This one is interesting, from Rich Hofmann:
http://www.philly.com/philly/columnists/20070723_Rich_Hofmann___Blowing_the_whistle_NBA_NEEDS_UPFRONT_DONAGHY_INVESTIGATION.html
"But for those in the commentary business who have concluded that the NBA is on the edge of the abyss here, or that officials in all sports will see every whistle they blow and every call they make viewed through the prism of betting and fixing and Tim Donaghy, a name is offered here for comparison:
Jayson Blair.
Did Jayson Blair kill journalism?
Blair was the New York Times reporter who was caught making up all kinds of stuff a couple of years back. What followed the revelations about Blair was an overdose of angst in the journalism profession. A series of new safeguards regarding plagiarism were put in place at most papers, and some witch hunts were conducted against reporters for trivial stuff, and some other journalists got canned for good reasons, and there is every reason to believe that what you read in a newspaper today is more accurately reported than ever.
Did Blair kill journalism? Hardly. It is even possible to argue the opposite.
So it can be for the NBA, and for officials everywhere, in every sport. Baseball survived Pete Rose, right? And the Bundesliga in Germany, following a referee betting scandal, continued to set attendance records. As long as it is isolated and investigated, people will not flee."
http://www.philly.com/philly/columnists/20070723_Rich_Hofmann___Blowing_the_whistle_NBA_NEEDS_UPFRONT_DONAGHY_INVESTIGATION.html
"But for those in the commentary business who have concluded that the NBA is on the edge of the abyss here, or that officials in all sports will see every whistle they blow and every call they make viewed through the prism of betting and fixing and Tim Donaghy, a name is offered here for comparison:
Jayson Blair.
Did Jayson Blair kill journalism?
Blair was the New York Times reporter who was caught making up all kinds of stuff a couple of years back. What followed the revelations about Blair was an overdose of angst in the journalism profession. A series of new safeguards regarding plagiarism were put in place at most papers, and some witch hunts were conducted against reporters for trivial stuff, and some other journalists got canned for good reasons, and there is every reason to believe that what you read in a newspaper today is more accurately reported than ever.
Did Blair kill journalism? Hardly. It is even possible to argue the opposite.
So it can be for the NBA, and for officials everywhere, in every sport. Baseball survived Pete Rose, right? And the Bundesliga in Germany, following a referee betting scandal, continued to set attendance records. As long as it is isolated and investigated, people will not flee."