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Group: Illegal sports bets total 6.5 trillion yen from Japan
Group: Illegal sports bets total 6.5 trillion yen from Japan

Asahi Shimbun

time09-06-2025

  • Business
  • Asahi Shimbun

Group: Illegal sports bets total 6.5 trillion yen from Japan

Hironori Inagaki, representative director of the Council for Sports Ecosystem Promotion, explains the state of sports betting markets. (Kosuke Inagaki) Gamblers in Japan illegally bet 6.5 trillion yen ($46 billion) on sports through overseas websites in 2024, a sign the nation should ratify an international treaty on preventing match-fixing, a group said. Betting on sports competitions has become a huge business in many countries. But most forms of sport gambling, including online wagering on competition outcomes, are prohibited in Japan. The Council for Sports Ecosystem Promotion (C-SEP) released its estimated Japanese wager amount during a symposium in Tokyo on May 14. C-SEP, a Japanese general incorporated foundation aimed at expanding the sports industry, said these overseas websites have been gaining a 'free ride' on sport competitions in Japan. Last year, 4.9 trillion yen was wagered through such sites on baseball, soccer, basketball and other sports played in Japan, C-SEP officials said. Of this amount, 3.8928 trillion yen was wagered by people overseas and 1.0183 trillion yen was placed in bets by residents of Japan. Soccer, including matches, accounted for the largest slice of the bets, at 2.8534 trillion yen, followed by Nippon Professional Baseball, at 882.9 billion yen, and basketball, including games, at 522.3 billion yen. About 60 percent of the bets on Japanese soccer were placed from China, compared with just over 10 percent from Japan. Sixty percent of the bets on Japanese baseball were placed from Japan, the officials said. Some sports betting websites overseas were found livestreaming the action from professional sport competitions in Japan, as well as using team logos and even portraits of athletes, without permission, the officials added. C-SEP Representative Director Hironori Inagaki, who is also a lawyer, recommended that Japan ratify the Convention on the Manipulation of Sports Competitions, which the Council of Europe brought into effect in 2019. More commonly known as the Macolin Convention, the international arrangement calls on public authorities and sport organizations to work together to prevent match-fixing and other irregularities. Inagaki said the convention has been signed by 43 countries and ratified by 14 so far. 'There is a pressing need, for Japan as well, to build a similar arrangement and join a similar framework of international cooperation,' Inagaki said. Yuki Ota, an Olympic fencing medalist and an International Olympic Committee member, also took part in the symposium. He explained that 1.65 trillion yen was bet on events at the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics. 'Many Japanese athletes compete in the Olympic Games, so there is a need for integrity education,' Ota said. Toshikazu Yamaguchi, president of the Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings newspaper publisher who is also owner of the Yomiuri Giants baseball team, expressed remorse over the recent revelation that some ballplayers, including Giants' members, were involved in illegal gambling on online casinos. 'With the spread of smartphones, there is a greater risk than a decade ago of players being involved in gambling,' Yamaguchi said. 'Japan should work toward signing and ratifying the Macolin Convention to prevent the nation's sporting world from being polluted with gambling and manipulation, which are descending on us from overseas.' He also pointed out there is no joint public-private body in Japan to address the issue. 'We should learn from cases overseas and promptly discuss the matter,' he said. (This article was written by Kosuke Inagaki and Taisuke Goto.)

Over ¥6 Trillion Bet on Sports Through Overseas Websites; Tokyo Symposium Proposes Ratifying Macolin Convention
Over ¥6 Trillion Bet on Sports Through Overseas Websites; Tokyo Symposium Proposes Ratifying Macolin Convention

Yomiuri Shimbun

time15-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Over ¥6 Trillion Bet on Sports Through Overseas Websites; Tokyo Symposium Proposes Ratifying Macolin Convention

The Yomiuri Shimbun A discussion on sports betting is held at a symposium in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo, on Wednesday. Residents of Japan are estimated to have illegally bet at least ¥6.4503 trillion through overseas sports betting websites in 2024, according to a recent report. The Council for Sports Ecosystem Promotion, a general incorporated foundation that works to support the sports industry, unveiled the report on Wednesday at a symposium held in Tokyo. The council commissioned an overseas research firm and other organizations to estimate the amount of betting from Japan, based on data from betting operators in countries where it is legal to gamble on sports. According to the survey, the total amount exceeded ¥6 trillion, of which ¥1.0183 trillion was wagered on Japanese sports. The largest value of bets were placed on professional baseball at ¥528.1 billion, followed by soccer at ¥333.4 billion and basketball at ¥86.9 billion. A total of ¥4.9112 trillion was wagered from around the world on Japanese sports, with soccer, including the J-League, accounting for ¥2.8534 trillion. At the symposium, Diet members and former athletes were among those discussing the need for international cooperation to address illegal gambling that crosses borders and the risk of athletes becoming involved in illegal acts. It was proposed that Japan ratify the Convention on the Manipulation of Sports Competitions, known as the Macolin Convention, which was put into effect in 2019 by the Council of Europe. The symposium participants also called for cracking down on illegal operators and identifying cheating. 'Illegal betting is spreading rapidly, and if nothing is done, the Japanese sports industry could become a target,' said council member Toshikazu Yamaguchi, the president of The Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings. Attorney Hironori Inagaki, representative director of the council, said the council intends to quickly establish a domestic organization with the aim of ratifying the convention.

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