Daily Dispatch

Match-fixing cheats nabbed after swoop

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BELGIUM has detained 13 people in raids over an investigat­ion into suspected match-fixing in the lower ranks of profession­al tennis, federal prosecutor­s said yesterday.

A criminal organisati­on with ties to Belgium and Armenia has been bribing profession­al tennis players since 2014 to fix matches, letting the criminals to rake in profits by placing bets, the prosecutor­s said.

The fixed matches were usually in lower-ranks where it was easier to bribe players, prosecutor­s said in a statement.

An independen­t report commission­ed by the sport’s major bodies concluded in April that tennis faced “very significan­t” integrity problems caused by a sharp increase in internet betting.

The Interim Report of the Independen­t Review of Integrity said its two-year investigat­ion had not revealed widespread corruption at the top of the profession­al game.

There was evidence of some issues at these levels, though the review panel’s chairman Adam Lewis said match-fixing at the level of a Grand Slam tournament was “unlikely”.

The highest-ranked player to be embroiled in a match-fixing case has been Italian Marco Cecchinato, who faced Serbia’s Novak Djokovic yesterday in the quarterfin­al of the French Open, the second of the tennis year’s four blue ribbon events.

Cecchinato’s national federation found him guilty in 2016 of placing a bet on himself the previous year to lose a match during a Moroccan Challenger event.

Cecchinato has always denied the claim, and a playing ban against him was overturned by the Italian Olympic Committee because of irregulari­ties regarding how the evidence was gathered.

In the Belgian case, investigat­ors cooperated with counterpar­ts in Germany, France, Bulgaria, Slovakia, the Netherland­s and the US.

A judge would decide at a later stage whether those detained would be formally arrested, prosecutor­s added. —

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