The Star Malaysia

Red Star in crisis

Faced with match-fixing scandal, Belgrade club adopt code of silence

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BELGRADE: Red Star Belgrade, embroiled in a Champions League match-fixing scandal, have erected a wall of silence around the Rajko Mitic Stadium ahead of their clash with Liverpool today.

The trip to Anfield should have been a celebratio­n for the team, 27 years after they won the European Cup, the first and last triumph in the competitio­n for a club from the former Yugoslavia.

But now the match has been overshadow­ed by suspicion following the announceme­nt that French investigat­ors are probing allegation­s of match-fixing in the club’s 6-1 thrashing by Paris St Germain in their last Champions League groupstage outing on Oct 3.

The probe was launched after French sports daily L’Equipe alleged that a senior Red Star official bet €5mil

(RM24mil) on the side losing by a five-goal margin to the French champions.

The claims upset many Serbs including Predrag Saric, editor-inchief of the Sportski Zurnal paper.

“Serbs are the ideal culprits. No one has read yet that the investigat­ion had actually started, but they are already condemned,” Saric told Serbian state-run television channel RTS.

He was also surprised that “in the age of modern technology, everything is not yet clear”.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, a long-time Red Star supporter, said he was “very sceptical” regarding the allegation­s.

“I think that the greatest part of what they are talking about is not true,” he told reporters.

The Serbian leader vowed to “examine every possibilit­y of whether anyone and in any way could have tarnished the name of our club and our country”.

After releasing two statements in which they urged a rapid investigat­ion and threatened legal action against L’Equipe for defamation, the club have fallen silent.

Red Star president and Serbian football great Dragan Dzajic hasn’t been answering his mobile phone.

General director Zvezdan Terzic said the club had decided not to comment further following the initial two statements.

“I won’t comment on the media reports, I can say they don’t affect the team,” said coach Vladan Milojevic. “The players and I are focused on the current competitio­ns.”

Sports analyst Mihajlo Todic said the betting allegation­s looked farfetched.

He doubted a bookmaker could

€5mil

accept a bet on something which was “blatant”, referring to the high probabilit­y that Red Star would be heavily beaten by one of Europe’s elite clubs.

“The left foot of (right-footed) Neymar is worth more than the whole Red Star team,” fan Dragan Nikolic, 42, said.

Todic said “match-fixing would have required participat­ion of PSG”, an accusation dismissed out of hand by the French club.

Independen­t Vreme weekly pointed to a record of previous corrup- tion in sport in Serbia.

“Serbian football in general and its two leading clubs – Red Star and Partizan Belgrade -–have a nefarious reputation.

Some of their hardcore fans, after first serving as paramilita­ries during the 1990s Balkans conflicts, have now joined the underworld.

They have been involved in gang shootings and often have trouble with the law.

Red Star were heavily indebted for a long time but Terzic said in September that the club’s debt had

€

been “cut to 13mil (RM62mil), which means that we have repaid

€

41mil (RM196mil)”.

Terzic, elected general director in 2014, is a controvers­ial figure.

Suspected of embezzleme­nt during suspicious transfers when he was running OFK Beograd, he fled Serbia in 2008 before turning himself in two years later. His trial has yet to open.

Terzic was also president of the Serbian football federation from 2005 to 2008. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Was it fixed?: Paris St Germain’s Neymar (right) fighting for the ball with Red Star Belgrade’s Branko Jovicic during the Champions League match on Oct 3.
— AFP Was it fixed?: Paris St Germain’s Neymar (right) fighting for the ball with Red Star Belgrade’s Branko Jovicic during the Champions League match on Oct 3.

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