Posts Tagged ‘germany’

The List

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

Dear Readers,

Here is the latest list of matches that Croatian fixers have confessed to fixing at the trial in Bochum, Germany. It starts with a World Cup Match, and an under-21 national team, Champions League, Europa League and matches in 9 different countries.

Remember this list, sadly, is an underestimation of the number.

World Cup Qualifying Match

09.09.2009: Liechtenstein – Finland

Under-21 National Teams

18.11.2009: Switzerland – Georgia

Champions League

20.10.2009: VSC Debrecen – AC Florenz

Europa League

05.11.2009: FC Basel 1893 – ZSKA Sofia

28.08.2008: VSC Debrecen – Young Boys Bern

09.07.2009: NK Siroki Brijeg – Banant Erewan

16.07.2009: Aalborg Boldsspilklub – FK Slavija Sarajewo

Germany

13.05.2009: FC Nürnberg – VfL Osnabrück

06.06.2009: SC Verl – 1. FC Köln II

13.05.2009: KSV Hessen Kassel – SSV Ulm 1846

17.05.2009: SG Neustrelitz – BFC Dynamo Berlin

02.08.2009: VfB Speldorf – RW Oberhausen

19.09.2009: FC Oberneuland – FC St. Pauli II

07.11.2009: Borussia Dortmund II – RW Erfurt

Switzerland

26.04.2009: Yverdon Sport – FC Thun

30.05.2009: Servette Genf – FC Gossau

26.06.2009: FC Sion – NK Travnik

01.07.2009: Neuchatel Xamax – NK Travnik

17.04.2009: FC Gossau – FC Thun

16.05.2009: FC Will 1900 – FC Thun

27.06.2009: FC Winterthur – NK Travnik

01.11.2009: FC Gossau – FC Vaduz

30.05.2009: FC La Chaux-de-Fonds – FC Thun

24.05.2009: FC Gossau – FC Locarno

26.09.2009: FC Lugano – FC Gossau

01.11.2009: FC Gossau – FC Vaduz

14.08.2009: FC Locarno – FC Gossau

Austria

22.09.2009: Red Bull Juniors Salzburg – TSV Hartberg

28.10.2009: SV Kapfenberg – Austria Wien

29.08.2009: Red Bull Salzburg – SV Kapfenberg

14.08.2009: SC Sparkasse Zwettl – TSV Hartberg

23.09.2009: SV Kapfenberg – SK Rapid Wien

Belgium

12.04.2009: UR Namur, Antwerpen

02.11.2008: Oud-Heverlee Leuven – UR Namur

17.01.2009: AS Eupen – UR Namur

14.03.2009: Olympic Charleroi – UR Namur

21.03.2009: UR Namur – Oud-Heverlee Leuven

Turkey

16.04.2009: Bafra Beleydiyespor Samsun – Kahramanmarasspor

03.05.2009: Istanbul Büyüksehir Beleidiyespor – Genclerbirligi Ankara

16.04.2009: Izmirspor – Ankara Demirspor

12.01.2009: Trabszonspor – Antalyaspator

04.04.2009: Spur Ankaraspor – Bursaspor

Hungary

19.04.2009: Vasas Budapest – VSC Debrecen

24.04.2009: Uijpest FC – Honved Budapest

Slovenia

11.04.2009: Labod Drava Ptuj – NK Nafta Lendava

Croatia

26.04.2009: NK Zadar – Hajduk Split

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The Redemption of Robert Hoyzer

Friday, October 8th, 2010

It has been one of those weeks. Seven days where match-fixing has, yet again, dominated the headlines. From China, to International Volleyball, to a suicide in London, to a Berlin court room – stories of corruption are bubbling up, yet again, to show the problems that the sports world is facing.

I will be posting a couple of blogs today on the common linkages between these events but first to Germany where the trial of a group of match-fixers has just begun. They allegedly fixed over two-hundred-and-fifty matches in a number of different European countries. When ‘The Fix’ (Sichere Siege) first came out in Germany in September 2008, I had to face a lot of criticism from lazy and complicit journalists. They said that what I wrote could not be true. German football was so clean, how dare a Canadian journalist imply that it was not? I am still waiting for an apology – heck even an acknowledgment from one of these people that they were wrong would be fine. If not, for me then how about for Robert Hoyzer? Hoyzer was the German referee that I wrote about in the book. He fixed a number of German football games. He eventually confessed to the authorities. Then he went from being chief prosecution witness to serving time in jail, because he had the courage to say that the problem of corruption in European football went beyond just the games he fixed. I am still waiting for German journalists to apologize to Hoyzer. Yes, yes, they will dredge up some nonsense that his stories were not consistent or his ex-girlfriend was too beautiful or that he was too good-looking, but the essential story that Hoyzer told back in 2005 has been amply substantiated and few people in the German press have had the courage to say it.

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I told you so

Friday, November 20th, 2009

This is superb news. Finally, a proper, well-resourced investigation into corruption in match-fixing in European football. The UEFA investigation unit was started, partly, because of the book. Certainly, I was flown to Geneva to speak to officials about the structure of the organization. Now, I am very pleased to see that it has produced such strong results. Great, great news.

I have two hopes for the outcome of the investigation:

  1. There have been a number of other investigations into match-fixing that have started with lots of publicity, strong calls of a major clean-up and multiple arrests: Portugal – the Pinto da Costa case, Germany – the Hoyzer case, France – the Tapie case. Then the authorities find one person, dump all the cases onto them and construct ‘conspiracies of one’ rather than uprooting the essential corrupt structure within the game. Journalists and fans should stay on top of this case, to ensure that this does not happen again.

  1. When the convictions happen, the authorities should make sure that the penalties are the harshest possible. There should be a clear signal sent out to the players, referees and officials that this will not be tolerated in the sport that we love.

FRANKFURT (AP) — German police have arrested an undisclosed number of people suspected of fixing matches in major European soccer leagues.
The arrests, in Germany and abroad, came as part of an investigation into match-fixing supported by UEFA, according to a statement by the prosecutor’s office in Bochum.
A Berlin newspaper reported that a Croatian man convicted as the mastermind of a German match-fixing scandal in 2005 was among those arrested Thursday. The Berliner Morgenpost’s online edition said Ante Sapina and his brother were among five people arrested in Berlin and that 15 arrest warrants in 10 countrties had been issued.
The investigation has been under way since the beginning of the year and targeted an international gang suspected of wide-ranging match-fixing.
The gang is suspected of bribing players, coaches, referees and officials in “high-ranking European leagues” to manipulate games in order to make money on betting, the statement said Thursday.
It said raids were conducted in Germany and Europe on Thursday and a large number of arrests were made. A news conference is scheduled for Friday in Bochum.
UEFA said it was aware of Thursday’s arrests, adding that it had been “working closely with German authorities through its betting fraud detection system for monitoring irregular betting patterns.”
The Morgenpost reported that games in the Turkish top division were suspected of being manipulated and that the probe by Bochum investigators targeted 200 people. Top players in Turkey are among the suspects, the newspaper said.
Quoting Berlin security sources, the newspaper said the gang apparently operated from Germany and its boss apparently lived in Berlin.
Ante Sapina was convicted of fraud in 2005 and sentenced to 35 months in prison for fixing or attempting to fix 23 games by paying German referee Robert Hoyzer to rig matches Sapina and his brothers bet on. Ante Sapina’s brothers Milan and Filip were given suspended sentences.
Hoyzer was convicted of fraud and sentenced to 29 months in prison after admitting he had manipulated games mostly in German lower divisions on behalf of the three brothers, who made millions by betting on the games.
UEFA said two months ago it was investigating 40 cases of suspected match-fixing in the Champions League and UEFA Cup, mostly involving eastern European clubs. The matches under investigation were early qualifying games that took place over the last four seasons.
UEFA has beefed up its efforts to protect against illegal betting and match-fixing. President Michel Platini has described those issues as the greatest problem facing European soccer.
The detection system monitors all top two divisions across Europe and domestic cup games.

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