NBA lays out injury reporting policies, reviewing other 'sports betting policies,' tanking rules

Having an NBA player and active head coach — Miami's Terry Rozier, Portland's Chauncey Billups, respectively — arrested and appearing in court on federal illegal gambling charges shook the NBA. Soon after, the league's executives and lawyers were reviewing old cases and looking ahead, trying to close loopholes that fueled the gambling charges in the first place.

All of which has led to a change in the league's injury-reporting rules, something the league informed teams by memo on Friday, which was reported by Shams Charania of ESPN.

Teams currently only have to update their injury report every hour on game days. Both Rozier and former NBA player and coach Damon Jones have been charged in federal court with sharing inside information on injuries with bettors, who were able to profit by betting proposition unders.

Commissioner Adam Silver said this week that the league was thinking big-picture about how it can address loopholes such as the ones involving Rozier and Jones
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"We're in the process, as I said right now, in working with our teams, thinking about anything else we can be doing, if there's any aspect of our system that needs to be shored up, and that includes working with the regulators on some, certain kinds of problematic betting," Silver said before the NBA Cup Final Tuesday night in Las Vegas. "For example, we know unders and prop bets are where we are most vulnerable. As I think you know, we don't control the bets that are placed on our own sport right now. We're left to lobby regulators or try to convince the legal sports betting companies that that's bad for them, as well."

The memo from the league told teams this (via The Athletic): "Core to the NBA's position is that sports leagues should have control over the types of bets offered on their games. Because leagues currently do not have such control, any changes will need to be pursued via negotiation with sports betting operations, requests to state gaming regulators, legislative action, or some combination of these avenues."
While the league might be able to influence its partners — such as DraftKings or FanDuel — to eliminate or significantly reduce the amount that can be wagered on prop bets, there are increasingly popular prediction markets that are much more like the Wild West and over which the league has no say. There is no easy answer here for the league, although better injury reporting would help.

All of this also has the league also undertaking "a renewed review of league policy changes concerning 'tanking' -- such as potential modifications to rules regarding Draft pick protections, revised Draft lottery rules, and other approaches," Charania reports. That news comes as we pass the 1/3 mark of the NBA season, and with some teams looking ahead to what is considered a talented, deep draft at the top, there will be a temptation to field nightly lineups with a lower chance of winning. The league already has a policy on resting star players — the Cleveland Cavaliers have been fined twice this season — but that is just part of the challenge.

The Hockey Show: Panthers rolling, top local broadcasters and Brad Williams talks high-flying Ducks

Happy holidays from The Hockey Show.

This week was the last episode of the season, so co-hosts Roy Bellamy and David Dwork were extra motivated to squeeze as much hockey goodness as they could into this week’s show.

Joining Roy and Dave was THS’ official Anaheim Ducks correspondent, comedian Brad Williams.

In addition to gushing over the solid season his Ducks are having, Brad also chatted about the challenging Western Conference, chirping his fellow comedians while on the road and the importance that Waffle House plays on any road trip.

Wins and fails of the week included Leon Draisaitl scoring his 1,000th point on former Oilers goalie Stuart Skinner, a pair of defensive fails by the New York Rangers and Pittsburgh Penguins, an interesting jersey choice by Tate McRae in Calgary and a goaltending matchup in South Florida featuring the sons of Hall of Fame netminders Martin Brodeur and Roberto Luongo.

The full episode and interview can be seen in the videos below:

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Blake Griffin, Jamal Crawford, Candace Parker headline list of Hall of Fame nominees

The list is stacked: Blake Griffin, Jamal Crawford, Joe Johnson, Candace Parker, Elena Delle Donne, Mike D'Antoni and Kelvin Sampson.

Those are just the first-time headliners on the list of eligible candidates for the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2026.

The list released on Friday includes a number of returning candidates eligible for the Hall, including Doc Rivers, Amar'e Stoudemire and Shawn Marion. The complete list released Friday will be narrowed down to Finalists selected on Feb. 9, with the 2026 class unveiled on April 4.

Jamal Crawford, a three-time NBA Sixth Man of the Year, is now an analyst for NBC Sports and its broadcasts of NBA games on the network and Peacock.

At first glance, Griffin, Parker and Delle Donne seem locks to be voted into the Hall of Fame.

Griffin, the No. 1 overall pick of the Clippers in 2009, went on to help change the franchise's reputation. He was the 2011 Rookie of the Year and went on to be a six-time All-Star and five-time All-NBA player, most famously one of the engines of the Lob City Clippers era. He is currently an analyst with Amazon Prime on their NBA broadcasts.

Flyers Call Up Exciting Prospect & Assign Defender To AHL

The Philadelphia Flyers are giving one of their exciting prospects a chance on the NHL roster.

The Flyers have announced that they have recalled forward Denver Barkey from their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. 

The Flyers also shared that defenseman Egor Zamula has been assigned to the Phantoms after clearing waivers.

With Barkey being one of the Flyers' most promising prospects, it is undoubtedly notable that he has been called up. The young forward will now be looking to make a big impact after getting his first NHL call-up from here. 

Barkey has appeared in 26 games so far this season with the Phantoms, where he has posted seven goals, nine assists, and 16 points. This is after he had 25 goals and 82 points in 50 games with the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) last season. He also recorded nine goals and 20 points in 10 playoff games for London this past spring. 

As for Zamula, he will now be getting into his first AHL action since the 2022-23 season. In 13 games this season with the Flyers, he has recorded one assist and a plus-4 rating.