Jason Kidd hopes NBAs stars dont get overshadowed by federal gambling investigation

As someone who played in the NBA for 19 years and has coached ever since retiring, Jason Kidd knows it’s a “beautiful game” at its best.And the Mavericks’ head coach doesn’t want the recent gambling scandals — which involved Heat guard Terry Rozier, Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups and former player Damon Jones getting arrested over alleged roles in illegal sports betting and poker schemes — to take away from some of the individual performances around the league to start the season. “What I will say is we have a beautiful game with a lot of talented players in this league,” Kidd told reporters Friday while declining to specifically comment on the scandal, according to the Dallas Morning News.“The start of the season, we’ve had an MVP (Shai Gilgeous-Alexander) score 55 points.

We got to see up-close Victo (Webanyama) score 40 points.Hopefully that doesn’t overshadow what these young men are doing because it’s a beautiful game. “They’re playing the game at a high level, and it’s fun to be a part of.

Hopefully they can get that fixed.”Kidd was referencing Thunder superstar Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s 55-point eruption against the Pacers on Thursday and Spurs superstar Victor Wembanyama’s 40-point night in a season-opening win against the Mavericks.But in between those games, an ugly scandal overshadowed anything that transpired on the court during the first week of the season — with a total of 34 people arrested following the pair of investigations, including the three with ties to the NBA, into schemes with alleged ties to the Mafia.Billups and Rozier were both put on leave by the NBA, with Billups allegedly serving as a “face card” in the rigged high-stakes poker games and Rozier allegedly providing insider information used in the illegal betting scheme.Follow The Post’s live updates on the bombshell NBA, Mafia gambling scandalJim Trusty, Rozier’s attorney, accused the FBI of wanting “the misplaced glory of...

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Publisher: New York Post

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