
College basketball is facing another integrity crisis and this one cuts deep. The NCAA announced Friday that six players from three universities have been permanently banned after a months-long investigation uncovered betting activity, insider information leaks, and deliberate game manipulation.
The players caught up in the scandal are Chatton “BJ” Freeman from Arizona State, Cedquavious Hunter, Dyquavian Short, and Jamond Vincent from the University of New Orleans, and Donovan Sanders and Alvin Stredic from Mississippi Valley State.
According to reports from the Associated Press, investigators found that several players intentionally affected game outcomes during the 2024–25 season to benefit outside bettors. At the University of New Orleans, three players were found to have deliberately altered their performances in at least seven games so their team would lose by more points than the betting spread. During one game, a teammate allegedly overheard a player say “don’t score” during a timeout after realizing the team was ahead of the betting line.
At Mississippi Valley State, two players were caught communicating with known gamblers about inside information and betting trends before tip-off. And at Arizona State, BJ Freeman allegedly shared personal game data and performance expectations with friends who placed bets through daily fantasy accounts.
The NCAA didn’t hesitate. It revoked all six players’ eligibility indefinitely and notified the schools that their names would be permanently flagged in the association’s compliance system. None of the athletes involved are currently enrolled at their universities.
This up-to-date announcement adds to a growing list of NCAA betting scandals over the past year. The association revealed that more than 30 current and former athletes are still under investigation for gambling-related offenses.
The NCAA called this case one of its most serious because it crossed into “direct game manipulation.” In other words, players didn’t just bet, they influenced outcomes. That kind of breach threatens the very foundation of competition.
For college basketball programs, the implications are serious. Universities could face increased compliance checks, and several conferences are already discussing new educational programs about sports gambling. The NCAA has also begun working with state regulators to improve its ability to flag unusual betting patterns in real time.
Fans, meanwhile, are left wondering how much of what they’re watching is pure competition and how much could be influenced by money. College sports have always been about pride and potential, but the rise of legal betting has blurred the line between passion and profit.
The NCAA’s message was clear: if you bet on your sport, you’re done. But for the players who made these choices, it’s too late. Careers that could have turned into professional opportunities are immediately finished before they even began.
This scandal won’t just fade away. It’s part of a growing concern about how easily gambling can creep into college athletics. As one official said, “We’re not just fighting betting, we’re fighting temptation.”
One thing’s for sure: the NCAA just made an example out of these six. And every college athlete across the country is paying attention.
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