Five ex-players from the now-defunct Surrey Scorchers have been hit with sweeping bans after an international investigation uncovered a match-fixing scheme during the 2022-2023 British Basketball League (BBL) season.
Led by FIBA in coordination with the British Basketball Federation (BBF) and the UK Gambling Commission’s Sports Betting Intelligence Unit (SBIU), the probe exposed manipulated outcomes in at least six matches. Players were found to have accepted payments to alter game results and failed to report suspicious betting activities—violations that led to career-ending consequences.
Lifetime Bans and Heavy Fines for Core Offenders
Quincy Taylor and Charleston Dobbs received the harshest penalties: lifetime bans from basketball in the UK and a £3,000 fine each. FIBA extended these sanctions globally, making them ineligible to participate in basketball anywhere.
Three more former Scorchers—Shakem Johnston, Padiet Wang, and Joshua McFolley—were also found complicit. Johnston and Wang face lifetime suspensions with the possibility of review, while McFolley is barred from the sport until 2034.
Further Penalties for Betting Violations
Dean Wanliss, another former player, was sanctioned separately for betting on games while under contract between 2019 and 2021. He received a £3,000 fine and a three-year suspension following a joint investigation involving Spanish and UK basketball authorities, the Spanish Basketball Federation (FEB), and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Monitoring Unit.
Scandal Leaves Deep Mark on British Basketball
The Scorchers folded after a 4-32 season and the withdrawal of university support. The BBL’s collapse soon followed, plagued by financial instability. The newly formed Super League Basketball (SLB) has since taken its place, but the damage to its reputation remains.
The investigation, backed by national and international bodies, exposed the extent of the corruption and reaffirmed the commitment to clean competition. Basketball’s governing organizations clarified that integrity violations will be met with zero tolerance.
FIBA and the BBF issued a strong warning: ethical breaches end careers and threaten the credibility of the game itself.