Alabama is firing baseball coach Brad Bohannon after a report of suspicious bets involving his team, with the school saying he violated "the standards, duties and responsibilities expected of university employees." The firing announced Thursday came three days after a report warning of suspicious wagers prompted Ohio's top gambling regulator to bar licensed sportsbooks in the state from accepting bets on Alabama baseball games.
Jason Jackson will serve as interim head coach. Matthew Schuler, executive director of the Ohio Casino Control Commission, issued an emergency order on Monday "prohibiting the acceptance of any wagers on University of Alabama Baseball effective immediately." The order said that one of the state's "certified independent integrity monitors" notified the state about the wagers.
According to ESPN, Las-Vegas based U.S. Integrity warned sportsbooks of "suspicious wagering activity" involving Friday night's Alabama-LSU game.
Alabama scored five runs in the ninth inning of an 8-6 loss to LSU, which was ranked No. 1 in the major college baseball polls while Alabama was unranked. WATCH | The Fifth Estate explores sudden spike in sports betting options: U.S.