A gambler and players involved in a 1994 Arizona State basketball point shaving scandal describe how and why they plotted to fix games for a payout.A gambler and players involved in a 1994 Arizona State basketball point shaving scandal describe how and why they plotted to fix games for a payout.A gambler and players involved in a 1994 Arizona State basketball point shaving scandal describe how and why they plotted to fix games for a payout.
Photos
Stevin Smith
- Self - ASU Point Guard
- (as Stevin 'Hedake' Smith)
Isaac Burton
- Self - ASU Shooting Guard
- (as Isaac 'Ice' Burton)
Mario Bennett
- Self - ASU Power Forward
- (archive footage)
Bill Frieder
- Self - Head Coach, ASU Basketball
- (archive footage)
Ron Riley
- Self - ASU Small Forward
- (archive footage)
Bill Saum
- Self - NCAA Gambling Director
- (archive footage)
Benny Silman
- Self - Bookmaker
- (archive footage)
David Stern
- Self - NBA Commissioner
- (archive footage)
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsThe events of 'Hoop Schemes' take place in early 1994. However in the reenactment scenes bundles of $100 bills are shown with the most recent redesign made available to the public in 2013.
Featured review
Sports is such a disappointing venture
I grew up in ArIzona and was a fan and eventual alumni of ArIzona St.'s rival the University of ArIzona. I remember laughing about this because ASU was the under achieving little brother to my Wildcats. ArIzona fans complained for years that our top rivals were getting at least one easy win on the ArIzona Road Trip.
Anyway, hindsight really brings to light how stupid and sad this story was. First of all, it was ASU. Someone was eventually gonna find out due to the relative anonymity of the university on the college basketball landscape. Second, it was ASU. I mean seriously, couldn't they have chosen a bigger named school? Plus the quote that ASU's basketball program was a sleeping giant was pretty laughable. ASU was a football and baseball school, never a basketball school.
Anyway, this was a pretty solid documentary that described the ins and outs of how this scandal came to be. I was rather shocked by the scheme, for running money into multiple casinos is pretty insane to me. I was even more amazed that one man made five million on this nonsense.
The only thing I didn't like was the fact they did not get any perspective from Bill Freider. I always liked him and felt the program was moving in the right direction with him. The players he recruited did help the program until the mid-90s, but the school fell into another abyss shortly after. With a massive distrust toward the school it was a miracle if he could recruit at all. He never coached again after he left in '97, and he might be the one most affected by the story. I also felt bad for Stevin Smith. For those that watched him up close, he was a more physical version of Stephen Curry, and had no issue with launching (and routinely making) long range shots. It was a shame his vices got the best of him. As for perpetrators that marked him and Isaac Burton, I just wish they had gotten more jail time.
Anyway, I knew most of the details of the story due to seeing unfold in real time, but it was a nice trip down memory lane. A few more participants and this would have been an extremely riveting documentary.
Anyway, hindsight really brings to light how stupid and sad this story was. First of all, it was ASU. Someone was eventually gonna find out due to the relative anonymity of the university on the college basketball landscape. Second, it was ASU. I mean seriously, couldn't they have chosen a bigger named school? Plus the quote that ASU's basketball program was a sleeping giant was pretty laughable. ASU was a football and baseball school, never a basketball school.
Anyway, this was a pretty solid documentary that described the ins and outs of how this scandal came to be. I was rather shocked by the scheme, for running money into multiple casinos is pretty insane to me. I was even more amazed that one man made five million on this nonsense.
The only thing I didn't like was the fact they did not get any perspective from Bill Freider. I always liked him and felt the program was moving in the right direction with him. The players he recruited did help the program until the mid-90s, but the school fell into another abyss shortly after. With a massive distrust toward the school it was a miracle if he could recruit at all. He never coached again after he left in '97, and he might be the one most affected by the story. I also felt bad for Stevin Smith. For those that watched him up close, he was a more physical version of Stephen Curry, and had no issue with launching (and routinely making) long range shots. It was a shame his vices got the best of him. As for perpetrators that marked him and Isaac Burton, I just wish they had gotten more jail time.
Anyway, I knew most of the details of the story due to seeing unfold in real time, but it was a nice trip down memory lane. A few more participants and this would have been an extremely riveting documentary.
helpful•25
- Agent10
- Oct 17, 2021
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