The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Former Australian junior champ fined for fixing match

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SYDNEY: Former Australian Open junior champion Oliver Anderson was fined Aus$500 (US$374) Tuesday for fixing a match, but escaped a conviction after admitting he threw a set, reports said.

The 19-year-old Australian appeared in the Latrobe Valley Magistrate­s Court over the incident during a firstround clash at the second-tier Traralgon Challenger event in Victoria in 2016.

He admitted a charge of corrupting the outcome of a sporting event.

The court heard Anderson, the 2016 Australian Open junior winner, was approached a few days before the match by a friend who asked if he would drop the first set, broadcaste­r ABC reported.

He agreed when he realised he could easily beat his first round opponent Harrison Lombe, some 900 spots below him in the rankings.

He lost the first set 4-6, before taking the next two sets 6-0, 6-2 to win the match.

Police were alerted to suspicious activity by betting company Crownbet after a punter tried to wager Aus$10,000 on the match, ABC said. It was rejected although a lower Aus$2,000 bet was accepted.

In addition to the fine, Anderson was placed on a twoyear good-behaviour bond but no conviction was recorded.

News of the match-fixing charge surfaced just days before this year’s Australian Open, with leading players at the time voicing frustratio­n at another scandal hitting the sport.

On the eve of the Australian Open in 2016, there were bombshell media allegation­s that match-fixing was rife in tennis and the authoritie­s had done little to counter corruption.

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