Home

 › 

Sports

 › 

The Most Insane Sports Scandals of the 1970s

The Most Insane Sports Scandals of the 1970s

Phil Cole / Getty Images Sport via Getty Images

The Munich Olympics Massacre (1972)

Keystone / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

Muhammad Ali Refusing the Draft in 1970

Keystone / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

George Steinbrenner Scandals

Stephen Dunn / Getty Images

Pete Rose Gambling Scandal

Mitchell Leff / Getty Images

The South African Apartheid Sports Boycott

Reg Lancaster / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

Rosie Ruiz Defrauds the Boston Marathon

David Madison / Getty Images

Bart Starr's "Dirty Play" Scandal

2019 Getty Images / Getty Images Sport via Getty Images

North Carolina State University Basketball Team Scandal

2024 Getty Images / Getty Images Sport via Getty Images

The Munich Olympics Massacre (1972)
Muhammad Ali Refusing the Draft in 1970
George Steinbrenner Scandals
Pete Rose Gambling Scandal
The South African Apartheid Sports Boycott
Rosie Ruiz Defrauds the Boston Marathon
Bart Starr's "Dirty Play" Scandal
North Carolina State University Basketball Team Scandal

Sports scandals are nothing new to those who are ingrained in the sports world. After all, sports stars are only humans and they make mistakes just like the rest of us. They just have more money to make bigger mistakes. Scandals are widespread among famous people because we hold them to such high standards compared to the average person. They're not just humans anymore. They're larger-than-life, role models, etc. So, when a major scandal hits the news, it can really shake up the media scene for the industry as the world scrambles to explain why their favorite famous person just messed up so badly. Let's examine the biggest sports scandals of the 1970s.

Due to the nature of the topic, there was a great risk of spreading harmful misinformation when writing this article. It was crucial to us that we sourced our information from reputable sources instead of repeating tired claims that were either not proven to be true or proven to be untrue. We did not want to publish a list of accusations against players that we could not verify as being true or plausible.

To top