
London, ON – Building on Huron’s commitment to ethical leadership and rigorous inquiry through the Nation Builder Program, the President’s SPARK Speaker Series continued this winter with a powerful keynote exploring the complex world of sport corruption and gambling.
In a thought-provoking and, at times, unsettling presentation, internationally renowned researcher Declan Hill, PhD, challenged audiences to reconsider what is at stake in today’s global sports industry.
Held just days before the Super Bowl, one of the largest betting events of the year, Hill’s talk, Mobsters, Money, and the Existential Threat to Canadian Sport, asked a direct question: What happens when sport, one of society’s most cherished institutions, becomes entangled with organized crime, addiction, and global gambling markets worth trillions?

A Global Expert with a Clear Warning
Introduced by Huron President and Vice-Chancellor Dr. Barry Craig, Hill was described as “one of the premier authorities in the world” on organized crime and corruption in international sport. A journalist, academic investigator, and bestselling author, Hill is widely known for his book The Fix, which documents his undercover investigation into global match-fixing networks.
From the start, Hill set the tone that this would not be a comfortable lecture.
“My job tonight is to blow your minds,” he told the audience. “If you walk out of here unchanged, then I failed.”
Blending data, case studies, and audience engagement, Hill encouraged students, staff, faculty and community members attending to see sport not just as entertainment, but as a powerful institution that must be protected.
Hill argued that even after sports gambling has been legalized in Ontario, which he supports, legalization has not eliminated criminal involvement. In some cases, it has shifted how illegal markets operate as a battleground and is creating opportunities for criminal groups to disguise the origins of their profits by filtering them through legal betting systems.
“There is a war going on, and there are bodies in the streets. The motivation for these murders and attacks are sports gambling. It’s who’s going to control the illegal world of sports gambling.”
For many in attendance, this was the moment that underscored the seriousness and scale of the issue.

A $1.6 Trillion Reality
Hill walked the audience through the staggering size of the global gambling economy, more than $1.6 trillion, with up to 60,000 sporting events and 20,000 micro-bets occurring every single day.
Contrary to common perception, Hill emphasized that North America represents only a small fraction of that market. The epicentre lies largely offshore, often in loosely regulated or illegal markets in Asia.
Hill described how gambling networks are used for money laundering, how athletes are targeted and manipulated, and how even senior executives in legal gambling corporations have been linked to illegal betting operations.
The message was clear: the line between “legal” and “illegal” is not always as clear as many assume.
The Human Cost
If the global scale was staggering, the human consequences were sobering.
Hill highlighted how both legal and illegal gambling models rely heavily on exploiting addiction that disproportionately affects young men. Hill pointed to research showing that a small percentage of gamblers generate the vast majority of industry profits through “frictionless gambling.” With mobile apps and algorithm-driven prompts, gambling has become immediate, constant, and easy to access.
“The real business model,” he said, “is not the casual bettor. It’s the heavy loser.”
He also referenced studies linking gambling addiction to serious mental health risks, including self-harm. The consequences, he emphasized, extend far beyond financial loss. Hill pointed to the work of Gambling with Lives, an advocacy organization founded by parents whose children died as a result of gambling addiction. The group works to raise awareness about the mental health risks linked to modern betting practices and calls for stronger safeguards to protect vulnerable users.
Integrity Under Pressure
Hill also addressed how gambling pressure fuels match-fixing and athlete exploitation. Through interviews with former organized crime figures and years of investigative research, he has documented how athletes, particularly young, financially vulnerable players, are recruited, indebted, and coerced into manipulating outcomes.
“The crisis facing sport,” he suggested, “is not just whether games are fixed. It’s whether fans can trust what they’re watching.”
Public trust, he argued, is essential to the future of sport.




A Nation Builder Conversation
Following the keynote, a panel discussion featured Professor Richard McLaren (’68), O.C., one of the world’s leading sport integrity investigators and a Huron alumnus, and Tim Hutzel, General Counsel for Canada Soccer and proud Huron parent. Together, they examined regulation, enforcement, and the realities of safeguarding global competitions and protecting sport in a rapidly changing and volatile environment.
Sport, as Hill and the panel emphasized, reflects society. Protecting it requires vigilance, transparency, and leaders prepared to act even when integrity is inconvenient.
The evening concluded with reflections from Nation Builder Program student Raam Rajan, who connected Hill’s message to leadership, mental health, and accountability. Drawing on statistics shared during the keynote; he reminded the audience that behind the trillion-dollar industry are real people and real consequences.
Raam emphasized three key themes from the talk: mental health matters, harmful systems must be challenged, and strong leaders must be willing to act with courage and empathy.

“Nations aren’t built by speeches or policies alone,” he told the audience. “They’re built by people who decide again and again to act with courage.”
His remarks brought the conversation back to Huron’s core mission. Through the Nation Builder Program, students are encouraged not only to understand complex global issues, but to lead with integrity and heart.

SPARK: Ideas That Challenge and Inspire
Made possible through the generosity of The Schulich Foundation, the President’s SPARK Speaker Series, which stands for Stimulating Possibilities, Awareness, Resilience, and Knowledge, brings influential thinkers to Huron to engage the university and broader community in timely, real-world conversations.
Hill’s keynote reflected SPARK’s mission: not only to inform, but to encourage thoughtful dialogue about the kind of society and sporting culture we want to build.
As Hill reminded the audience, sport can reflect the very best of humanity. Protecting that promise requires integrity, courage, and ethical leadership.
The President’s SPARK Speaker Series continues this spring with another timely conversation.
Save the Date
The President’s SPARK Speaker Series continues this spring with another timely conversation.
In Conversation:
Anique Asher & Gillian Riley on Leadership and the Future of Banking
March 30, 2026
Schulich Hall (Theatre), Frank Holmes Centre
Invitation to follow.




Lisa Jones Keenan is the Vice President of Sales at Xplornet Communications, the largest rural fixed wireless broadband service provider in Canada. 
Leigh Allen is the AVP, Global Strategic Research, Reinsurance Group of America Inc., one of the world’s largest global life and reinsurance companies.
Yola Ventresca is a Managing Partner, Lerners LLP, Secretary of Huron’s Board of Governors and a Huron Class of ’02 alumni. Selected as one of Canada’s “Best Lawyers,” she is passionate about the value of Liberal Arts in helping students succeed in their careers.
Susan Farrow is an Assistant Professor in The Temerty Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto and a Founding Partner and Co-Director of The Toronto Institute of Group Studies, an organization offering certified training and education in group leadership.
Frank Holmes is CEO and Chief Investment Officer of U.S. Global Investors, as well as a business commentator, philanthropist and Huron Class of ‘78 alumnus. Holmes also serves as the Executive Chairman of HIVE Blockchain Technologies, the first cryptocurrency mining company to go public in 2017.
Kelly Meighen is an experienced philanthropist and volunteer. In her role as president of the T.R. Meighen Family Foundation, she has created a legacy of volunteerism and philanthropic giving in the areas of youth mental health advocacy, environmental conservation and cultural vibrancy.
Ranjita is Executive Chair of the Oxford Global Partnership, advising investors, businesses, family offices and entrepreneurs on sustainable, inclusive and responsible value creation. A Business Fellow at Oxford University’s Smith School, Ranjita engages with companies on pursuing value with values, and teaches a postgraduate “Essentials of ESG & DEI” course.
Caleb Hayhoe is the Founder & Chairman of Flowerdale Group and a Huron Class of ’85 Alumnus. Flowerdale Group is a Hong Kong based family office with a global investment outlook across public markets, real estate and private investment. Hayhoe previously spent over ten years building a global sourcing business together with an exceptional team, and remains committed to entrepreneurialism and helping great ideas become sustainable companies.



