racing is straighter than sport atm
- Bob Brogan
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racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
cricket/tennis/football/snooker/boxing matches fixed all over the world
Ronnie O`sullivan claims snooker matches are fixed > read more
Pakistani Match fixing claims > more
We have all seen the movies about boxers taking a dive,Sonny Liston is supposedly the most famous of them...
Football match fixing- Brtish players charged in match fixing > more
Tennis match fixing is rife >more
Ronnie O`sullivan claims snooker matches are fixed > read more
Pakistani Match fixing claims > more
We have all seen the movies about boxers taking a dive,Sonny Liston is supposedly the most famous of them...
Football match fixing- Brtish players charged in match fixing > more
Tennis match fixing is rife >more
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- shrek
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
I wonder if some of these guys could fix this match. 
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- Garett Murphy
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
(tu)
shrek Wrote:
> I wonder if some of these guys could fix this
> match.
shrek Wrote:
> I wonder if some of these guys could fix this
> match.

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- Party Line
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
Where are the rugby match fixing stories, oh ya right they aren't any because rugby is such a hard sport to manipulate.
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- gregbucks
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
Party Line Wrote:
> Where are the rugby match fixing stories, oh ya
> right they aren't any because rugby is such a hard
> sport to manipulate. Its not like the refs can use
> their discretion when it comes to penalty
> decisions.
or send off a player thereby giving the opposition an unfair advantage...(
> Where are the rugby match fixing stories, oh ya
> right they aren't any because rugby is such a hard
> sport to manipulate. Its not like the refs can use
> their discretion when it comes to penalty
> decisions.
or send off a player thereby giving the opposition an unfair advantage...(

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- Titch
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
Party Line Wrote:
> Where are the rugby match fixing stories, oh ya
> right they aren't any because rugby is such a hard
> sport to manipulate. Its not like the refs can use
> their discretion when it comes to penalty
> decisions.
Ask Bryce Lawrence or Romain Poite :
> Where are the rugby match fixing stories, oh ya
> right they aren't any because rugby is such a hard
> sport to manipulate. Its not like the refs can use
> their discretion when it comes to penalty
> decisions.
Ask Bryce Lawrence or Romain Poite :

Give everything but up!
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- Guest
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
something about match fixing football Australia this morning
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- Bob Brogan
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
Ben-Hur Wrote:
> something about match fixing football Australia
> this morning
four of the links above were from this month
> something about match fixing football Australia
> this morning
four of the links above were from this month
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- vis
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
Titch Wrote:
> Party Line Wrote:
>
>
> > Where are the rugby match fixing stories, oh ya
> > right they aren't any because rugby is such a
> hard
> > sport to manipulate. Its not like the refs can
> use
> > their discretion when it comes to penalty
> > decisions.
>
> Ask Bryce Lawrence or Romain Poite :
I Bryce Lawrence and Romain Poite are drowning and you have only time to save one, what are you gonna put on your sandwich?
> Party Line Wrote:
>
>
> > Where are the rugby match fixing stories, oh ya
> > right they aren't any because rugby is such a
> hard
> > sport to manipulate. Its not like the refs can
> use
> > their discretion when it comes to penalty
> > decisions.
>
> Ask Bryce Lawrence or Romain Poite :

I Bryce Lawrence and Romain Poite are drowning and you have only time to save one, what are you gonna put on your sandwich?
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- Bob Brogan
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
25 September 2013 Last updated at 10:22
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Stephen Lee: Snooker player given 12-year ban for match-fixing
Snooker player Stephen Lee has been banned for 12 years after being found guilty of seven match-fixing charges.
Lee, 38, of Trowbridge, Wiltshire, has also been told to pay £40,000 costs.
The former world number five cannot play in any game sanctioned by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA).
Stephen Lee's career
Turned professional: 1992
Ranking tournament wins: 5 (Grand Prix 1998; LG Cup 2001; Scottish Open 2002; Welsh Open 2006, PTC Grand Finals 2012)
Highest tournament break: 145
Highest world ranking: Five
He denied the allegations, which included a match at the World Snooker Championship in 2009, but a tribunal described him as an unreliable witness.
Snooker's governing body says it is " the worst case of corruption" it has ever seen, and the longest ban imposed on a player by the organisation.
"The WPBSA has a zero tolerance approach to match fixing and this is further evidence of our uncompromising approach to dealing with such issues," said a spokesman.
The ban is calculated from 12 October 2012, when an interim suspension was imposed, and means Lee will not be able to compete as a professional snooker player before 12 October 2024, the date of his 50th birthday.
He was ordered to pay costs to help cover legal and other expenses of the WPBSA in bringing the case.
Lee has the right to appeal against the verdict and sentencing, and would be required to submit any appeal within a fortnight.
Independent tribunal chairman Adam Lewis QC had warned the player he faced "a significant sanction" following a hearing in Bristol earlier in September.
Lee, who has been a professional for more than 20 years and the winner of five ranking titles, was found to have fixed the outcome in seven matches in 2008 and 2009.
286
Share
Stephen Lee: Snooker player given 12-year ban for match-fixing
Snooker player Stephen Lee has been banned for 12 years after being found guilty of seven match-fixing charges.
Lee, 38, of Trowbridge, Wiltshire, has also been told to pay £40,000 costs.
The former world number five cannot play in any game sanctioned by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA).
Stephen Lee's career
Turned professional: 1992
Ranking tournament wins: 5 (Grand Prix 1998; LG Cup 2001; Scottish Open 2002; Welsh Open 2006, PTC Grand Finals 2012)
Highest tournament break: 145
Highest world ranking: Five
He denied the allegations, which included a match at the World Snooker Championship in 2009, but a tribunal described him as an unreliable witness.
Snooker's governing body says it is " the worst case of corruption" it has ever seen, and the longest ban imposed on a player by the organisation.
"The WPBSA has a zero tolerance approach to match fixing and this is further evidence of our uncompromising approach to dealing with such issues," said a spokesman.
The ban is calculated from 12 October 2012, when an interim suspension was imposed, and means Lee will not be able to compete as a professional snooker player before 12 October 2024, the date of his 50th birthday.
He was ordered to pay costs to help cover legal and other expenses of the WPBSA in bringing the case.
Lee has the right to appeal against the verdict and sentencing, and would be required to submit any appeal within a fortnight.
Independent tribunal chairman Adam Lewis QC had warned the player he faced "a significant sanction" following a hearing in Bristol earlier in September.
Lee, who has been a professional for more than 20 years and the winner of five ranking titles, was found to have fixed the outcome in seven matches in 2008 and 2009.
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- Mac
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
Read in The New Age this morning that Interpol has arrested the king-pin in what they believe to be the biggest sports fixing syndicate.
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- Bob Brogan
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Re: Re: racing is straighter than sport atm
11 years 8 months ago
Non-league chairmen accuse FA of match-fixing inaction
By Dan Roan BBC chief sports correspondent
The Football Association has been accused of a "dereliction of duty" after failing to question three non-league clubs about suspicious betting activity on a number of games.
Billericay Town, AFC Hornchurch and Chelmsford all came under scrutiny from the FA after bookmakers stopped taking bets on several matches involving the clubs in the Conference South last season.
The FA promised to act and told clubs to "remind players and officials of their responsibilities under the rules".
But the chairmen of all three Essex clubs have told BBC Sport that none of them have been questioned or even approached.
The former head of the FA's compliance unit, Graham Bean, said the governing body's failure to contact the clubs was "disgraceful and a dereliction of duty".
Continue reading the main story
“If there is a problem, let's sort it out, get rid of it and move on. The FA are the only ones that can do it really - they have the power.”
Steve Kent Billericay Town chairman
He added: "It is my belief that the FA tend to stick their heads in the sand at suggestions of match-fixing and tend to give a perception that they don't think it actually exists.
"When I was at the FA, I once raised the idea of having an intelligence hotline where anonymous contact could be made to report wrongdoing. I was laughed at for the suggestion."
The chairman of Billericay Town now wants the FA to conduct a thorough investigation.
"I am calling for the authorities in this country to investigate the possibility of match-fixing at our level of football," said Steve Kent.
"How can they investigate alleged match-fixing involving my club when not a single person from the police, the FA, or the league made any kind of approach to us whatsoever? It's amazing."
Last month, a group of British players in Australia were arrested and charged with match-fixing offences while playing for the Melbourne-based Stars in the second-tier Victorian Premier League.
All four of the accused played non-league football in England before moving to the Stars. Three of them - Joe Woolley, Reiss Noel and Nick McKoy - joined from AFC Hornchurch.
"In the light of recent events in Australia, it's time for a proper investigation," said Kent.
"I'm not saying match-fixing is rife or commonplace, but from the information I have been gathering it certainly warrants an investigation.
"When I saw the names involved I was shocked. The names I was reading I was so familiar with. Last season, they were all playing at our level. We played against them. That's what shocked me the most.
Lord Triesman
Ex-FA chairman Lord Triesman is "astonished" no-one at the clubs has been interviewed
"You don't know if it's gone on. There were rumours last year in the press so it makes you wonder. I didn't believe that there could be match-fixing at this level, I thought the players were too honest."
Colin McBride, the chairman of AFC Hornchurch, told the BBC he was backing Billericay's stance and said the FA had been "amateurish".
"It's surprising the FA didn't contact us, you'd have thought we'd have got a courtesy call," he said.
"We feel in limbo. We can't draw a line under it and we want to move on. That's the disappointing thing, I think we deserve an answer."
McBride said he hoped his former players, who he described as "good lads, good footballers", were acquitted.
"I truly hope they're innocent," he said. "I'm deeply shocked and deeply upset. I truly hope they're found not guilty."
The BBC has learnt that concerns were raised at the FA and within the betting industry when irregular amounts of money were gambled on certain Conference South matches last season.
For example, despite being a match in the sixth tier of the English game, played out in front of just 408 spectators, hundreds of thousands of pounds was placed on Billericay's away match at Welling in November, the vast majority of it on Asian betting exchanges.
"It was a phenomenal amount of money," said Kent, who has conducted his own inquiries into why bookmakers suddenly stopped taking bets on matches involving his club.
Continue reading the main story
“Match-fixing is one of the most critical problems. It destroys the ethics of the game.”
Lord Triesman Former FA chairman
"There was more money bet on our game than on the Barcelona game [that week]. That's where the story came from. The FA and the league picked up on that but they did nothing about it.
"If there is a problem, let's sort it out, get rid of it and move on. The FA are the only ones that can do it really - they have the power."
Kent said not everyone is happy he has decided to speak out, but he is determined the issue is addressed.
He added: "We don't want cheating, we don't want to win or lose just because someone has identified our club as vulnerable, or someone wants to make a fast buck.
"We want to know that when we go to a game our players have given their best."
Sources at the FA have told the BBC that a lack of direct contact with Billericay, AFC Hornchurch and Chelmsford does not mean enquiries have not been made.
The BBC has also learned that the governing body has been sharing information with the authorities in Australia.
"The FA takes the matter of integrity extremely seriously," said a spokesman. "The FA does not confirm any details of investigations or enquiries made, or indeed whether they are ongoing."
Former FA chairman Lord Triesman told the BBC he was "astonished" to learn that no-one at Billericay, Hornchurch or Chelmsford had been interviewed by the FA.
He added: "It seems to me to be one of the first obligations of the organisation to ensure the sport's properly regulated and scrupulously fair.
"Match-fixing, which has been a huge problem in leagues around the world, is one of the most critical problems. It destroys the ethics of the game."
Asked if he thought match-fixing was going on in English football, Triesman added: "You can never be complacent about it.
"If there's a credible allegation, it should be investigated immediately by the regulatory body. That is their duty."
By Dan Roan BBC chief sports correspondent
The Football Association has been accused of a "dereliction of duty" after failing to question three non-league clubs about suspicious betting activity on a number of games.
Billericay Town, AFC Hornchurch and Chelmsford all came under scrutiny from the FA after bookmakers stopped taking bets on several matches involving the clubs in the Conference South last season.
The FA promised to act and told clubs to "remind players and officials of their responsibilities under the rules".
But the chairmen of all three Essex clubs have told BBC Sport that none of them have been questioned or even approached.
The former head of the FA's compliance unit, Graham Bean, said the governing body's failure to contact the clubs was "disgraceful and a dereliction of duty".
Continue reading the main story
“If there is a problem, let's sort it out, get rid of it and move on. The FA are the only ones that can do it really - they have the power.”
Steve Kent Billericay Town chairman
He added: "It is my belief that the FA tend to stick their heads in the sand at suggestions of match-fixing and tend to give a perception that they don't think it actually exists.
"When I was at the FA, I once raised the idea of having an intelligence hotline where anonymous contact could be made to report wrongdoing. I was laughed at for the suggestion."
The chairman of Billericay Town now wants the FA to conduct a thorough investigation.
"I am calling for the authorities in this country to investigate the possibility of match-fixing at our level of football," said Steve Kent.
"How can they investigate alleged match-fixing involving my club when not a single person from the police, the FA, or the league made any kind of approach to us whatsoever? It's amazing."
Last month, a group of British players in Australia were arrested and charged with match-fixing offences while playing for the Melbourne-based Stars in the second-tier Victorian Premier League.
All four of the accused played non-league football in England before moving to the Stars. Three of them - Joe Woolley, Reiss Noel and Nick McKoy - joined from AFC Hornchurch.
"In the light of recent events in Australia, it's time for a proper investigation," said Kent.
"I'm not saying match-fixing is rife or commonplace, but from the information I have been gathering it certainly warrants an investigation.
"When I saw the names involved I was shocked. The names I was reading I was so familiar with. Last season, they were all playing at our level. We played against them. That's what shocked me the most.
Lord Triesman
Ex-FA chairman Lord Triesman is "astonished" no-one at the clubs has been interviewed
"You don't know if it's gone on. There were rumours last year in the press so it makes you wonder. I didn't believe that there could be match-fixing at this level, I thought the players were too honest."
Colin McBride, the chairman of AFC Hornchurch, told the BBC he was backing Billericay's stance and said the FA had been "amateurish".
"It's surprising the FA didn't contact us, you'd have thought we'd have got a courtesy call," he said.
"We feel in limbo. We can't draw a line under it and we want to move on. That's the disappointing thing, I think we deserve an answer."
McBride said he hoped his former players, who he described as "good lads, good footballers", were acquitted.
"I truly hope they're innocent," he said. "I'm deeply shocked and deeply upset. I truly hope they're found not guilty."
The BBC has learnt that concerns were raised at the FA and within the betting industry when irregular amounts of money were gambled on certain Conference South matches last season.
For example, despite being a match in the sixth tier of the English game, played out in front of just 408 spectators, hundreds of thousands of pounds was placed on Billericay's away match at Welling in November, the vast majority of it on Asian betting exchanges.
"It was a phenomenal amount of money," said Kent, who has conducted his own inquiries into why bookmakers suddenly stopped taking bets on matches involving his club.
Continue reading the main story
“Match-fixing is one of the most critical problems. It destroys the ethics of the game.”
Lord Triesman Former FA chairman
"There was more money bet on our game than on the Barcelona game [that week]. That's where the story came from. The FA and the league picked up on that but they did nothing about it.
"If there is a problem, let's sort it out, get rid of it and move on. The FA are the only ones that can do it really - they have the power."
Kent said not everyone is happy he has decided to speak out, but he is determined the issue is addressed.
He added: "We don't want cheating, we don't want to win or lose just because someone has identified our club as vulnerable, or someone wants to make a fast buck.
"We want to know that when we go to a game our players have given their best."
Sources at the FA have told the BBC that a lack of direct contact with Billericay, AFC Hornchurch and Chelmsford does not mean enquiries have not been made.
The BBC has also learned that the governing body has been sharing information with the authorities in Australia.
"The FA takes the matter of integrity extremely seriously," said a spokesman. "The FA does not confirm any details of investigations or enquiries made, or indeed whether they are ongoing."
Former FA chairman Lord Triesman told the BBC he was "astonished" to learn that no-one at Billericay, Hornchurch or Chelmsford had been interviewed by the FA.
He added: "It seems to me to be one of the first obligations of the organisation to ensure the sport's properly regulated and scrupulously fair.
"Match-fixing, which has been a huge problem in leagues around the world, is one of the most critical problems. It destroys the ethics of the game."
Asked if he thought match-fixing was going on in English football, Triesman added: "You can never be complacent about it.
"If there's a credible allegation, it should be investigated immediately by the regulatory body. That is their duty."
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