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Integrity in sports update: FIFpro hold first "Train The Trainer" match-fixing initiative

Football Taking a Kick

This week in the media, the ongoing Dutch investigation highlights how the manipulation of football match goal difference can assure large profits, whilst the methods and costs of organising match-fixing are emerging in the Italian investigation.

Also study carried out in Poland produced interesting findings suggesting that Tennis is one of the most targeted sports by match-fixers.

 

CURRENT INVESTIGATION

Greece

Olympiakos Piraeus are keeping their spot in the Champions League for the time being despite investigations in Greece into the club's owner Vangelis Marinakis, UEFA said on Tuesday.

Marinakis was banned from soccer earlier this month and has also been ordered to report to police every 15 days on strict bail terms. He is accused of being involved in and directing a criminal organization, aiding and abetting blackmailing, aiding and abetting extortion, and aiding and abetting bribery and fraud. Olympiakos have qualified directly for the Champions League group stage after winning the Greek Super League last season.

"The UEFA disciplinary bodies have provisionally admitted Olympiakos," UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino told reporters. "There are investigations in Greece (and) the situation could change....as we all know, this kind of investigation can take some time, we need to have some clear evidence." "I think our bodies have shown they are very firm when it comes to match-fixing; if there is any evidence, they will take this into account." "There is a clear rule as well which automatically excludes a club involved in match-fixing." Marinakis has already said that he is still the "major shareholder and guarantor of the future of our Olympiakos." The latest Greek football scandal, following the 'Koriopolis' match-fixing probe of 2011, emerged in April when a 173-page document was revealed by prosecutor Aristidis Korreas and prompted a nationwide investigation. Korreas's document contained transcriptions of telephone tapping operated by the National Intelligence Service. It is alleged that Marinakis and Hellenic Soccer Federation EPO officials Giorgos Sarris and Theodoros Kouridis were responsible for directing a criminal organization from 2011 with the aim of "absolute control of Greek football's fate by the methods of blackmailing and fraud". Sarris, president of the EPO from October 2012 to December 2014, has been banned from soccer and ordered to remain in Greece as part of his bail terms. He denies all accusations.

Source: AP, "Olympiakos Champions League spot safe for now ", 30 June 2015, Ekathimerini, https://www.ekathimerini.com/198741/article/ekathimerini/sports/olympiakos-champions-league-spot-safe-for-now

Italy

Antonino Pulvirenti, president of Italian football club Catania, has been accused of paying £71,000 (€99,700/$111,600) to fix five matches in order to keep his team in the country’s Serie B second-tier.

As reported by iGaming Business, Pulvirenti was this month confirmed as one of seven people to have been arrested over alleged match-fixing activities in Italy.

Prosecutors have now alleged that, during interrogation, the Catania president admitted he paid for five matches to be fixed during the 2014-15 season.