THISDAY

Toney Diagnosed with Gambling Addiction, Place 13 Bets against Club

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Ivan Toney placed 13 historical bets on his own club to lose and has been diagnosed with a gambling addiction, as the written reasons for his eightmonth ban were revealed by the FA.

In the written reasons explaining the eight-month ban the Brentford striker, 27, received last week for breaching the FA’s betting rules, it was also revealed:

126 bets were in matches in a competitio­n in which Toney’s club had participat­ed in or were eligible to participat­e in that season.

Of those 126 bets, 29 bets involved clubs Toney was registered with or on loan with at the time.

16 of those 29 bets were on Toney’s team to win 15 different matches - and Toney played in 11 of these games and was an unused substitute in another.

13 bets of the 29 bets were on Toney’s own team to lose in seven different matches between

August 22, 2017 and March 3, 2018 - but Toney did not play in any of those matches

11 of the 13 bets were against Newcastle while Toney was on loan at another club.

The other two bets related to a game between Wigan vs Aston Villa while Toney was on loan at Wigan but he was not part of the squad.

There was also a breach of FA Rule E8.2 on insider informatio­n when on March 29, 2018 Toney told a friend he would be starting in his club’s next match. Toney argued it was widely known he was likely to play but accepted it as a breach of the rules.

Toney admitted lying to investigat­ors on more than one occasion after he initially denied he had bet on football.

The England internatio­nal admitted 232 breaches of betting rules between February 2017 and January 2021 and was banned from all football activity until 17 January and fined £50,000. He can return to training on 17 September.

According to the FA’s document, had Toney not pleaded guilty to the charges against him, the FA would have imposed a 15-month ban starting from the beginning of next season, “to properly reflect the seriousnes­s of the offences admitted including betting on one’s own team to lose, albeit he was not playing”.

By pleading guilty and showing “genuine remorse”, however, he is seen to have saved substantia­l time and cost, leading to a 25 per cent reduction to 11 months.

In addition, the independen­t commission found that “a significan­t reduction should be made to reflect the diagnosed gambling addiction identified by [psychiatri­st] Dr [Philip] Hopley”.

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