Baseball's Big Whiff on Gambling [View all]
Gambling is a numbers game, so here are a few: The pitcher Emmanuel Clases 2025 salary from Major League Baseballs Cleveland Guardians is $4.5 million dollars. This weekend, prosecutors unveiled charges that he had made just $12,000 from two recent rigged pitches. And he could face as many as 65 years in prison (though such a stiff sentence seems unlikely).
Clase and the fellow Guardians hurler Luis Ortiz were indicted last week for their involvement in the scheme, which allegedly netted bettors hundreds of thousands of dollars. (Attorneys for Clase and Ortiz have denied the allegations.) The scheme outlined in the indictment is the latest instance of legalized gamblings corrosive influence on professional sports. Major leagues have welcomed the industry with open arms and greedy palms, signing contracts with betting companies and bringing casinos into stadiums and arenas, but they act astonished when gambling starts to corrupt their own players.
Traditional sports fandom involves rooting for your team to win; traditional sports gambling involves putting money on the game results too. The most notorious baseball-gambling episode was the 1919 Black Sox scandal, in which members of the Chicago White Sox (including Shoeless Joe Jackson) were accused of intentionally losing the World Series as part of a mob betting scheme and banned from the sport.
The indictment against Clase and Ortiz alleges something that is both less directly threatening to the games integrity and somehow even bleaker. Nothing in the charges suggests that Clase, a fearsome closer and three-time All-Star, intentionally lost any games. Instead, prosecutors say, he and Ortiz agreed to throw balls on particular pitches. The gamblers then placed prop betswagers on specific outcomesand won money. In other words, this was gambling for gamblings sake, staking money on things that no one would care about for any independent reason, and then concocting elaborate methods of cheating to make those things happen.
https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/2025/11/baseball-gambling-charges-mlb-cleveland-guardians/684896/