/ 20 November 2009

Europe rocked by fresh match-fixing scandal

About 200 football matches in nine European countries including at least three Champions League games are implicated in a new match-fixing scandal, German prosecutors said on Friday.

Uefa expert Peter Limacher told a press conference in Germany that the revelations represented ”clearly” the worst match-fixing scandal in European football.

The suspect matches took place in Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, Croatia, Slovenia, Turkey, Hungary, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Austria, netting criminals several million euros in betting profits, prosecutors believe.

They include 12 matches this season from the Europa League, formerly known as the Uefa Cup, one qualifying game for the under-21 European championship and four from the German second division.

Police carried out about 50 raids on Thursday in Germany, Britain, Switzerland and Austria, arresting 15 people in Germany and two in Switzerland. More than €1-million in cash and property were seized.

A network of about 200 people is suspected of influencing matches and placing bets on them with bookmakers in Europe and Asia. Prosecutors have reason to believe that players, coaches, referees and officials were offered bribes.

Two of those arrested in Thursday included two Croatian brothers living in Berlin, Ante and Milan Sapina, who were at the centre of a match-fixing scandal that rocked Germany in 2004, newspapers said.

Harald Stenger, a spokesperson for the German Football Federation (DFB), said on Thursday: ”As far as the DFB knows, no German matches are affected.”

But prosecutors are scrutinising 32 matches in Germany, including two in the second division, three in the third, 23 games in regional leagues and two under-19 clashes.

German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung reported that one of the games being investigated was a friendly between German side SSV Ulm against Fenerbahce Istanbul in July.

The Turkish side won 5-0, and investigators suspect that ”certain currently unidentified SSV Ulm players” received more than €10 000 each to throw the game, the paper said.

Ulm’s manager Markus Loesch told Bild. ”Looking at how the game panned out, I can’t see how it [throwing the game] could have happened,” Loesch said.

The team’s goalkeeper, Holger Betz, agreed: ”At the beginning we had two good chances. After the first goal, it was all over. We could have lost by an even greater margin.”

Reports also said that the ring was believed to have placed enormous bets with Asian bookmakers, where limits on the sums that punters can gamble are as much as €30 000, much higher than in Europe.

The 2004 German scandal saw referee Robert Hoyzer sentenced to two years and five months behind bars after admitting receiving almost €70 000 and a plasma television from a Croatian mafia ring to throw games.

The matches concerned were mainly in the German second and third division, but a German Cup match between first division SV Hamburg and third division Paderborn and a first division match in Turkey were also affected.

Hoyzer was released after serving half of his sentence. Ante Sapina was jailed for two years and 11 months, while his brother Milan escaped with a suspended sentence. — AFP

 

AFP