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Match Fixing Affecting You As a Punter?
In organized sports, match fixing or game fixing occurs when a match is played to a completely or partially
pre-determined results. When a team intentionally loses a game to obtain a perceived future competitive
advantage rather than gamblers being involved, the team is often said to have tanked the game instead
of having thrown it.
Thrown games, when motivated by gambling, require contacts (and normally money transfer) between
gamblers, players, team officials, and referees. These contacts and transfer sometimes be found, and lead
to prosecution, by law or the sports leagues.
Match Fixing is often motivated by agreements with book making syndicates. But even if there is no
bookmaking syndicates involved, sometimes a team may deliberately lose to gain some perceived future
advantage.
Since 2004, separate scandals have erupted in prominent sports leagues in Germany (Bundesliga scandal),
Brazil (Brazilian football match-fixing scandal), Italy (Calcio Italia) and the United States, all of which
concerned referees who fixed matches for gamblers. Many sports writer have speculated that in leagues
with high player salaries, it is far more likely for a referee to become corrupt since their pay in such
competitions is usually a lot more less than the players.
There is no monopoly single-handedly responsible for all or most of the fixed matches. At best, there
is a fragment cartel structure dominating the soccer betting market made up of different parties
and for various reasons.
Well, recognizing it when it happens proves most useful for ranking in the profits.Strongest Syndicate Societyknow to a good extent what’s going to happen for certain matches and
stakes a sizeable sum of money on it.
Andres Escobar Saldarriaga (13 March 1967 - 2 July 1994),
a Colombian defender, was murdered shortly after his
return from the1994 World Cup, where he scored an own
goal. The first of a 2-1 defeat to the USA that knocked
out the Colombians at the first phase. In the most believed
explanation, the Medellin drug cartel bet a large sums
of money that Colombia would advance, and blamed the
Medellin-born Escobar for the loss.
The Italian Football Federation said in October 2000
it had found eight players guilty of match-fixing. Three
were from Serie A side Atalanta and the other five played
for Serie B side Pistoiese. The players were Giacomo
Banchelli, Christian Doni and Sebastiano Siviglia (all
Atalanta) and Alfredo Aglietti, Massimiliano Allegri,
Daniele Amerini, Gianluca Lillo and Girolama Bizzarri
(all Pistoiese). The charges related to an Italian Cup
first round tie between the two side in Bergamo on August
20, 2000 which ended 1-1. Atalanta scored at the end
of the first half and Pistoiese equalised three minutes
before full time. Atalanta qualified for the second
round. Snai, which organises the betting on Italian
football, said later it had registered suspiciously
heavy betting on the results and many of the bets were
for a 1-0 halftime score and a full time score of 1-1.
In the late 2004, the game between Panionios and Dinamo
Tbilisi in the 2004-05 UEFA Cup was suspected of being
fixed after the Bristish bookmakers detected an unusually
high number of half time bets for a 5-2 win for the
Greek side, which was trailing 0-1. As the final results
ended up being 5-2, suspicions of fixing quickly emerged,
but were quickly denied by both clubs, although FIFA
started an investigation.
In July 2005, Italian Serie B champions Genoa was arbitrarily
placed last in the division, and therefore condemned
to relegation Serie C1, after it was revealed that they
bribed their opponents in the final match of the season,
Venezia to throw the match. Genoa won 3-2 and had apparently
secured promotion to Serie A.
2006 Serie A scandal: (”Calciopoli”) In May 2006, perhaps
the largest match fixing scandal in the history of Italian
Serie A football was uncovered by Italian Police, implicating
league champions Juventus, and powerhouses AC Milan,
Fiorentina, and Lazio. Teams were suspected of rigged
games by selecting favourable referees, and even superstar
Italian World Cup team goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon was
charged with betting on football games. Initially, Juventus
were stripped of their titles in 2004-05 and 2005-06,
all four clubs were barred from European club competition
in 2006-07, and except Milan were forcibly relegated
to Serie B. After all four clubs appealed, only Juventus
remained relegated and Milan were allowed to enter the
third qualifying round of the Champions League (they
went on to win the tournament.) The stripping of Juventus’s
title stood.
In November 2009, German police arrested 17 people on
suspicion of fixing at least 200 soccer matches in 9
countries. Among the suspected games were those from
the top leagues of Austria, Bosnia, Croatia, Hungary,
Slovenia and Turkey and games from the second highest
league of Belgium, Germany and Switzerland. Three contest
from the Champions League were under investigation and
12 from the Europa League.
During 1999 a Malaysia-based betting syndicate was caught
attempting to install a remote-control device to sabotage
the floodlights at English Premier League team Charlton
Athletic’s ground with the aid of a corrupt security
officer. If the match had been abandoned after half-time,
the results and the bets would have stood. Subsequently
investigations showed that the gang had been responsible
for previous unsuspected "floodlight failure" at West
Ham’s ground in November 1997, and again a month later
at Crystal Palace’s ground during a home match of Palace’s
ground- sharing tenant Wimbledon.
Match Fixing Event
2004 South African Football Association
In June 2004 in South Africa, thirty-three people (including
nineteen referees, club officials, a match commissioner
and an official of the South African Football Association)
were arrested on match-fixing charges.
2005 Bundesliga scandal: In January 2005, the German
Football Association (DFB) and German prosecutors launched
separate probes into charges that referee Robert Hoyzer
bet on and fixed several matches that he worked, including
German Cup tie. Hoyzer later admitted to the allegations;
it has been reported that he was involved with Croat
gambling syndicates. He also implicated other referees
and players in the match fixing scheme. The first arrests
in the Hoyzer investigation were made on January 2008
Berlin, and Hoyzer himself was arrested on February
12 after new evidence apparently emerged to suggest
that he had been involved in fixing more matches than
he had admitted to. Hoyzer has been banned for life
from football by the DFB. On March 10, a second referee,
Dominik Marks, was arrested after being implicated in
the scheme by Hoyzer, Still later (March 24), it was
reported that Hoyzer had told investigators that the
gambling ring he was involved with had access to UEFA’s
referee assignments for international matches and Champion
League and UEFA Cup fixture several days before UEFA
publicity announced them. Ultimately Hoyzer was sentenced
to serve 2 years and 5 months in prison.
Brazilian football match-fixing scandal: In September
2005, a Brazilian magazine revealed that two football
referee, Edilson Pereira de Carvalho (a member of FIFA’s
referee staff) and Paulo Jos Danelon, had accepted bribe
to fix matches. Soon afterwards, sport authorities ordered
the replaying of 11 matches in the country’s top competition,
the Campeonato Brasileiro, that had been worked by Edilson.
Both referees have been banned for life from football
and face possible criminal charges. Brazilian supporters
have taken to shout "Edilson" at a referee who they
consider to have made a bad call againts their team,
in reference to the scandal.
2008: On October 1, it was reported that a Spanish judge
who headed an investigation against Russian mafia figure
uncovered information alleging that the mobsters may
have attempted to fix the 2007-08 UEFA Cup semi-final
between eventually champion Zenit St. Petersburg and
Bayern Munich. Both clubs denied any knowledge of the
alleged scheme.