OT: The criminal side of international soccer

Submitted by Moleskyn on

I just read an article in ESPN magazine about the prevalence of international crime syndicates fixing soccer matches (online article is here). Since I am not an avid soccer fan at all, this was the first I had ever heard of this, and I was pretty shocked. The craziest thing to me in the article was this:

and in an under-21 friendly, Turkmenistan reportedly beat Maldives 3-2 in a "ghost match" -- neither country knew about the contest because it never actually happened, yet bookmakers still took action and fixers still profited.

For those of you who are more avid fans, how widely-known are these practices? From the article, it seems like most of this is taking place in Africa, Asia, and Scandanavia; have they infiltrated the US scene at all? I feel like it would be difficult to see an MLS game take place with 7 goals, all from PKs, and nobody get suspicious about it. But when someone's offering you more money than you would otherwise make on a game, I can see why refs would be willing to do that.

mzdmv

May 23rd, 2012 at 12:59 PM ^

There was a huge match-fixing problem in the Serie A in Italy a few years ago. As a result, Juventus, one of Italy's perennial powers, got sent down to the Serie B for a year

DeadMan

May 23rd, 2012 at 1:11 PM ^

There's one going on right now, too. Italian soccer is a mess. Of course, after the match fixing scandal in 2006, Italy won the World Cup. In 1982, there was also a match fixing scandal in Italy, and they won the World Cup. Maybe they'll win the Euro Cup this time?

stephenrjking

May 23rd, 2012 at 1:36 PM ^

FIFA is a slime pit of bribery and corruption; whether they are actually trying to deal with match-fixing (quite possible) or not, FIFA and the IOC are the dirty underbelly of sports. Their leaders are untrustworthy, their practices are unseemly, and their decision-making processes have so much traffic under the table that they need stoplights.

djs

May 23rd, 2012 at 3:06 PM ^

Bill Archer's blog over at Big Soccer (http://www.bigsoccer.com/soccer/bill-archer/) is a pretty comprehensive compendium of FIFA corruption, especially the nefarious goings-on in our region (CONCACAF) spearheaded by former CONCACAF head Jack Warner and his various toadies throughout the Caribbean. Warner, you may recall, was at the center of a bribery scandal over payouts distributed at a CONCACAF meeting which were intended as "thank-you" gifts for supporting Mohammed bin Hammam in his contest against Sepp Blatter for FIFA president. Once Chuck Blazer blew the whistle, the scandal couldn't be swept under the rug -- as a result, bin Hammam withdrew from the race and Warner was suspended from his position as FIFA vice-president (though getting rid of Warner completely is about as difficult as killing Nosferatu for good).

hart4eva

May 23rd, 2012 at 3:06 PM ^

Just google Sepp Blatter corruption. I'm specifically thinking of things related to the last FIFA presidential election and the awarding of the 2018 World Cup to Qatar. If you want to learn more about the corruption inside FIFA, you also need to look at the regional organizations, primarily CONCACAF and Jack Warner. Bottom line: it's a cesspool. 

BiSB

May 23rd, 2012 at 1:17 PM ^

We have the opposite problem in American Football; hundreds of thousands of people claimed to witness Ohio State play football in 2010, but no official record of those games seems to exist.

Tuebor

May 23rd, 2012 at 1:31 PM ^

Cheat for 10 years but only lose 1.

I'll bet you that every Ohio fan would take going 8-1 officially,(9-1 in games played on field) against Michigan even if it means losing 1 year each decade.

So the punishment does not deter the crime.  I expect the toys for tats program will be up and running again in no time.

acnumber1

May 23rd, 2012 at 1:30 PM ^

 

 
S. Korea bans 11 volleyball players for life over match-fixing scandal
SEOUL, March 19 (Yonhap) -- South Korea's volleyball governing body
banned 11 volleyball players for life for their involvement in
rigging matches in return for bribes, an official said Monday.

The Korean Volleyball Federation made the announcement by
holding a disciplinary committee meeting in what is South Korea's
latest attempt to combat match-fixing practices among local
professional athletes.

BlueAggie

May 23rd, 2012 at 2:25 PM ^

There is a book called The Fix by a journalist named Declan Hill that delves into a lot of this. It's only ok, but the source material is pretty fascinating. He makes a compelling case that match fixing has killed soccer in Singapore and Malaysia.

Hardware Sushi

May 23rd, 2012 at 4:28 PM ^

Don't bet on obscure foreign sports game is the theme I took from this article. If you can't get enough action at a Vegas sports book, you should seek help.

MichiganManOf1961

May 23rd, 2012 at 9:59 PM ^

Everything said above is peanuts compared to this instance... I still remember reading this and being amazed: http://espn.go.com/sports/soccer/news/_/id/5572079/togo-official-says-team-played-bahrain-was-fake

Yes, a fake national team (for Togo, a tiny west African nation) played an international friendly in and against Bahrain.  I still giggle like a school girl everytime I think about this, it is just so outlandish.

-Herm

Caesar

May 24th, 2012 at 5:47 AM ^

Big sport (in Japan) that is rife with match-fixing, though, from what I understand, it's limited to matches that are meaningless for one of the parties. For example, if a super-favored guy has already wrapped up first place, he'll lose to some nobody who needs to complete certain norms to be a big deal in the sport.

Of all the sports I follow, I've never heard of match-fixing in chess.