Airion Simmons has been ruled permanently ineligible after the NCAA said he helped manipulate an Abilene Christian game tied to a wider college basketball betting scandal.
NCAA Hands Simmons a Lifetime Eligibility Ban
Former Abilene Christian men’s basketball player Airion Simmons has been permanently banned from NCAA competition after the Division I Committee on Infractions found he violated sports betting integrity rules.
The NCAA said Simmons knowingly gave information to people involved in sports betting and agreed to manipulate his own performance during an Abilene Christian game in March 2024. The ruling makes him permanently ineligible, although Simmons is no longer with the program and is not currently competing in NCAA sports.
For bettors, this is the nightmare version of “inside information.” The NCAA’s version of events says Simmons shared details about his hand injury and another teammate’s availability, then was offered $3,500 to “play bad.” He left the game after 11 minutes with a hand injury.
The Parking Lot Detail That Will Stick
The case reads less like a compliance memo and more like a low-budget crime scene. According to the NCAA, Simmons later told investigators he met someone in a Dallas parking lot to collect cash for his role in throwing the game.
The NCAA also said Simmons received the money but did not pay the other student-athletes he had allegedly brought into the plan. That is not exactly honor among thieves, and it will only add to the concern that college athletes can be targeted by bettors dangling quick cash.
How The Scheme Was Reported
The NCAA said the case surfaced in September 2025 after another former Abilene Christian player transferred to a Division II school and reported prior sports betting violations connected to the ACU team.
That player said Simmons and another teammate pressured him to help lose a game for money. The NCAA also said the reporting player later joined a FaceTime call with Simmons, the teammate, and a known bettor, who told the group to lose the game for cash.
Federal Charges Remain the Bigger Shadow
The NCAA ban is not the only problem for Simmons. In January 2026, he and two known bettors were indicted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on fraud-related charges, including bribery in sporting contests, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
A DOJ document listing charged defendants ties Simmons to Abilene Christian’s March 19, 2024 game and lists bribery in sporting contests and conspiracy to commit wire fraud among the charges.
Latest Update: NCAA Action Follows Wider Point-Shaving Case
The latest confirmed update is the NCAA’s May 15, 2026 ruling against Simmons. I did not find a later reliable report showing a plea, conviction, or sentencing update for Simmons.
The broader case is much larger than one player. Reuters reported in January that federal prosecutors charged 26 people in an alleged betting fraud scheme involving college basketball and Chinese professional games. The indictment described a network involving former NCAA players, a former NBA player, and sports-betting figures, with bets and bribes allegedly used to manipulate performances.
AP later reported that Jalen Smith, described as a key recruiter in the wider NCAA point-shaving scheme, pleaded guilty in federal court in March. Prosecutors said the broader scheme involved more than 39 players across 17 Division I teams and alleged attempts to rig more than 29 games.
Why Online Bettors Should Care
This case cuts straight to trust. A recreational bettor can study injuries, pace, matchups, and line movement all night, but none of that helps if a player is secretly being paid to tank a spread.
It also puts sportsbooks and regulators under fresh pressure. Integrity monitors can flag weird markets after the fact, but the average bettor usually finds out only when the damage is done. College basketball, with deep benches, uneven player pay, and heavy betting interest in even smaller games, remains a soft target for fixers.
For now, Simmons is out of NCAA competition for good. The federal case is the one to watch next.

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