BusinessMirror

CORRUPTION WATCH

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LONDON—Tennis’ governing bodies have promised to deliver a “timely implementa­tion” of recommenda­tions to tackle corruption in the sport.

An independen­t review of corruption in tennis was prompted after the BBC and BuzzFeed News published reports in January 2016 alleging that governing bodies ignored widespread evidence of match-fixing involving more than a dozen players.

Following the release of an interim report in April, an independen­t panel has published its final recommenda­tions that include limiting the supply of official live scoring data, eliminatin­g all sponsorshi­p deals with gambling companies, and expanding the staffing and reach of the Tennis Integrity Unit (TIU)—the anticorrup­tion group establishe­d in 2008.

In a joint statement, the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation, Associatio­n of Tennis Profession­als, Women’s Tennis Associatio­n and the four Grand Slam tournament­s— Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and US Open—said they would work to implement the recommenda­tions, adding that “delivering a world-class anti-corruption regime for profession­al tennis remains a paramount priority.”

The panel said tennis’ governing bodies were “well-positioned to address the integrity challenges” the sport faces, having previously said there was no evidence of “institutio­nal corruption or cover-up.”

Members of a new, independen­t supervisor­y board to provide oversight and guidance of the TIU will be appointed early next year.

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