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Belgian approached to throw match on sacred stage

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发表于 2007-10-1 21:05 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
Leo Schlink

September 28, 2007 12:00am

THE tennis gambling scandal widened yesterday with revelations Belgian Gilles Elseneer was offered money to throw a match at Wimbledon.

And Elseneer's compatriot Dick Norman said he had been asked to provide locker room information on player injuries in return for cash from punters.

News of the approaches follows an illegal $255,000 incentive offered to Serbia's Novak Djokovic to deliberately lose in St Petersburg last year. He bypassed the tournament.

Elseneer said he was told he could earn $114,000 if he lost his first-round match at Wimbledon two years ago against Italian Potito Starace.

Elseneer said he dismissed the offer out of hand and won the match in straight sets.

Norman said he had been offered almost $15,000 to provide information on player injuries but refused.

Tennis authorities continue to probe betting patterns stemming from a suspect match in Poland in July between Russia's Nikolay Davydenko and Argentina's Martin Vassallo Arguello.

Wimbledon officials were shocked last year when betting exchange Betfair revealed $690,000 was wagered on unheralded Richard Bloomfield to beat higher-ranked Argentine Carlos Berlocq. Bloomfield, a British wildcard, won the match against an opponent ranked 170 places higher.

Elseneer said he was shocked. "I had my honour as a player to protect and Wimbledon meant everything to me. They said I should take my time and give them my reply the next day, but I only needed a couple of minutes to realise it was impossible for me to contemplate."

Representatives from the seven major tennis bodies -- the four grand slam tournaments, the International Tennis Federation and the ATP and WTA Tours -- last month met in New York to discuss the illegal gambling scourge.

The group is pooling its resources in an attempt to end a problem said to be linked to the Russian mafia.

ATP chairman and president Etienne de Villiers said: "I am not surprised players are approached in sport today but what I care about is their reaction, where they stand in terms of their responsibility to the sport and what the consequences are.

"We can fine a player up to $US100,000 ($114,000) for transgressing our code and impose a maximum lifetime ban if it continues."

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22494707-3162,00.html
 楼主| 发表于 2007-10-1 21:07 | 显示全部楼层
但是ATP仍然认为网球竞技是纯洁的。

ATP says Elseneer revelation shows tennis is clean

Thu Sep 27, 2007 10:09pm BST

By Pritha Sarkar

LONDON (Reuters) - The governing body of men's tennis has dismissed suggestions that corruption is rife in the sport after Belgian Gilles Elseneer said he was offered 100,000 euros (69,800 pounds) to throw a first-round Wimbledon match in 2005.

Elseneer, who has earned a modest $473,798 (233,720 pounds) in prize money after almost a decade on the men's tour, had been offered the bribe to lose his match against another journeyman, Italy's Potito Starace, the Times newspaper reported on Thursday.
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Last month the ATP began investigating possible irregular gambling patterns on a match at the Sopot Open in Poland between world number four Nikolay Davydenko and Martin Vassallo Arguello of Argentina. Davydenko, who retired hurt from the match, denies any involvement.

The ATP said that if a player such as Elseneer, then ranked 191 in the world, could instantly decline the offer, it proved that the integrity of the sport was intact.

"Fans need to understand that we have procedures in place and the most important thing is not that sports people are being approached but it's what sports people do when they are approached," an ATP spokesman told Reuters on Thursday.

Elseneer, who won the match in straight sets, was quoted as saying in The Times: "I had my honour as a player to protect and Wimbledon meant everything to me.

"They said I should take my time and give them my reply the next day but I only needed a couple of minutes to realise it was impossible for me to contemplate."

The newspaper reported that another Belgian, Dick Norman, said he had been offered money at Wimbledon to provide information on his fellow players but he declined.

"All the players who have said they've been approached have instantly said 'no'," the ATP spokesman said. "Our investigations since 2003 have not found any evidence that a player is sanctionable under those rules.

ONLINE EXCHANGES

"Tennis is a 1-1 gladiatorial battle but it is no more vulnerable than any other sport when you look at it in the context of online exchanges and what they offer punters in terms of opportunities.
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"You can bet on so many different components of a match because of the way online works, which is why we saw the threat and started to put in place in 2003 the way in which we could protect the integrity of the sport even further."

Tennis has an anti-corruption code which states that players and their personnel, including coaches, trainers, managers, agents, family members and guests, are not allowed to wager money on the sport.

Anyone flouting the rules faces a maximum penalty of $100,000 and up to three years' suspension from the game.

The code also says that anyone caught trying to fix a match will be banned for life.

"The responsibility is on everyone in tennis to understand what's at stake, to understand what's expected of them and to work with the custodians of the game in order to protect the integrity," the spokesman said.

Officials at the International Tennis Federation (ITF), which runs the four grand slam tournaments, said they had not been aware of the approach made to Elseneer.

"I wish he would have come to us then as it would have given us a chance at the time to ferret out the problem," grand slam co-ordinator Bill Babcock told Reuters.

"He hasn't done anything wrong so there is no question of any punishment but it's good people are coming up with this information as we need to unlock whatever problem there is."

http://uk.reuters.com/article/tennisNews/idUKL2719694920070927
 楼主| 发表于 2007-10-1 21:09 | 显示全部楼层
今天又有英国运动员揭露有人给钱叫他放弃比赛


Arvind Parmar: I wanted to punch man who asked me to throw match

October 1, 2007
Neil Harman, Tennis Correspondent

The first British player to admit that he was approached to throw a tennis match reached a career-high world ranking of No 138 and made an average of £25,000 a year in his nine years on the circuit. Arvind Parmar was the kind of soft target who was perfect for those eager to take unscrupulous advantage and make huge sums of money for themselves.

Parmar retired ten months ago and is being fast-tracked to LTA coaching standards at the National Tennis Centre (NTC) in Roehampton, southwest London. But the 29-year-old remembers how he was targeted a couple of years ago - he prefers not to say where, except that it was on the ATP Challenger Series circuit, a series of tournaments that can allow players to win enough ranking points to earn an entry into an ATP-level main draw or qualifying draw – and how matter-of-fact the manner of the offer was.

“A guy I’d never seen before just walked up and asked me to throw a match,” Parmar said. “He said because it was in my control, I should lose in straight sets and I’d receive X amount. I don’t want to say how much except it was pretty substantial. It took me half a second to say no.

“To be honest, I wanted to punch him in the face. I told him to get the hell out of here. Tennis was my life and I had my integrity and that of the sport to protect. I know there are people hanging around at this level of tournaments. I didn’t see him again that week, but it doesn’t mean he wasn’t still around trying it on with other players.”

Parmar’s belief that “this has been happening for a few years now” ought to resonate with those seeking to deal with an insidious practice. There are believed to be at least 130 matches that have given cause for concern since 2003 and a dossier compiled by a leading bookmaker is said to contain names of those involved in some of the betting syndicates and details how the fixes were put together. What it cannot do is link specific players and coaches to irregular betting patterns, but this is a problem that will not go away.

The four arms of tennis authority – the ATP, Sony Ericsson WTA Tour, ITF and the grand-slam tournaments – intend to set up an anticorruption unit and the ATP recently opened a hotline for its professionals to report any approaches. “It is up to the players to name and shame,” Parmar said. “These guys may just think it’s a bit of fun, but they can make huge money. It gets a bit scary when you see the story about Gilles Elseneer being offered
 楼主| 发表于 2007-10-1 21:10 | 显示全部楼层
NBA、ATP等官方好像活在天堂一样
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