Posts Tagged ‘match fixing’

It is the time for the fixes

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

It is the time for the fixes.

Here is what I know.

The fixers are in South Africa. They have been desperately trying to contact various teams. They have various runners and old contacts coming in and out of the hotels and training camps. They are trying ‘to do the business’ with various players and administrators.

Here too is what I know.

FIFA has put out lots of press statements and solemn talk about seriously vetting up-coming games. This is almost utter tosh. FIFA’s system of checking for fixed matches is practically useless. They repeatedly talk about their network of 400 bookmakers passing them information. Many of these bookmakers are not effective sources of information. They either do not know anything or will not say anything or will try to downplay any suspicious activity at the best of times. This is not the best of times. The gambling market on the World Cup is huge. FIFA and the bookmakers cannot monitor any suspicious activity as there is not suspicious activity to monitor. You cannot detect any patterns if the amount of money is too large.

FIFA also speaks of a liaison with Interpol. Interpol is pretty useless. Good for collecting official information and putting it in nicely-bound reports. Good for staging press conferences and saying polite pleasantries about the need to win the war on drugs, crack down on corruption, fight match-fixing etc, etc. But Interpol is almost useless for mounting a successful criminal investigation or preventing criminals from working on the ground. Their very mandate prevents them from doing anything effective.

Given these circumstances which matches should we red-flag for possible corruption?

1)Games where one team has nothing to play for. Even if they win the teams will not progress to the next stage of the competition.

2)Teams which have a history of not paying their players properly. It is the phenomenon of relative exploitation which drives fixing. The officials receive lots of money, the players comparatively little.

The games I will be watching closely are Cameroon vs. the Netherlands and Honduras vs. Switzerland. In no way do I want to suggest that I have heard anything about players on these teams being open to fixing matches. In no way do I want to suggest that even if they had been approached the players would have taken money. But I do want to say that if either of these teams loses by more than the Asian ‘spread’ of goals (2 goals and above) then FIFA should bring in their toothless tigers of investigators and begin to ask questions.

The Battle for the Soul of Sport

Friday, June 11th, 2010

On the first day of the World Cup, here is the transcript of my presentation before the Council of Europe. It is not about the World Cup, rather it is about something more important – the future of sport as we know it.

**

Testimony of Declan Hill, May 3, 2010
EPAS, The Council of Europe, Strasbourg

Mesdames et monsieurs, je vous remercie de l’invitation. C’est véritablement un honneur de faire une présentation pour vous aujourd’hui. En fait, c’est beaucoup plus important que simplement un honneur personnel. C’est très, très important. Parce que nous sommes engagé dans une guerre pour l’âme du sport. Pour dire vrai, nous ne sommes pas engagés dans une guerre. Mais l’ennemi est déjà ici. Et comme un cancer, il risque de détruire le sport Européen.

Ladies and Gentlemen, there has always been fixing and corruption in sport. Our friends from the Greek delegation can take us to the site of the ancient Olympics, built in 776 B.C. Outside that stadium were a whole collection of statues and shrines to the Gods. They were built with the fines levied on athletes and coaches who were caught cheating or fixing at the games. So corruption has had a long history in sport, back at least two-thousand eight-hundred years and that type of corruption will be with us for as long we continue to hold competitive sports. It is simply a part of human nature.

However, we of this generation – are facing something almost entirely new. It is a new form of match-fixing as if someone has taken fixing and injected it with steroids. It is an utterly modern phenomenon and it will destroy sport as we know it. We have spoken already this morning about governance in sport and youth in sport, but this new form of corruption will, like a Tsunami, sweep aside all these other issues and leave our sport dead and destroyed.

Those are big words and even bigger claims, and many of you may be sitting there thinking, ‘Who is this man and how can he make such wild allegations?’ It all sounds so extraordinary to a European, so I am going to spend the rest of my time here this morning going through the facts which lead me to make those claims. Many of these facts may be unknown to you, they will seem absolutely unbelievable to European ears, but I want to assure you that they are all absolutely true and that we are facing a very, very serious threat to all forms of European sports today.

I am, as our friend Sebastian was kind enough to say, an investigative journalist and have had the good fortune to win a number of national and international awards for my work. The research for the book was done over five years and featured interviews with over two-hundred and twenty people inside the sports world – players, referees, coaches, sports officials, policemen, prosecutors, bookmakers, professional gamblers and, most importantly, the fixers themselves. I spoke with match-fixers around the world about their means and methods. A group of Asian fixers brought me into meetings between them and coaches and players when they helped fix matches at the last World Cup. During these meetings I wore secret recording devices. However, it was not only this type of research that is the basis for my findings. It is also based on my doctoral thesis at the University of Oxford. To gain my degree I compiled and then analysed a whole range of statistical databases on fixed matches vs. non-fixed matches and players who were approached to fix games who either accepted or did not accept. So I speak this morning, partly as an investigator, partly as an academic.

If we take the entire sports gambling world at 100%, most of the forms that we are familiar with are relatively small. Las Vegas, for example, only has a small share of the total market, so let us add in the illegal sports gambling market of North America. This market is run by the LCN, or La Cosa Nostra, American organized crime. Let us add in the offshore gambling sites in Costa Rica and the Caribbean. Actually, let us also add in the big British gambling companies like Ladbrokes, William Hill and Betfair. We will even throw in the European sports national lotteries, run mostly by governments, that are comparative midgets in terms of sports gambling, but the only way of legally gambling on sports in many European countries. Combine all of those vastly different organizations and all their billions of Euro that they make in gross turn-over. Combine all of them into large pot and you only have 30-40% of the total world sports gambling market.

The rest is the Asian market. It is huge. It dwarfs the European and North American markets. And most of it is illegal, run by the equivalent of Al Capone. This is a vast, powerful market. Because much of it is illegal it is difficult to give an accurate estimate of its total size, but the American journal Foreign Policy tried to do that in 2006 when it estimated the total size of the Asian gambling market at $450 billion, for comparison, the size of the entire Asian pharmaceutical industry is roughly $100 billion.

What has happened is that this vast, illegal gambling market has corrupted sport across the continent of Asia. I do not want to exaggerate. There are a few Asian sports leagues that are corruption-free. The fixing in Japanese Sumo wrestling is so bad and so ritualized that it has even been featured in an academic article by the American economists Levitt and Duggan. The Taiwanese baseball league has had so many scandals linked to gambling match-fixing it has now been reduced to only four teams. Much of Asian sport is drenched in corruption. There is so much corruption in sport there, that to an outsider the stories just seem extraordinary, but here are a few examples:

The Chinese soccer league is a national disgrace. Those are the words of Chinese President Hu Jintao, who declared in the fall of 2009, that there was so much match-fixing and corruption in their soccer league that it embarrassed China. We see the same circumstances in the soccer leagues across the region: Vietnam, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore have all faced similar scandals in their own leagues. In Malaysia, the corruption was so bad that a cabinet minister there estimated that seventy percent of the matches in their leagues were corrupted. Seventy percent! That means it was more common for spectators to watch a corrupted match than a regularly played game. When there was an attempt to clean-up their extremely corrupt, joint Singaporean-Malaysian soccer league, the two countries came close to a diplomatic rift. The Malaysians claimed that the league was so corrupt because of the gamblers in Singapore were fixing a lot of the games; the Singaporeans said that the league was so corrupt because the criminals in Malaysia were fixing a lot of the games. Neither could agree so the league was disbanded because of the corruption.

The list of corruption stories in Asian sports goes on and on. The President of the Indonesian Football Association, the same people who recently tried an unsuccessful bid for the 2022 World Cup, was not just accused of corruption, he was not just charged with corruption, he was not just tried for corruption, but he was convicted and sentenced to 30-months in jail for corruption. However, at no point in that entire process did he ever resign or suspend himself from his post. In fact, he even continued to serve as President of the Indonesian FA and carried out its work from his prison cell. When he got out of prison he went on as the head of the Indonesian FA.

Possibly the best case that indicates the depth of corruption in Asian sport is the story of the South-East Asia Games of 2005. The South-East Asian Games are a kind of mini-Olympics of the region, with competitions in a range of athletics, team sports, etc. In November 2005, a few days before the tournament began the Vietnamese sports executive in charge of the team held a press conference. At the conference, the Vietnamese journalists expressed concern that their team was not particularly strong and would not win a lot of medals. “Don’t worry,” said the sports executive, “It is all fixed.” He then explained how many medals each national team would get and for which sports. Most of the Vietnamese press corps showed that independence of spirit that makes Communist regimes bastions of freethinking and democracy and did not report the story. However, one lonely AFP reporter at the press conference did write an article. It went out over the international wires where the Filipino journalists, who as a whole suffer from many problems but timidity is not one of them, splashed it all over their front pages. The Thai Prime Minister of the time Thaksin Shinawatra wearily responded when asked about these events at a press conference, that everyone knew that the SEA games were corrupt and they should think about abolishing the games. The Vietnamese government faced with a barrage of public embarrassment carefully reviewed the situation and realized what the problem was – the AFP reporter. So they pressured her to rescind her article. She apologized for ‘causing national embarrassment’ but did not withdraw the substance of her story.

At the end of the SEA Games in December 2005, two things happened. One, many Filipino journalists took great delight in pointing out that the medal tally of the games correlated exactly with the predictions of the Vietnamese sports executive. And two, eight Vietnamese soccer players were arrested for fixing matches with an international gambling ring.

Asian sports fans are not stupid. They know what is going on. They are not happy about all the corruption in their sports, in fact they are very angry. So what are they doing? They are turning their allegiances to teams in other leagues where they think the contests are not corrupt. This is part of the reason why you cannot walk down a street in China and not see three people wearing Manchester United shirts. However, far more importantly the punters in that vast illegal Asian gambling market are switching their bets from the local soccer leagues, with all the corruption in them, to European leagues. They are betting on all measures of matches from the big, prestigious Champions League all the way down to tiny games in second division Women’s Soccer in the Netherlands.

There are a number of companies organizing monitors who go to matches across Europe. They send people to the sidelines of these games where they stand with their mobile phones or laptops reporting back to the illegal gambling market in Shanghai or Johor Bahru or Manila. Again, they are not just reporting on the big English Premier League, or La Liga or Serie A games. In July 2008, in Copenhagen, Denmark there was the annual Tivoli Cup. The Tivoli Cup is a youth tournament for teams across Denmark aged 11 to 19. It is a big tournament, but most matches are played in parks and watched by a couple of dozen people, mostly parents and that year some of the coaches for the teams found four Chinese gambling monitors reporting on the games back to the Asian bookmakers. To repeat, the illegal gambling market in Asia is so powerful that it is worthwhile to monitor games of Danish teenagers playing matches in a park.

This is why I get phone calls every few weeks from journalists in a whole range of different countries – Belgium, Finland, Germany, Switzerland, South Korea, – all asking, essentially the same question, “These are such small games in our smallest leagues, we don’t care about these games, why should someone come thousands of miles around the world to fix them?”

What are the Asian fixers doing? They too are not stupid and they are trying to do to European leagues what they so successfully did in their own leagues – corrupt them. Now the fixers are coming to Europe and forming alliances with local criminals. It is an ideal marriage. The Asian criminals get access to the teams and players; the European criminals get access to the lucrative Asian gambling market.

We know that they have been fixing games in a range of different countries – across the continent. Recently, the German organized crime squad in Bochum, announced that they suspected over two-hundred matches, ranging from Champions League matches to youth games across Europe may have been fixed.

The range of European countries that have had fixing scandals in football in recent years is a long one. Here is an incomplete list: Turkey, Greece, Belgium, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Croatia, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Poland (where one cabinet minister, like his Malaysian counterpart, estimated that over 70% of the games had been fixed), Russia, Romania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Cyprus, Malta, Italy, Bosnia, Finland, Portugal. I could go on, but I won’t. I am not here to make people uncomfortable. I am not here to embarrass any one nation. I am not here to single out one group or country and say they are worse than others. However, I do stand before you as a man who has risked his life to protect a sport that he loves. Five years ago when I spoke about these dangers many people did not believe me, “It is not possible,” they said, “that so much corruption could come into our sports.” Now many of those same people have passed from disbelief to resignation without going through combat. They say things like, “It is not possible to do anything about all this corruption, and besides it is not the big teams or the big players.” This is the attitude of the deliberately blind. It also avoids the question – What happens in five years? Star players do not emerge fully-grown from the ground. Many players on big teams in the big leagues come from the very teams and leagues that have now been shown to be corrupt. So they are wrong. They were wrong to deny the problem five years ago. They are wrong to refuse to fight now to protect their sport and they are wrong to say, ‘there is nothing we can do’.

There is much that we can do. We can establish integrity units in each national sport association across Europe. We can establish an International Anti-corruption Agency, funded in part by the gambling industry but separate from them, which can collect information and help launch investigations. An Anti-corruption Agency that would have the same purpose and structure as the World Anti-doping Agency. We can establish proper training and teaching of young players – as they come into the game they can learn the sad truth that if they sell games to these fixers, they become in effect their slaves. We can establish proper pensions and educational benefits for the players. We can establish anti-corruption hotlines for players and referees to report corrupt approaches. There are literally dozens of easy, doable and effective ways of stopping the wide-scale corruption

It is, then, possible to protect European sport. It is actually very easy to protect European sport. It has become the vessel for many of our hopes and dreams in our societies, so we should clean up sport. There are many, many things that we can do to protect sport, so we can clean up sport. And for the sake of our young people and all those come after us, we must clean up sport.

Latest on World Cup, twitter

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Dear Friends,

Below is the latest blog posting. With the World Cup now four days away stay tuned for daily blog entries – including my testimony before the European Council in Strasbourg last month.

I have also signed up on Twitter, if you would like or need more immediate comments on possible corruption.

All best wishes,

Declan
———————————————————————————————-
It is not a guarantee that there will be fixed matches at the World Cup in South Africa, but it is guaranteed that there will be match-fixers at the tournament.

There is a gang of Asian match-fixers who have been to all levels of international soccer tournaments for the last twenty years: from the under-17 World Cup, to the Olympic Soccer tournament to the World Cup itself.

This gang has approached many different teams, players and referees. The President of the Ghana Football Association (the equivalent of the NHL for Ghana) Kwesi Nyantakyi is a typical case. “In every competition they are there,” he says. “It is done all the time in major competitions. The gamblers are not Africans, they are Europeans, Asians so they have a lot of money to bet on these things. Even at the [Under-17] World Cup in 1991 when we won, there were gamblers around, offering a lot of money to the team to throw away the match.”

The average soccer fan might be astounded at Mr. Nyantakyi’s words, given that most journalists’ coverage of the World Cup amount to little more that pieces about the ‘colourful fans’ around the stadiums, tear-jerkers about the morale of the various teams, and tons of eye-closing articles about the Napoleon-like coaches and their astute ‘tactical’ choices.

What these journalists will not tell you is that players on some of the teams do not know how much or even if they will get paid for appearing in this year’s World Cup.

It sounds extraordinary, but there are many examples. On May 21st, while the world’s sporting press was focused on the up-coming Champions League final, and writing their usual articles about whether Jose Mourinho, the recently appointed manager of Real Madrid, is arrogant or a genius or simply an arrogant genius, seven men held a press conference in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. Outside of their country, they were almost ignored, which is odd, because four years ago the whole world watched them.

They were members of the Trinidad and Tobago World Cup team in 2006. And four years later, athletes who achieved the extraordinary feat of getting their nation (population less than Toronto) to the World Cup state they have still not been paid their bonuses by the Football Association of Trinidad and Tobago.

If this was the only example of salary problems between a national team and its football association, it could be dismissed as an aberration. But there are many more cases, most of which have gone unreported.

Honduras is a team that also achieved the extraordinary feat of getting their nation, with a population less than Ontario, to the World Cup. Many of their players play in the own domestic league where they will receive a few hundred dollars a week. However, seven months after qualifying and setting their whole country alight with patriotic fervor they had not been paid.

South Africa has spent billions of dollars on stadiums, upgrading their infrastructure and promoting this World Cup. Guess what they have not done: figure out how much to pay their players. South African players have a long history of going on strike because they feel they cannot trust their national federation to pay them. But yet again, the players and their salaries are treated as an after-thought. It was the same thing at the last World Cup with Togo. They staged a strike in the middle of the tournament, refusing to play their last game until they were paid their promised salaries.

In fact, pretty much all of African football is enmeshed in corruption and the exploitation of players. The great goalkeeper Joseph Antoine Bell, whose Cameroon team also went on strike at a World Cup tournament, said, “In French football you can expect 10% of the money to disappear, in African football it is 90%.” He is not alone. There are dozens of formerly great African footballers who are now abandoned and living in difficult circumstances.

It is the exploitation of players that is the key dynamic for match-fixing at the big international soccer tournaments. The players from the good, but not the best teams, know they will not win the tournament. They know that often their football associations will not pay them properly. They know that the average sports journalists will not report these stories. And ironically, they know that the match-fixers are relatively honest. They fixers will come to the players with bags of cash at the beginning of the tournament and say, “Do the business with us. Play your first couple of games honestly, but when you are ready to play out – let us know. Then your biggest problem is how to spend your money.”

A simple solution would be for FIFA to pay the players directly. There should be wages and incentives for every game won, for each stage of the tournament, even for the number of goals that a player scores. The money should be paid directly into the players’ bank accounts by FIFA. The amounts should be publicly announced. This way all players on all World Cup will know they will be paid and how much.

Additionally, FIFA has not established an integrity unit staffed with ex-policemen and gambling experts. This is standard practice in North American sport, and increasingly other international sports like ATP tennis and cricket. Two years ago, the president of UEFA (the European Soccer Association), Michel Platini, established such an integrity unit for European football. It was instrumental in uncovering a wide network of fixers working in 9 different European countries.

Until these very basic steps are implemented, the fixers will continue to work. They will be approaching players and referees and they may, unfortunately, find a few who are willing to listen to them and there may be fixed matches at the World Cup tournament.

[This article also appears in this month's Canadian Business Magazine]

So what are they actually doing?

Friday, November 27th, 2009

This continues to be the best news in football for years. Full congratulations to the German police and UEFA.

However, one question has to be answered: what are the national football associations actually going to do about corruption?

You can see them now, in their press conferences and statements to the press, jostling around trying to escape doing anything about match-corruption. ‘We did not know anything about all this match-fixing going on in our leagues! We are completely surprised! (Really? I did. I even wrote a book about it. Why didn’t you read it?) Nothing we can do,’ they say, ‘We do not want to upset an on-going investigation. This is beyond our expertise. We are football administrators, not policemen.’ Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. It is all crap.

They can do something about match-fixing; they should do something about match-fixing and they must do something about match-fixing.

Here are a few suggestions:

1) More integrity units.

Every Football Association in the world should have an integrity unit staffed with honest ex-policemen, gambling experts and football insiders. It is not possible for the unit in UEFA alone to do all the work. Football Associations run national industries worth, in some cases, billions of dollars. It beggars belief that they do not have their own security units. Can you imagine a similar sized Fortune 500 Company not having an internal security unit? No, of course not.

  1. A proper system of reporting corrupt approaches.

Imagine – you are professional football player in some European league. A criminal approaches you to fix a game. What do you do now? Who do you report it to? Especially, as the corruptors are really, really good at this type of approach. They know what to say. And usually, they will say something that isolates a player from the rest of the team, ‘You do know that your coach is on our payroll.’ Or ‘We control your team owner. He gets his cash from us.’ In the best case, these kind of statements are untrue but they put doubt in a player’s mind. In many cases, they are actually true and remind the player that if tells anyone he may face some very serious consequences.

What to do? Establish an independent security unit with a hotline telephone number that every player and coach knows they must call if approached to fix. This is what the Danish Football Association has done.

  1. Pro-active reporting.

This is the rule in professional tennis. If a player is approached by a corruptor they must report the incident. The fixers have to know that every time they approach players they are at risk of being turned in.

There are dozens more ways of prevent more fixing. Watch in the next few weeks to see if the football associations are actually doing anything concrete. Until you see any reforms take place, you will know that all the words of the national associations are exactly that – words – and once this current scandal is over corruption will creep back into the game.

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.

A Tale of Two Football Associations

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

October 22nd and 23rd ‘Doorgestoken Kaart’, the Dutch/Flemish version of ‘The Fix’ was released. I was in Amsterdam and then Brussels to do media interviews. The interviews were mostly related to new updates. That is the week before I had a long and fascinating interview with a prominent Asian gambling expert in Bangkok. He had told me that there was still fixing going in the Belgian and Dutch leagues. I was surprised. I knew about the Ye Zheyun case, but when I mentioned it to him he looked at me and said, ‘I’m not talking about five years ago, I’m talking about the last couple of weeks.’ He mentioned some clubs in the lower half of the Belgian and Dutch Premier Leagues that he claimed were fixing matches away from home, betting against themselves on the gambling market and then using the money that they won to keep their clubs afloat.

I told this to the Dutch and Belgian journalists who came to interview me. They asked lots of tough, hard questions and then many of them chose to lead their articles with this story and it received a lot of prominence in the media.

However, what happened next is a textbook case of one football association doing everything right and another football association doing everything wrong. The Dutch Football Association was brilliant. They had already expressed a strong interest in ‘Doorgestoken kaart’. The CEO Henk Kesler and other executives had ordered 16 copies of the book for their staff and told them to read it. Essentially, he was saying, ‘Look we don’t know if Hill is right but we should at least know what he is saying.’ Then the Dutch FA heard the latest developments about possible fixing in their league and immediately flew two of their executives over to London to have a meeting with me at a hotel near Heathrow Airport. Nor were the Dutch Football Association the only ones to move quickly, a number of Dutch fans contacted me and then began filming the Chinese gamblers who were monitoring their clubs. In all, a superb response from the Netherlands to difficult news.

The Belgian Football Association’s reaction, however, has been an absolute disaster. Most of their officials have not read the book, which is a mistake because it shows how the industry that is threatening their league is structured. But those officials still choose to criticize it and me in the media for raising the question that there may still be corruption in Belgian football. They have done little except bury their heads further in the sand. If there were an Olympic contest for the laziest sporting executives in the world, surely the Belgian Football Association would be perennial gold medal contenders.

If you were a fixer, which league would you prefer to work in: one that is pro-active and interested in fighting corruption or one that is doing its best to deny that there are any problems? I am not a gambler, but if I were, I would make a strong bet on the Dutch league being in much better shape in five years time and the Belgian game becoming more of a fiasco than it is now.

Comments on the IOC Sports Monitoring Unit

Monday, October 5th, 2009

For all media looking for thoughts on the announcement of the International Olympic Movement setting up a relationship with a commercial company to monitor irregular betting on sports events.

1)    A good start.

2)    Almost useless in protecting sport (See below).

Why?  Because the really bad boy fixers are still betting on the Asian illegal gambling market.  The monitoring unit is still mostly focused on the legal European and North American gambling sites.   This means that although they can monitor the live odds on an event, they cannot know which punters are making the odds change or the amount of money coming on to events with any precision.

Two, okay they discover irregular betting.  Now what?   Does this commercial company have detectives ready to investigate?   Does the IOC have an integrity unit ready to spring into action?   What sanctions are in place for athletes or their coaches, agents or family members if they are caught placing bets?  How can they be traced?

I did a study while at Oxford on ways that fixed football matches were detected, in less than 20% of the cases was the corruption detected by irregular odds changes.  So in all, this is a good start, but it does not go far enough.

Match-Fixing and English Sports Journalists

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

I am on another research trip, so for all the media people who are contacting me for comments about either the alleged fix in the lower Scottish divisions or the announcement that UEFA is investigating a possible 40 fixed matches in the Champions League:

1)I told you so.

2)You haven’t seen anything yet. It is only going to get worse.

Lots of interviews from places like Sweden, South Korea, Belgium.  The journalists invariably have a question like, “But these incidents are happening in such lowly matches, that we don’t even care about them! They are in the semi-regional third division games.”   Listen, the gambling market is so huge that there is a way of profiting on almost any match.  The lower the level of the match the easier it is to fix.  10,000 euros, pounds or dollars can buy a lot of influence very quickly in those leagues.

**

As the UK reels from yet another controversy of odd bet movements, some football fans may stop and wonder why they had not heard of these issues before.  Indeed all football fans should stop and ask the media why they have not heard of the dangers of match-corruption before now.  I have been speaking about the dangers since 2005, the book has been out on the market for over a year.  It is a best-seller in Canada, Germany, France and a number of other countries.  Yet, there is not much publicity in the UK.    The book explains how the illegal gambling market works, it shows how the fixes are performed, it identifies a number of top international matches that I believe were corrupted.  I even outline how the sport that we all love can be protected.

A small indication of why English sports journalism is, generally, so bad was given by a recent article by Patrick Barclay of the Times.  He writes of an interview twelve years ago with the then England and Arsenal striker Ian Wright.  In the interview, Wright basically said that he would fall down for his country or fake a penalty if he were playing for England.  After the interview Barclay writes:

…as part of a group of Sunday-paper journalists who had interviewed him [Wright] after training at Bisham Abbey, I looked forward to publishing his views. That was until my colleagues were approached by the FA press department and agreed, after a near-unanimous vote, to suppress the supposedly explosive material. In such circumstances, you don’t break ranks, but to this day I feel guilty about selling the readers short. Or, as you might say, cheating them.

Ummm… it is called collusion. It is called complicity. It is called cowardly. It is called a lot of other things, but it is not journalism.    And remember Patrick Barclay is one of the best journalists. He, at least, has the decency to feel badly.  He, at least, had the decency to vote against a cover-up.  The rest of these little creeps actually voted for censorship.  These purported professionals working for rival news organizations all got together and agreed not to print news because an official asked them not to.   There was no higher moral purpose, no grieving relative, no hapless kidnap victim to protect, just a whole lot of inappropriate chumminess.

This kind of deliberate inaptitude extends to English sports journalists’ attempts to cover corruption. First, most of them are not competent enough to do the necessary journalism. Second, they have no wish to find out about possible corruption.  And third, if they did stumble upon corruption (Hint: try interviewing a player by yourself. You might be surprised at what they tell you.) they would not know what to do without the rest of the pack telling them.

One more note.  I write of the general incompetence and complicity of UK sports journalism. There are a number of good English sports journalists.  Unfortunately, they truly are the exception in their industry.

FK Pobeda and the future of sport

Friday, April 17th, 2009

The time has been short, the list of cases long.

Bulgaria, China (badminton), Denmark (handball), Denmark (football), England, Germany (football), Germany (handball), Holland, Hong Kong, Malta, Malaysia, Monaco (tennis), Poland, Italy, Romania, Russia, Scotland, South Korea, Spain, Taiwan (baseball), and now, Macedonia.

Seven months, nineteen countries, five sports. This is a list of suspected scandals involving match-fixing in sport since the publication of ‘The Fix’.   To be fair, a number of these cases have not been fully investigated.  There have been some sensational headlines, a brief announcement, then the police or sporting authorities have claimed ‘there is not enough evidence to investigate them.’ Which begs the question, how do you know there is not enough evidence if you don’t investigate?

But today, there is a ray of hope.  UEFA has announced an eight-year ban on the Macedonian football club, FK Pobeda.

It is a good start.

However, there are a couple of things for football fans to watch.

One, the Macedonian club gets to appeal the sentence and if it follows the typical Italian sentencing of corruption in football, we will see these sentences much reduced. They should not be.  There is an old story about the law.  The convict is sentenced to death for stealing a horse.  He appeals to the judge, “Come on, your Lordship, I just stole a horse!”   The judge replies, “I am not hanging you for stealing a horse.  I am hanging you to stop other people from stealing horses.”

This is one of those cases where the sentence is not just about punishing the crime, it is about giving a clear, definite signal that match-fixing will not be tolerated at any level.

Two, that there is corruption in the Macedonian league comes as no surprise to anyone.  Now will UEFA have the nerve to go after bigger clubs in bigger leagues?

Three, will UEFA establish a few, very basic, defences to the sport?

Here is one example.  For those non-fans of Danish and German handball, the cases there involve referees being approached to fix games. In Germany, the referees discovered 50,000 Euro had been put in their luggage, only when going through airport security.

They bring up a question relevant to football.   What does a referee do in a case like this?  If someone approaches them to bribe a game, who do they go to?  The local football association?  They are often in on the fix.   UEFA?    Hmmmmmm…

The problem with UEFA is that it is a house with many rooms in it.  Many of those rooms have very honest, decent people in them.  But some of those rooms contain people that no referee would ever want to report a bribe attempt to.   So their new security department should be established absolutely independently of the UEFA hierarchy.  It should report directly to Platini and no one else.  Anything else, and despite the Macedonian verdict, football will be back to corruption and the list of suspected cases will keep growing.

A Good Start

Friday, March 27th, 2009

First of all, this is excellent news.  The announcement yesterday by UEFA that they are actually holding their own judicial inquiry into a Champions League match is the best news in the battle against corruption in football for some time.  It is one of the initiatives that I have been pressing for since the publication of the book.

Does it go far enough?  No. But Michel Platini in his declaration that “match-fixing is the most serious problem facing the sport” shows that he understands exactly the nature of the problem.

Before we go any further: a declaration.  In October, at their invitation, I met with UEFA officials and discussed their proposal for a new investigation unit.  I did not accept any money from them, except for travel expenses, but at the end of the meeting, it was felt by both sides that it was too early in the process to work together.

A couple of points:

It is obvious that UEFA have picked on an obscure game from a relatively obscure league and country.  No insult to the Macedonians but the revelation that there may be fixing in Macedonia will not come as a great surprise to anyone.  However, this is, hopefully, the first case of a series of high-profile investigations.  UEFA cannot afford to fail too publicly in their first case against match-fixing.  They must choose the case that they have greatest chance of success to proceed with first.

Two, the performance of the FK Pobeda game, if it was fixed, does follow an increasingly common practice in fixing matches.  The fixers are trying to maximize profit on the gambling market.   In the book, I show some of my research into how players and referees perform fixed matches. For example, I identify a pattern of goals being scored early in the game to establish the fix.  When I began the research I thought the results would be the exact opposite: fixes would happen in the last ten minutes of the game. After all the cliché is the crooked players or referee trying frantically to score an own goal or give away a penalty in the last few minutes.  But the data indicates that for successful fixes the players and referees want to get it done quickly so will try to give away goals as early in the game as possible.

However, recently fixers have been moving towards another pattern where one team will score their goals in the first half, with the other team score their goals in the second half.  The growth of this phenomenon is because of a relatively new trend of live betting on matches, so the fixers can make money betting on both the half-time score and the full-time score.  This can increase their profit in a massive way.  Of course, this is not conclusive proof that the FK Pobeda game was fixed — only the UEFA tribunal on April 17 will be able to determine that one way or another.

Finally, if this news is “a good start”, what more can UEFA do to stop match-fixing?   I will deal with that issue in a blog posting next week.