucchese crime family.
With the clock ticking, the NCAA’s decision could reshape the rules of college athletics and the ongoing debate over gambling in sports.



















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