In a recent podcast, Cleveland.com columnist Terry Pluto expressed concerns over Major League Baseball's ties to online betting sites, suggesting they threaten the sport's integrity. The discussion, prompted by a listener's email, highlighted the dangers of prop bets amid indictments of Cleveland Guardians pitchers. Pluto argued that these partnerships could lead to scandals rivaling the Pete Rose era.
Cleveland.com columnist Terry Pluto and host David Campbell addressed MLB's deepening involvement with gambling in the latest episode of the Terry’s Talkin’ podcast. The conversation was ignited by an email from listener Jim Mullen, who criticized the partnerships as “inviting the fox into the henhouse” and warned they could spell “great detriment” for baseball.
This comes at a precarious time for the sport. This fall, Cleveland Guardians pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz were indicted on gambling-related charges, facing a potential trial in May and possible lifetime bans. Despite this, MLB maintains financial links with sportsbooks that facilitate such betting. Pluto pointed to prop bets—wagers on individual player performances—as a major vulnerability, unlike traditional game-outcome bets that require broader corruption.
He recounted an example from a Cavaliers game where Darius Garland's prop bet line was set at 23.5 points; Garland scored exactly 23, illustrating how such bets can breed suspicion among fans. “So then if you’re watching the game, think how it takes you into a bad place,” Pluto said.
Pluto suggested the next major scandal might hit college basketball due to its history and the ease of influencing single players via prop bets. MLB's response—a $200 limit on prop bets through partners—was dismissed by Pluto as ineffective, easily bypassed by multiple wagers. He urged decisive action, even amid upcoming labor talks with the players' union in 2026.
Studies indicate rising problem gambling rates, with fans saying they now find sports “no fun” without betting. The podcast underscores a tension: MLB's revenue pursuits versus the sport's long-term health.