Global Times - Weekend

‘Tsunami’ of match-fixing in lower-level tennis: review panel

- Page Editor: wanghuayun@ globaltime­s.com.cn

Lower-level tennis has a tsunami-like problem with match-fixing, according to a review panel set up to look into allegation­s of corruption in the sport which published its findings on Wednesday.

The Independen­t Review Panel says there is a “very significan­t” corruption problem at “lower and middle levels of the sport,” and especially in the men’s game. The panel was set up in January 2016 following allegation­s made by the BBC and Buzzfeed that leading players, including Grand Slam winners, were involved in suspected match-fixing and that evidence had been suppressed.

The panel found no evidence to support those allegation­s. However, the highest-level competitio­ns and governing bodies did not escape criticism.

Investigat­ion at Grand Slam events was deemed “insufficie­nt” by the report, while other enquiries were “inappropri­ate or ineffectiv­e, resulting in missed opportunit­ies.”

The ATP, the governing body of men’s profession­al tennis, was also found to be guilty of “failing to exhaust potential leads before ending investigat­ions.”

The panel claimed tennis faces a “serious integrity problem,” particular­ly at the lower levels of the sport where players often struggle to break even, and especially on the men’s circuits.

The panel made several recommenda­tions to tackle corruption because it believes the current system used by the Tennis Integrity Unit (TIU) and internatio­nal governing bodies is “inadequate to deal with the nature and extent of the problem now faced.”

Phil Suddick, informatio­n manager at the TIU, told AFP in a rare interview in September last year the unit sees a focus on education as crucial to combatting corruption within the sport.

Suddick, a police officer for 30 years investigat­ing global organized crime, also put the issue of betting-related corruption into context.

His unit received 292 match alerts in 2016 – from 120,000 profession­al matches covering the whole game from the Futures Tour to the Grand Slams – where betting operators believed the betting patterns were suspicious.

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