Gambling among college golfers? You bet

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RankNameRatingEvents
1Southern California 70.91  11 
2Duke 71.54  11 
3Alabama 71.56  11 
4Oklahoma 72.08  11 
5UCLA 72.33  12 

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RankNameSchoolRating
1Michael KimCalifornia  69.23 
2Brandon StoneTexas  69.35 
3Bobby WyattAlabama  69.55 
4Cory WhitsettAlabama  69.57 
5Julien BrunTCU  69.61 

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1California 69.31  14 
2Alabama 69.66  12 
3Texas 70.31  12 
4UCLA 70.49  13 
5New Mexico 70.51  14 

College golf coaches will make time during their annual conference next month for a topic normally associated with higher-profile sports.

Gambling.

A study released recently by the NCAA found that male college golfers are far more likely to wager than other athletes.

Twenty percent of Division I men’s golfers were “frequent’’ gamblers, according to the survey, done anonymously in 2008 with more than 19,000 student-athletes in 11 sports. “Frequent gambling’’ is defined as once or more per month. The golfers' rate was up from 14 percent in a similar survey in 2004. Eight percent of men’s golfers were defined as “heavy’’ gamblers, meaning once or more per week in ’08.

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In women’s golf, 1.3 percent of respondents were “frequent’’ gamblers, the most of the 11 women’s sports surveyed. Female athletes, like society at large, are far less likely to gamble than their male counterparts, according to research cited in the study.

The proliferation of fantasy sports leagues, online gambling and the ease of payment – via credit cards or third-party transfers – contributed, according to the findings.

“We take this issue very seriously,” Louisville coach Mark Crabtree, president of the Golf Coaches Association of America, said in a GCAA news release. The findings will be a priority during the Dec. 7-9 meeting, Crabtree said.

The site of that meeting? The Riviera Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas.