In organized
sports,
match
fixing,
game fixing or
race
fixing occurs when a match is played to a completely or
partially pre-determined result, violating the rules of the game
and often the law. Where the sporting competition in question is a
race then the incident is referred to as
race
fixing. Games that are deliberately lost are sometimes
called
thrown games. When a team intentionally
loses a game, or does not score as high as it can, to obtain a
perceived future competitive advantage (for instance, earning a
high
draft pick) rather than gamblers
being involved, the team is often said to have
tanked the game instead of having
thrown it. In
pool
hustling, tanking is known as
dumping.
Thrown games, when motivated by gambling, require contacts (and
normally money transfers) between gamblers, players, team
officials, and/or referees. These contacts and transfer can
sometimes be found, and lead to prosecution, by law or by the
sports league(s). In contrast, tanking is internal to the team and
very hard to prove. Often, substitutions made by the coach designed
to deliberately increase the team's chances of losing (frequently
by having one or more key players sit out, often using minimal or
phantom injuries as a public excuse for doing this), rather than
ordering the players actually on the field to intentionally
underperform, were cited as the main factor in cases where tanking
has been alleged.
Motivations and causes
The major motivations behind match fixing are gambling and future
team advantage.
Agreements with gamblers
There may be financial gain through agreements with
gamblers.
Getting a better draft pick
In the
NHL and
NBA, teams near the bottom
of the standings have sometimes been accused of tanking games at
the end of the season to finish with the worst record in the league
— thereby gaining the first
draft
pick. (For example, there were accusations that in 1993 the
Ottawa Senators intentionally tanked
games in order to draft
Alexandre
Daigle.) To deter this behavior, these leagues now use a
draft lottery which does not guarantee
the first pick to the team at the bottom of the standings. Other
leagues such as the
Australian Football League and
the
NFL do not make use of
a lottery, which leads to suspicions of match fixing, especially
since top draft picks can have top careers. Like the NFL,
MLB does not conduct a draft lottery,
though it is very unlikely that an MLB team would tank a game for a
draft pick because of the series of minor leagues that draft picks
have to go through, and the fact that a first round draft pick may
go his entire professional career without appearing in a single
major league game.
Better playoff chances
In the NBA (but not in the NHL, which re-seeds teams after the
first playoff round), there have also been allegations of teams
tanking games in order to finish in sixth rather than fifth place
in the conference standings, thus enabling the team in question to
evade a possible playoff match with the conference's top seed until
the final round of playoffs in that conference (for more details
see
single-elimination
tournament). For example, the 2006
Los Angeles Clippers allegedly tanked
late season games so they could finish with the 6th seed and play
the 8th-ranked team in the league's Western Conference, the
Denver Nuggets, who were the 3rd seed
by way of winning their division. Another quirk in the league's
playoff system gave the Clippers even more of an incentive to tank.
The NBA is the only one of the four
major professional sports leagues of the United States in which
home advantage in the playoffs is based strictly on regular-season
record without regard to seeding. If the Clippers had finished with
the 5th seed in the West, they would have had to face the
Dallas Mavericks, who despite being the 4th
seed had the second-best record in the conference, which would give
the Mavericks home advantage. However, the Clippers would have home
advantage in a series against the Nuggets by virtue of a better
overall record. If tanking was indeed their strategy, it worked, as
the Clippers easily won their first round series. Following the
2006 season, the NBA changed its playoff format so that the best
second-place team in each conference would be able to obtain up to
the #2 seed should it have the second-best conference record.On
occasion, an NFL team has also been accused of throwing its final
regular-season game in an attempt to "choose" its possible opponent
in the subsequent playoffs. For example, in the closing game of the
2004 season, the
Indianapolis
Colts faced the
Denver Broncos.
With a win, the Broncos would advance to the playoffs as a wild
card and face the Colts as their first round playoff opponent. It
would seem the Colts had little incentive to win as their loss
would ensure that they would play a team they dominated in the 2003
Wild Card game. Sure enough, the Colts rested their starters, lost
the game, and went on to blow out the Broncos the following week in
the playoffs.
Perhaps the most notable example of this was when the
San Francisco 49ers, who had clinched a
playoff berth, lost their regular-season finale in 1988 to the
Los Angeles Rams, thereby keeping the
New York Giants (who had defeated
the 49ers in the playoffs in both 1985 and 1986, also injuring 49er
quarterback
Joe Montana in the latter
year's game) from qualifying for the postseason; after the game,
Giants quarterback
Phil Simms angrily
accused the 49ers of "laying down like dogs."
A more recent example of possible tanking occurred in the
ice hockey
competition at the
2006 Winter
Olympics. In Pool B,
Sweden was to face
Slovakia in the
last pool match for both teams. Sweden coach
Bengt-Åke Gustafsson publicly
contemplated tanking against Slovakia, knowing that if his team
won, their quarterfinal opponent would either be
Canada, the
2002 gold medalists,
or the
Czech
Republic,
1998 gold medalists.
Gustafsson would tell Swedish television "One is
cholera, the other
the
plague." Sweden lost the match 3-0; the most obvious sign of
tanking was when Sweden had a five-on-three
power play with five
NHL stars—
Peter Forsberg,
Mats
Sundin,
Daniel Alfredsson,
Nicklas Lidstrom, and
Fredrik Modin—on the ice, and failed to put a
shot on goal. If he was seeking to tank, Gustafsson got his wish;
Sweden would face a much less formidable quarterfinal opponent in
Switzerland.
Canada would lose to
Russia in a quarterfinal in
the opposite bracket, while Sweden went on to win the gold medal,
defeating the Czechs in the semifinals.
More favorable schedule next year
NFL teams have been accused of throwing games in order to obtain a
more favorable schedule the following season; this was especially
true between 1977 and 1993, when a team finishing last in a
five-team division would get to play five of its eight non-division
matches the next season against other last-place teams.
Match fixing by referees
In addition to the match fixing that is committed by players,
coaches and/or team officials, it is not unheard of to have results
manipulated by corrupt
referees. Since 2004,
separate
scandals have erupted in prominent
sports leagues in Portugal, Germany (
Bundesliga scandal), Brazil
(
Brazilian
football match-fixing scandal) and the United States (see
Tim Donaghy), all of which concerned
referees who fixed matches for gamblers. Many sports writers 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 much less than that of the players.
Match fixing to a draw or a fixed score
Match fixing does not necessarily involve deliberately losing a
match. Occasionally, teams have been accused of deliberately
playing to a draw (or a fixed score) where this ensures some mutual
benefit (e.g. both teams advancing to the next stage of a
competition.) For example, in the
1982 FIFA World Cup,
West Germany played
Austria in
the last match of group B. A
West German victory by 1 or 2 goals would result in both teams
advancing; any less and Germany was out; any more and Austria was
out (and replaced by
Algeria, who had just beaten
Chile). West Germany attacked hard and scored after 10 minutes.
Afterwards, the players then proceeded to just kick the ball around
aimlessly for the remainder of the match. Algerian supporters were
so angered that they waved banknotes at the players, while a German
fan burned his German flag in disgust. By the second half, the ARD
commentator
Eberhard Stanjek
refused any further comment on the game, while the Austrian
television commentator
Robert
Seeger advised viewers to switch off their sets.
As a result, FIFA
changed its
tournament scheduling for subsequent World Cups so that the final pair of matches
in each group are played simultaneously.
Abuse of tie-breaking rules
On several occasions, "creative" use of tie-breaking rules have
allegedly led teams to play less than their best.
An example occurred in the
2004 European Football
Championship.
Because unlike FIFA
, UEFA takes "head-to-head" play into consideration
before overall goal difference when
ranking teams level on points, a situation arose in Group C where
Sweden and Denmark played to a 2-2 draw,
which was a sufficiently high scoreline to eliminate Italy (which had lower-scoring
draws with the Swedes and Danes) regardless of Italy's result with
already-eliminated Bulgaria. Although
Italy beat Bulgaria by only one goal and would hypothetically have
been eliminated using the FIFA tie-breaker too, some Italian fans
bitterly contended that the FIFA tie-breaker would have motivated
their team to play harder and deterred their
Scandinavian rivals from, in their view, at the
very least half-heartedly playing out the match after the score
became 2-2.
But the FIFA tie-breaker, or any goal-differential scheme, can
cause problems, too. There have been incidents (especially in
basketball) where players on a favored
team have won the game but deliberately ensured the quoted
point spread was not covered (see
point shaving). Conversely, there are cases
where a team not only lost (which might be honest) but lost by some
large amount, perhaps to ensure a point spread was covered, or to
grant some non-gambling related favor to the victor. Perhaps the
most famous alleged example was the match between Argentina and
Peru in the
1978 FIFA World Cup.
Argentina needed a four goal victory to advance over Brazil, an
enormous margin at this level of competition, especially since
Argentina had a weak offense (6 goals in 5 games) and Peru a stout
defence (6 goals allowed in 5 games). Yet somehow, Argentina won
6-0. Much was made over the fact that the Peruvian goalkeeper was
born in Argentina, and Peru was dependent on Argentinian grain
shipments, but nothing was ever proven.
Although the Denmark-Sweden game above led to calls for UEFA to
adopt FIFA's tiebreaking formula for future tournaments, it is not
clear if this solves the problem - the Argentina-Peru game shows a
possible abuse of the FIFA tie-breaker. Proponents of the UEFA
tie-breaker argue that it reduces the value of
blow-outs,
whether these be the result of a much stronger team
running up
the score or an already-eliminated side allowing an unusually
large number of goals. Perhaps the most infamous incident occurred
in December 1983 when
Spain, needing to win by eleven
goals to qualify for the
1984 European Football
Championship ahead of
the Netherlands, defeated
Malta by a score of
12-1 on the strength of
nine second half goals. Especially
in
international football,
such lopsided results are seen as unsavoury, even if they are
honest. If anything, these incidents serves as evidence that the
FIFA tie-breaker can cause incentives to perpetrate a fix in some
circumstances, the UEFA tie-breaker in others.
Individual performance in team sports
Finally, it should be noted that bookmakers in the early 21st
century accept bets on a far wider range of sports-related
propositions than ever before. Thus, a gambling-motivated fix might
not necessarily involve any direct attempt to influence the
outright result, especially in team sports where such a fix would
require the co-operation (and prerequsitely, the knowledge) of many
people, and/or perhaps would be more likely to arouse suspicion.
Fixing the result of a more particular proposition might be seen as
less likely to be noticed - for example, scandalized former
National Basketball
Association referee
Tim Donaghy has
been alleged to have perpetrated his fixes by calling games in such
a manner as to ensure more points than expected were scored by both
teams, thus affecting "
over-under" bets
on the games whilst also ensuring that Donaghy at least did not
look to be outright
biased. Also, bets are
increasingly being taken on individual performances in team
sporting events, although it is currently unlikely that enough is
bet on an average player to allow someone to place a substantial
wager on them without being noticed.
One such attempt was described by retired footballer
Matthew Le Tissier, who in
2009 admitted that while he was playing with
Southampton FC back in
1995 he tried (and failed) to kick the ball out of play
right after the kick-off of a
English Premier League match against
Wimbledon FC so that a group of
associates would collect on a wager made on an early
throw-in.
Effect of non-gambling-motivated fixing on wagering
Whenever any serious motivation for teams to manipulate results
becomes apparent to the general public, there can be a
corresponding effect on betting markets as honest gamblers
speculate in
good faith as to the chance
such a fix might be attempted. Some bettors might choose to avoid
wagering on such a fixture while others will be motivated to wager
on it, or alter the bet they would otherwise place. Such actions
will invariably affect
odds and
point spreads even if there is no contact
whatsoever between teams and the relevant gambling interests. The
rise of
betting exchanges has
allowed such speculation to play out in real time. For example, the
average payout on bets backing the 2004 2-2 result between Sweden
and Denmark were much lower than would normally be expected, as
heavy betting on that result depressed the odds despite the fact
that both teams vehemently denied they would intentionally attempt
to manipulate the result. There has never been any evidence
produced to suggest that the betting patterns witnessed before that
match was anything more than honest speculation from honest
bettors.
History
Since gambling pre-dates recorded history it comes as little
surprise that evidence of match fixing is found throughout recorded
history. The
Ancient Olympics were
almost constantly dealing with allegations of
athlete accepting
bribes
to lose a competition and
city-states
which often tried to manipulate the outcome with large amounts of
money. These activities went on despite the
oath each athlete took to protect the integrity of the
events and the severe punishment sometimes inflicted on those who
were caught.
Chariot racing was also
dogged by race fixing throughout its history.
By the end of the 19th century gambling was illegal in most
jurisdictions, but that did not stop its widespread practice.
Boxing soon became rife with fighters "taking
a dive" - probably because boxing is an individual sport which
makes its matches much easier to fix without getting caught.
Baseball also became plagued by match
fixing despite efforts by the
National
League to stop gambling at its games. Matters finally came to a
head in 1919 when eight members of the
Chicago White Sox threw the
World Series (see
Black Sox Scandal). In an effort to
restore confidence,
Major League
Baseball established the office of the
Baseball Commissioner, and one of
Kenesaw Mountain Landis's
first acts was to ban all involved players for life. Strict rules
prohibiting gambling persist to this day (See
Pete Rose).
Japan
is a Japanese word meaning a cheating activity which is committed at places where a match, fight, game, competition, or other contest, is held, where the winner and loser are decided in advance by agreement of the competitors or related people. It is believed that the word "Yaocho" came from the name ("Chobei") of the owner of a vegetable stand (yaoya) during the Meiji period. Created from the first syllable of "Yaoya" and "chobei", the word "yaocho" was created for a nickname of Chobei. Chobei had a friend called "Isenoumi Godayu" (7th Isenoumi stablemaster) with whom he played the game Igo, who had once been a Sumo wrestler "Kashiwado Sogoro" (former shikona was "Kyonosato") and now was a "Toshiyori" (a stablemaster of Sumo). Although Chobei was a better Igo player than Isenoumi, he sometimes lost games on purpose to please Isenoumi, so that Isenoumi would continue to buy merchandise from his shop. Afterward, once people knew of his cheating, they started to use "Yaocho" as a word meaning any decision to win/lose a match in advance by negotiation etc. with the expectation of secondary profit, even though the match seems to be held seriously and fairly.
Economists, using statistical analysis, have shown very strong
evidence of match fixing in
Sumo
wrestling.
Match fixing and gambling today
Influenced by baseball's experiences, the
NFL
and
NBA have followed MLB's lead and adopted a
hard line against gambling on its games, especially by those
directly involved in the league. The
NCAA goes as far as
to prohibit its athletes and coaches from gambling on
any
sport in which the NCAA holds a championship, and prohibits venues
in championship play to carry advertising for any form of gambling,
including state lotteries. Each of these organizations was, and may
still be influenced by fears that their games could come under the
influence of gamblers in the absence of these tough measures.
Critics of such hard line measures note that in spite of such
policies, such influence nonetheless does occur.
In
Britain
the
authorities in both government and sport
have taken a softer line on gambling. Following decades of
relatively lax, intermittent and ineffective enforcement of laws
prohibiting gambling, sports betting was finally legalized and
regulated in the 1960s.
Organizations such as The Football Association seem to
have taken the stance that gambling on their events is inevitable —
unlike the American
leagues, The
FA only prohibits betting on a match by those directly involved in
the game in question. In 1964, the great
British football betting
scandal of the 1960s was uncovered. A betting ring organized by
Jimmy Gauld and involving several
Football League players had been fixing matches. The most famous
incident involved three
Sheffield Wednesday players,
including two England international players, that were subsequently
banned from football for life and imprisoned after it was
discovered they had bet against their team winning in a match
against
Ipswich Town. A
similar scandal had
occurred in 1915.
The integrity of horse racing remains an ongoing concern since
gambling is an integral part of this sport. Recent allegations of
race fixing have centered around the recently-formed
betting exchanges which unlike traditional
bookmakers allow punters to
lay
an outcome (that is, to bet against a particular runner). Leading
exchange
Betfair has responded to the
allegations by signing Memorandums of Understanding with the
Jockey Club, The FA, the
International Cricket Council,
the
Association of
Tennis Professionals and other sporting authorities. These
memoranda of understanding are evidence of the vast difference
between British and American attitudes — as of 2008 it would be
almost unthinkable for an American sports league to sign such an
agreement with a bookmaker or betting exchange.
It should be noted that while British
football has never been rocked by match
fixing allegations on the scale of the
Black Sox scandal (the aforementioned
incidents involved league matches, not major championships),
football match-fixing has become a serious problem in parts of
Continental Europe.
Cricket has been scandalized by several
gambling and match fixing allegations in recent years, culminating
in the
World Cup
investigations of 2007. These highly publicised enquiries were
prompted by the surprise defeat of
Pakistan in the Cup by
Ireland and the subsequent
murder investigation into the sudden death, straight after the
match, of Pakistan's head coach
Bob
Woolmer. Cricket match-fixing and the fallout of the Woolmer
case have since become the subject of crime/thriller literature in
the novel 'Raffles and the Match-Fixing Syndicate' (2008) by Adam
Corres.
The high salaries of some of today's
professional athletes likely serves to
insulate their leagues from player-instigated match fixing. In the
NCAA and in
leagues where the salaries are comparatively less (or, in the case
of the amateur NCAA, zero), match fixing by players remains a
serious concern.
Match fixing incidents
- In 1919, gamblers bribed several members of the Chicago White Sox to throw the World Series. This became known as the Black Sox Scandal and was recounted in
book and movie form as Eight Men
Out.
- In
1951, District Attorney Frank Hogan
indicted college basketball players for point shaving from four New
York schools, including CCNY
, Manhattan
College
, New York University
and Long Island University
.
- In
1978, mobsters connected with the New York Lucchese crime family, among them
Henry Hill and Jimmy Burke, organized a point shaving scheme with key
members of the Boston
College
basketball
team.
- On August 24, 1989, former baseball player Pete
Rose voluntarily accepted a permanent ban from Major League Baseball for allegedly
betting on Cincinnati Reds games
while managing the team. Rose would later confirm the truth of the
allegations in his 2004 autobiography, My Prison Without Bars.
- Andrés
Escobar, a Colombian
defender, was
murdered shortly after his return from the 1994 FIFA 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
Medellín drug cartel bet large
sums of money that Colombia would advance, and blamed the Medellín
-born Escobar for the loss.
- In
1994, a comprehensive point shaving
scheme organized by campus bookmaker Benny
Silman and involving players from the Arizona State
University
men's basketball team was uncovered with the
assistance of Las
Vegas
bookmakers, who grew suspicious over repeated large
wagers being made against Arizona State.
- In
February 1999 a Malaysian
-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, then the result
and bets would have stood. Subsequent investigations showed that the
gang had been responsible for previously unsuspected "floodlight
failures" 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 groundsharing
tenant Wimbledon.
- In
2000 the Delhi
police
intercepted a conversation between a blacklisted bookie and the
South Africa cricket captain Hansie
Cronje in which they learnt that Cronje accepted money to throw
matches. The South African government refused to allow any
of its players to face the Indian investigation unit, which opened
up a can of worms. A court of inquiry was set up and Cronje
admitted to throwing matches. He was immediately banned from all
cricket. He also named Salim Malik
(Pakistan), Mohammed Azharuddin and Ajay Jadeja (India). Jadeja was banned for 4 years.
They too were banned from all cricket. As a kingpin, Cronje exposed
the dark side of betting, however with his untimely death in 2002
most of his sources also have escaped law enforcement agencies. Two
South African cricketers, Herschelle
Gibbs and Nicky Boje, are also wanted
by the Delhi police for their role in the match fixing saga. A few
years before in 1998, Australia players Mark Waugh and Shane
Warne were fined for revealing information about the 'weather'
to a bookmaker.
- 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,
Cristiano Doni and Sebastiano Siviglia (all Atalanta) and
Alfredo Aglietti, Massimiliano Allegri, Daniele Amerini, Gianluca Lillo and Girolamo Bizzarri (all Pistoiese).
The
charges related to an Italian Cup first round tie between the two
sides in Bergamo
on August 20, 2000 which ended 1-1. Atalanta
scored at the end of the first half and Pistoiese equalised three
minutes from full time. Atalanta qualified for the second round.
Snai, which organises betting on Italian
football, said later it had registered suspiciously heavy betting
on the result and many of the bets were for a 1-0 halftime score
and a fulltime score of 1-1.
- 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.
- In the summer of 2004, Betfair provided
evidence of race fixing to City of
London Police that led to the arrest of jockey Kieren Fallon and
fifteen others on race fixing charges. On 7
December 2007 the judge in the case ordered
the jury to find Fallon not guilty on all charges.
- In late 2004, the game between Panionios and Dinamo Tbilisi in the 2004-05 UEFA Cup was suspected of being fixed after British
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 result ended up being 5-2,
suspicions of fixing quickly emerged, but were quickly denied by
both clubs, although UEFA started an
investigation.
- 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 a 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 28 in 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 Champions League and UEFA Cup fixtures several days before UEFA publicly
announced them. Ultimately, Hoyzer was sentenced to serve 2 years
and 5 months in prison.
- In
July 2005, Italian
Serie B champions Genoa was arbitrarily placed last in the
division, and therefore condemned to relegation in 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 the match 3-2 and had apparently secured promotion to
Serie A.
- Brazilian football
match-fixing scandal: In September 2005, a Brazilian
magazine revealed that two football referees,
Edílson Pereira de
Carvalho (a member of FIFA
's referee
staff) and Paulo José Danelon, had accepted bribes 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 Edílson. Both referees have
been banned for life from football and face possible criminal
charges. Brazilian supporters have taken to shout "Edílson" at a
referee who they consider to have made a bad call against their
team, in a reference to the scandal.
- 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 rigging games by
selecting favorable referees, and even superstar Italian World Cup
team goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon
was charged with betting on football games. [69563] 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 all
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' titles stood.`
- 2007 NBA Referee Scandal: In July 2007 it
was revealed that National Basketball
Association referee Tim Donaghy had
gambled on 10 to 15 games, including games which he refereed.
The
matter is currently being investigated by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation
as well as the NBA.
- 2008 The Fix: Book by Declan Hill
alleges that in the 2006 World
Cup, the group game between Ghana and Italy, the round-of-16
game between Ghana and Brazil, and the Italy-Ukraine quarter-final
were all fixed by Asian gambling syndicates to whom the final
scores were known in advance. The German Football Federation (DFB)
and German Football League (DFL) looked into claims made in a
Der Spiegel interview with Hill that two
Bundesliga matches were fixed by William Bee Wah Lim a fugitive with a
2004 conviction for match-fixing.
- 2008:
On October 1, it was reported that a
Spanish
judge who headed an investigation against Russian Mafia figures uncovered information
alleging that the mobsters may have attempted to fix the 2007–08 UEFA Cup semi-final
between eventual champion
Zenit St. Petersburg and
Bayern Munich. Both clubs
denied any knowledge of the alleged scheme. Prosecutors in the
German state of Bavaria
, home to Bayern, later announced that they did not
have enough evidence to justify a full investigation.
- 2008: On October 4, suspicious online betting on the game
between Norwich City and Derby County led some to question the
validity of the Football League
match. Gamblers in Asia were said to have placed a large amount of
money down during halftime, which raised concerns over the outcome.
The inquiry by The Football
Association found no evidence that would suggest the match was
fixed. Derby County ended up winning the match 2-1.
- 2009:
On May 6, a federal grand jury in Detroit
indicted six former University of Toledo
athletes—three each from the school's football and
basketball programs—on charges of conspiracy to commit sports
bribery in relation to their alleged involvement in a point shaving
scheme that ran from 2003 through 2006. It is believed to be
the first major U.S. gambling case involving two sports at the same
college.
- 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 leagues of Belgium, Germany, and Switzerland. Three
contests from the Champions League were under investigation, and 12
from the Europa League.
Outside of sports
- The 1980s TV game show Starcade had a policy of matching contestants
up based on their gaming abilities, which means that after
potential contestants had played a number of video games for a
certain amount of time, they would be paired up by their total
scores. Although it was written in the rules that intentionally
doing badly in order to be paired up to someone who really wasn't
that good was grounds for disqualification, many contestants did it
anyway, and were stripped of any awarded prizes and
disqualified.
See also
References
-
http://www.sportsnet.ca/basketball/article.jsp?content=20060802_150747_2508
- [1]
- Sports Illustrated: Andres Escobar
- Sports Illustrated: Silman gets 46 months for his
part in ASU point-shaving scandal
- BBC News | UK | Football guard 'bribed for
sabotage'
- BBC News | UK | Bad bets and blown lights
-
http://www.theage.com.au/news/sport/world-cup-matches-fixed-says-author/2008/08/31/1220121049179.html
-
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,575586,00.html
- FA launches match-fixing investigation into Norwich
v Derby match,16 October 2008, accessed 14 Match 2009
- Match-fixing inquiry closed by FA, 5 December
2008, accessed 14 March 2009.