December 6, 2009 9:16 PM

Is Donaghy Believable? You Make The Call!

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  The NBA's seemingly endless nightmare continued Sunday night when disgraced former referee Tim Donaghy sat down with 60 Minutes for his first interview about the gambling scandal that rocked professional basketball.

The death threats, the fact that he threw away his life and career for a mere $100,000 in gambling profits, the knee that he says was damaged by an organized crime operative while in prison and the mob involvement that ultimately got him caught - all will make headlines. So will an assertion by the FBI agent who headed the Donaghy investigation, Philip Scala, who told 60 Minutes that the ref's NBA picks conservatively resulted in "at least a few million dollars" flowing into organized crime coffers.

While Donaghy reiterated that he was successful on between 70 and 80 percent of his picks - a claim that matches the FBI's conclusions, according to the 60 Minutes piece - he continued to maintain that his officiating was honest. But the most significant piece of news that emerged from the interview Sunday night was Donaghy's assertion that he did, in fact, manipulate calls that helped him win a bet on a game between the Denver Nuggets and Utah Jazz on Jan. 6, 2007. This is the first time that Donaghy has publicly disclosed a particular game that he wagered on and described the actions he took - coincidentally, he claims - to win that bet.

A bombshell - until you watch the game.

The day before the game, Nuggets superstar Allen Iverson was fined $25,000 by the NBA for comments critical of referee Steve Javie, with whom Iverson has long feuded.

In the interview, Donaghy said that he and other referees felt the punishment was too light. Before the Nuggets played the Jazz on Jan. 6, 2007, Donaghy said he and the other two officials assigned to the game -- Bernie Fryer and Gary Zielinski -- agreed that they wouldn't give Iverson a fair whistle that night as a way to "teach him a lesson."

"I knew that the other two referees and I sought out to do a little justice of our own," Donaghy said. "... In the pregame meetings we came to the conclusion that we were not gonna give Allen Iverson any marginal plays for the basket."

Donaghy told 60 Minutes that he bet against Iverson's team that night, but claimed that he manipulated calls only to stick it to Iverson - not to help him win the bet. The Jazz beat the Nuggets 96-84, making Donaghy's pick a winner.

If Donaghy was able to execute his plan, he did a better job concealing it than you could imagine. The Nuggets attempted 31 free throws to Utah's 17, and Iverson went to the free-throw line more than anyone else in the game; he was 11 for 12. But there's more, thanks to Synergy Sports Technology, which logs in-depth statistics, play outcomes and video clips of every NBA game.

In the game in question, Iverson drove to the basket 12 times. I watched every one of those plays. Iverson made two driving layups, missed four, lost the ball once and drew five fouls -- three of which were called by Donaghy himself. He was called for two personal fouls and drew nine in the game.

Iverson was called twice for palming the ball, an infraction known as a discontinued dribble. One call was made by Zielinski and the other by Donaghy, who also whistled Utah's Deron Williams for the same infraction with two minutes left in the game. At the time, cracking down on palming was a point of emphasis for the NBA's officiating department, according to a source.

The Synergy video clips showed one play on which Iverson obviously was fouled and didn't get the call. With 2:28 left in the third quarter, Iverson missed a driving layup in transition. Donaghy, the baseline official on the play, failed to call Mehmet Okur for hitting Iverson with his left arm. Donaghy did, however, call Okur for fouling Reggie Evans, who got the offensive rebound and missed both of his free throws.

Asked about Donaghy's assertions Sunday after his first practice since re-signing with the Philadelphia 76ers, Iverson told CBSSports.com, "I don't have a reaction. I don't want to get into that. I'll let the NBA and the higher beings handle that."

In the interview, Donaghy focused on games involving another superstar, the Lakers' Kobe Bryant. He said he won several bets in a row by putting money on the Lakers because he was able to use the NBA's own internal communication with referees to guess accurately about how those games would be called.

After the Lakers had sent a DVD to the league office complaining about certain calls not going in Bryant's favor - a common practice for all teams - Donaghy saw the league's training videos emphasizing those rules not as a teaching tool, but as a way to win bets. According to a person familiar with the league's methods for training officials and emphasizing certain rules, such videos cover a variety of teams and players and aren't specifically geared toward how one player is being officiated.

What does it all mean? Either Donaghy was highly skilled at concealing his use of the whistle in games he bet on, or he continues to be what the NBA has repeatedly cast him as -- a convicted felon whose statements cannot be trusted. It remains the ultimate case of you make the call.

Donaghy continued to maintain his truthfulness, telling 60 Minutes that he had no choice but to be honest with federal investigators or risk losing his plea agreement. Scala supported that claim, saying that the FBI never found any of his statements to be false. In the interview, Donaghy did not unveil any bombshells about the potential involvement of any other referees in betting or passing information to gamblers.

The NBA declined to make Fryer, Zielinski or any other league official available to CBSSports.com for an interview Sunday because it had yet to see the 60 Minutes interview or Donaghy's book, Personal Foul, which is due out this month with a new publisher after a division of Random House dropped it in October over legal concerns.

"I certainly made some terrible choices to do what I did," Donaghy said. "But the culture that existed within the game of the NBA enabled me to be able to do this at a very successful rate."

In the wake of Donaghy's first interview since the scandal broke, only one thing remains certain: the culture of the NBA will never be the same.


Written by Ken Berger

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by reemed05 December 12, 2009 10:40 AM EST
This guy is scum, but yes I believe him. There should be an investigation to find out who else is involved. Wow is nothing on the up and up anymore ? Sad commentary on sports officials.
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by Windwalker_Oldwolf December 10, 2009 6:34 AM EST
Hes 100% believable. I've been wondering about refs favortism and vendettas for a long time now. Too many bad calls in games where when it is looked at from another angle it didnt happen. Thats why I stopped watching sports years ago.
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by sarahnwrap December 8, 2009 1:36 AM EST
I believe him 100%. As an advid fan, I've seen this many, many times. There were times when Jordan was playing, that if you breathed on him you got called for a foul. This tradition has not been lost on Lebron James and a select few other in the NBA.

But, lets use the last post season as an example. Both the East and West coast series were plagued by the horrible calls. They cheated so much just to keep Cleveland from getting swept against Orlando, I thought I would puke... They cheated for Boston and Denver too. Not enough to decide the series, but as much as possible to keep the series going as long as possible. There were times when it was so unbelievable, as a sports fan it was extremely hard to watch.

Do I believe him? Yeah, I've seen it with my own two eyes.
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by JazzySalsa December 7, 2009 6:24 PM EST
When a team wins a championship I wonder did they really win fair and square or were they helped by the Commisioner and the refs.
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by redmarks10 December 7, 2009 5:23 PM EST
I believe you missed the boat 60 minutes people. This guy, has a huge PATHOLOGICAL GAMBLING ADDICTION,an addiction that afflicts 1% or more of the population and 5-15% are at risk for. He made little or no money. It was about the gambling....all of the insideous behaviors and distorted cognitions of the disease. I am not excusing the crime, but hey, report the whole story. And for what I think of his report, I believe that other NBA officials are corrupt. Letting him be the fall guy for 100K is insane.
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by banshee0022 December 7, 2009 3:53 PM EST
Yes I believe him. I beleive that David Stern has ridged games,drafts and teams for years just for ratings.

No one ever talks about the small market team and how they are manipulated by Sterns office. One case is the Pacers and Ron Artest. This was a small market team that Sterns office dismantled because of the talent they had. At the time of the fight the Pacers were by far the best team in the NBA (look at the record to that point) What Stern did to that franchise was just as bad as Donaghy.

Detroit started the fight, the fan excelled it and the Pacers paid for it. If that would have been the current lakers with Artest the suspensions would have been no where near as steep. Stern killed this small market team for ratings and it has never been the same. The large market team Detroit walked away with almost no punishment.
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by Turbidite December 7, 2009 8:48 AM EST
To say that he didn't let his bet interfere with his game calls is not believable. He contradicts himself when he mentioned "getting even" with a player for arrogance, insults or bad behaviour. How does he seperate that from shading his call in favor of his bet? He may even do it subconciously, but his judgement is seriously in question. As for the other game officials, well we've all suspected or seen calls that were blatantly biased. Coaches and managers have a right of appeal to NBA authorities which seems to satisfy most people. As for Mr. Donaghy he got off easy. It could have been worse if the Mob had taken serious action, and the potentialof it happening in the future is still a possibility. I believe that is why he decided to fully cooperate with the FBI. If anything happens to him the suspicion immediately falls on the "family" he was dealing with. Now let's take a look at football officials. I would be surprised if some interesting calls aren't under scrutiny by the NFL, AFL and FBI.
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by fss2009 December 7, 2009 7:50 AM EST
We all know that Tim Donaghy routinely allowed Kobe to take four or five steps to the hoop when the rules allow for one and a half. I don't believe Donaghy EVER called Kobe for traveling.

Tim Donaghy is a criminal and a psychopath who has demonstrated no real remorse for his actions. He is only talking now because he has a book for sale. Buy his book, and reward a criminal for violating your trust.
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by gac91786 December 7, 2009 12:02 AM EST
YES, I believe Donaghy is telling the truth. I credit hime for having the fortitude to admit his actions. I have been a die hard basketball fan since back to Jerry West. I have been a Laker fan ever since. For quite some time I have felt the NBA was guilty of fixing games. For instance extending playoffs to a full 7 game playoff - in respect to the consideration of revenue an additional game or two would mean. Also allowing a weaker team to win to help them influence spectators?
Even so I love and have enjoyed the sport, which I played all through high school and up to the age of 35.
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