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Match fixing
Match fixing
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In organized sports, match fixing (also known as game fixing, race fixing, throwing, rigging, hippodroming, or more generally sports fixing) is the act of playing or officiating a contest with the intention of achieving a predetermined result, violating the rules of the game and often the law. There are many reasons why match fixing might take place, including receiving bribes from bookmakers or sports bettors, and blackmail. Competitors may also intentionally perform poorly to gain a future advantage, such as a better draft pick[1] or to face an easier opponent in a later round of competition.[2] A player might also play poorly to rig a handicap system.[3]

Match fixing, when motivated by gambling, requires contacts (and normally money transfers) between gamblers, players, team officials, and/or referees. These contacts and transfers can sometimes be discovered, and lead to prosecution by the law or the sports league(s). In contrast, losing for future advantage is internal to the team and very difficult to prove. Often, substitutions are made by a coach, designed to deliberately increase the team's chances of losing (such as having key players sit out, often using minimal or phantom injuries as an excuse), rather than ordering the players who are actually on the field to intentionally underperform, are cited as the main factor in cases where this has been alleged.

Match fixing includes point shaving and spot-fixing, which center on smaller events within a match that can be wagered upon but are unlikely to prove decisive in determining the game's final result. According to Sportradar, a company that monitors the integrity of sports events on behalf of sports federations, as many as one percent of the matches they monitor show suspicious betting patterns that may be indicative of match fixing.[4]

In sports where a handicap or ranking system exists and is capable of being abused (including sports such as racing, grappling and golf), throwing the game is known as "sandbagging". Hustling, where a player disguises his abilities until he can play for large amounts of money, is a common practice in many cue sports, such as nine-ball pool.

Motivations and causes

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Some major motivations behind match fixing are gambling and future team advantage. According to investigative journalist Declan Hill it has also been linked to corruption, violence and tax avoidance.[5] In Eastern Europe, organized crime is linked to illegal gambling and score fixing. In Russia, people have disappeared or been murdered after acting against bribery in sports.[6]

Agreements with gamblers

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There may be financial gain through agreements with gamblers. The Black Sox Scandal of 1919, in which several members of the MLB's Chicago White Sox conspired with gamblers to fix that year's World Series for monetary gain.[7]

One of the best-known examples of gambling-related race fixing (in motorsports) is the 1933 Tripoli Grand Prix, in which the winning number of the lottery was determined by the number of the race-winning car. One ticket holder held the number belonging to Achille Varzi, contacted him and agreed to share the winning should he win. Varzi contacted other drivers who agreed to share the money if they deliberately lost. Despite a poor start, Varzi won the race after his opponents deliberately underperformed throughout the race.[8]

A large match-fixing ring in the lower levels of professional tennis, centered around gambling, was broken up in 2023. At least 181 players were involved.[9]

Better playoff chances

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Many sports have tournaments where the result of one round determines their opponent in the next round. As a result, by losing a match, a team can face an easier opponent in the next round, making them more likely to win.

The National Basketball Association (NBA) is the only one of the four major professional sports leagues of the United States and Canada in which home advantage in the playoffs is based strictly on regular-season records without regard to seeding. The top six teams earn an automatic playoff berth, while the seventh through tenth teams compete for the last two seeds in a "play-in tournament".[10]

In the Canadian Football League, since the introduction of the cross-over rule, Western teams have been occasionally accused of losing near the end of the season in situations where a loss would cause them to finish fourth place in their division and where such a finish was still good enough to secure a berth in the league's East Division playoffs. In recent years, the East has often been viewed to be a weaker division than the West; however, if any Western team has attempted such a strategy, it has not paid significant dividends for them since teams who qualify for the playoffs via crossover have gone a combined 5-7 in the East Division Semi-Finals, and 0-5 in the East Division Finals. As of the 2022 season, no Western team has advanced to the Grey Cup championship game from the Eastern bracket.

A more recent example of possible match fixing occurred in the ice hockey competition at the 2006 Winter Olympics. In Pool B, Sweden was to face Slovakia in the last pool match for both teams. Sweden coach Bengt-Åke Gustafsson publicly contemplated losing against Slovakia, knowing that if his team won, their quarterfinal opponent would either be Canada, the 2002 gold medalists, or the Czech Republic, 1998 gold medalists. Gustafsson would tell Swedish television "One is cholera, the other the plague." Sweden lost the match 3–0; the most obvious sign of match fixing was when Sweden had a five-on-three powerplay with five NHL stars – Peter Forsberg, Mats Sundin, Daniel Alfredsson, Nicklas Lidström, and Fredrik Modin – on the ice, and failed to put a shot on goal. (Sports Illustrated writer Michael Farber would say about this particular powerplay, "If the Swedes had passed the puck anymore, their next opponent would have been the Washington Generals.") If he was seeking to tank, Gustafsson got his wish; Sweden would face a much less formidable quarterfinal opponent in Switzerland. Canada would lose to Russia in a quarterfinal in the opposite bracket, while Sweden went on to win the gold medal, defeating the Czechs in the semifinals.[11]

The 1998 Tiger Cup – an international football tournament contested by countries in Southeast Asia – saw an example of two teams trying to lose a match. The tournament was hosted by Vietnam, with the eight countries competing split into two groups of four. The top two in each group advanced to the semi-finals with the winners playing the runners-up of the other group. In the first group, Singapore finished on top with Vietnam finishing second; this meant that the winners of the second group would have to travel to Hanoi to play the host nation in the national stadium on their national day, while the runners-up would face Singapore in Ho Chi Minh City where the final group match was taking place.[12] As the two teams involved – Thailand and Indonesia – had both already qualified for the semi-finals, it was in both teams' interest to lose the match and finish in second place. As the game progressed, neither side seemed particularly concerned with scoring, while the defending was lackadaisical. As the match entered stoppage time, Indonesian defender Mursyid Effendi scored an own goal, overcoming the efforts of several Thai players and the goalkeeper to stop him. Both teams were fined $40,000, and Effendi was banned from international football for life.[13]

In the final month of the 2010 Major League Baseball season, the New York Yankees and Tampa Bay Rays were in a tight race for the American League East division title and by the final week, both teams had already clinched at least the wild card. The Yankees went 3–7 over the final 10 games, losing their regular-season finale, while the Rays went 5–5 and won theirs, giving the Rays the AL East title by one game and the Yankees the AL wild-card berth. Winning the division would have given New York an ALDS matchup against the Texas Rangers, who at the time had star pitcher Cliff Lee; the Yankees instead defeated the Minnesota Twins, a team they historically have had more postseason success against. Allegations of the Yankees purposefully settling for the wild card, presumably to avoid facing Texas in the ALDS, began to surface after the Yankees defeated the Twins. Additional allegations came up in 2012 when Yankees general manager Brian Cashman commented in response to a possible playoff expansion that his team had "conceded the division" and that winning it meant "nothing more than a T-shirt and a hat".[14][15] However, Cashman insisted that the Yankees were not motivated by any desire to lose games, but were merely ensuring their best players were well-rested for the postseason, which he contended was perfectly ethical behavior. In 2012, Major League Baseball added a second wild card in each league, with the two wild cards playing a single-elimination game in order to give more importance to winning the division. In 2022, the postseason was further expanded, adding a third wild card and making the round a best-of-three series.

The 2012 Summer Olympics saw two examples of match fixing of this type:

  • Members of four badminton teams from China, Indonesia and South Korea were ejected from the women's doubles tournament for intentionally losing matches to allow better pairings in the knockout stages of the competition.[16][17] In what the BBC called a "night of shame", players made simple errors throughout the match, despite booing and jeering from the crowd, and warnings from the match umpire and tournament referee to cease and desist. The Badminton World Federation found the four pairs guilty of "not using one's best efforts to win a match" and "conducting oneself in a manner that is clearly abusive or detrimental to the sport."[18]
  • In the women's football tournament, Japan intentionally played a draw with South Africa in Cardiff, allowing it to finish second in its group so it would not have to travel to Glasgow, more than 300 miles away, for the first round of the knockout stage. Instead, Japan remained in Cardiff and defeated Brazil in their quarterfinal en route to the gold medal match.[19]

Match fixing can also happen in high-school level sports. For example, In February 2015, two girls' basketball teams representing Nashville-area Riverdale and Smyrna High Schools were both intentionally trying to lose during a consolation match of their district tournament.[20] The winner of the game would enter the same side of the regional tournament bracket as defending state champion[20] Blackman High School (ranked as one of the country's top 10 teams by some national publications), setting up a potential match in the regional semifinals.[21] The loser would thus avoid Blackman until the regional final, a game whose participants would both advance to the sectional tournament (one step short of the state tournament).[21] During the game both teams pulled their starters early, missed shots on purpose, intentionally turned over the ball and deliberately committed fouls.[20] The Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association, which governs high school sports in the state, ejected both teams from the postseason, fined the two schools (Riverdale $1,000 and Smyrna $500), and placed both teams on probation through the 2015–16 school year.[20]

As previously mentioned, the practice of coaches on a playoff-bound team deliberately benching a team's best players for some or all of the final match(es) of the regular season (or alternatively, giving them less playing time than would normally be warranted) is often defended as a common sense measure to avoid unnecessarily risking injuries and fatigue to the team's star players.[22] Some argue that a coach should not only have the right to select a starting lineup for a match that gives the team the best chances of winning titles in the long run — should this be a different lineup than the one that gives the team the best chances of winning the game at hand — but that doing so is the smartest course of action.

For example, during Euro 2004 the Czech Republic rested nearly all of its starters from the first two group matches for the final group match against Germany. Since the Czechs had already clinched first place in the group, this move was seen to have the potential to allow Germany a better chance to get the win they needed to advance at the expense of the winner of the NetherlandsLatvia game. As it happened, the Czechs' decision to field a "weaker" side did not matter since the Czechs won the match anyway to eliminate the Germans.

Better draft position

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Most top-level sports leagues in North America and Australia hold drafts to allocate young players to the league's teams. The order in which teams select players is often the inverse of their standings in the previous season. As a result, a team may have a significant incentive to tank games to secure a higher pick in the league's next draft, and a number of leagues have changed their draft rules to remove (or at least limit) potential incentives to tank.

From 1966 to 1984, the NBA used a coin flip between the teams with the worst records in each of the league's two conferences to determine the recipient of the top pick. In the 1983–84 season, several teams were accused of deliberately losing games in an attempt to gain a top position in the 1984 draft, which would eventually produce four Hall of Fame players. As a result of this, the NBA established a draft lottery in advance of the 1985 draft, involving all teams that did not make the playoffs in the previous season. This lottery system prevented teams from receiving fixed draft positions based on record place, which the league hoped would discourage them from deliberately losing.[23][24]

Even though the lottery in place through the 2018 draft gave the team with the worst record only the same chance at the top pick as the 2nd and 3rd worst teams (with that team guaranteed no worse than the fourth pick), there was still perceived incentive for a team to tank. Responding to these perceived incentives, the NBA further tweaked its lottery rules shortly before the start of the 2017–18 season. Effective with the 2019 draft, the teams with the three worst records have equal odds of landing the #1 pick (barring one of these teams also owning another lottery team's pick), and the top four picks are allocated in the lottery instead of the top three.[25] This limits but does not eliminate the incentive to tank, particularly when there is at least one exceptional prospect.[26]

The Australian Football League, the main competition of Australian rules football, has used a system of priority draft picks since 1993, with poorly performing teams receiving extra selections at or near the start of the draft. Prior to 2012, a team automatically received a priority pick if its win–loss record met pre-defined eligibility criteria. However, that system led to accusations of tanking by several clubs—most notably by Melbourne in 2009 (the club was found not guilty, but the head coach and general manager were found guilty on related charges). Since 2012, priority picks are awarded at the discretion of the AFL Commission, the governing body of both the AFL and the overall sport.

Until the 2014–15 NHL season, the National Hockey League assured the last place team of at least the second position in its entry draft, with the first overall pick being subject to a draft lottery among the five worst teams. As NHL drafts typically include only one NHL-ready prospect, if any at all, in any given year (most others must continue developing in junior ice hockey or the minor leagues for several years before reaching the NHL), this rudimentary lottery has historically been enough of a deterrent to avoid deliberate tanking. However, in 2014–15, two elite prospects widely considered to be "generational talents", Connor McDavid and Jack Eichel, were projected to enter the 2015 NHL Entry Draft, thus ensuring the last place team at least one of the two prospects. This was most prominent with the Buffalo Sabres, whose fans openly rooted against their team in the hopes they would clinch last place in the league for much of the season (the Sabres themselves denied they were tanking and openly criticized their fans for suggesting the notion).[27] Beginning in 2015–16, the top three picks in the draft are subject to lottery, with all fourteen teams that did not qualify for the playoffs eligible to win the picks. However, as the worst team is guaranteed one of the first three picks, tanking is still contemplated when the draft field is deep.[28]

More favorable schedule next year

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NFL teams have been accused of throwing games to obtain a more favorable schedule the following season; this was especially true between 1977 and 1993, when a team finishing last in a five-team division would get to play four of its eight non-division matches the next season against other last-place teams.

In the current scheduling formula which has been in place since 2002 and slightly amended in 2021, only three games in a team's schedule are dependent on a team's placement the previous season. The remaining eight non-division games are the same for all teams in a division.

Match fixing by referees

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In addition to the match fixing that is committed by players, coaches and/or team officials, it is not unheard of to have results manipulated by corrupt referees. Since 2004, separate scandals have erupted in prominent sports leagues in Portugal, [dead link][29] Germany (Bundesliga scandal), Brazil (Brazilian football match-fixing scandal) and the United States (see Tim Donaghy scandal), all of which concerned referees who fixed matches for gamblers. Many sports writers have speculated that in leagues with high player salaries, it is far more likely for a referee to become corrupt since their pay in such competitions is usually much less than that of the players.

On December 2, 1896, former Old West lawman Wyatt Earp refereed the Fitzsimmons vs. Sharkey boxing match, promoted as the Heavyweight Championship of the World.[30] Earp was chosen as referee by the National Athletic Association the afternoon of the match after both managers refused to agree on a choice. In the eighth round of a fight dominated by Fitzsimmons, Sharkey suddenly went down, clutching his groin, yelling foul. Referee Earp conferred with both corners for a few seconds before he disqualified Fitzsimmons for a foul that virtually no one saw.[30] Fitzsimmons went to court to attempt to stop Sharkey from taking the purse, but failed when the court ruled that the match was illegal and it had no jurisdiction.[31]

Eight years later, B. Brookes Lee was arrested in Portland, Oregon. He had been accused of treating Sharkey to make it appear that he had been fouled by Fitzsimmons. Lee said, "I fixed Sharkey up to look as if he had been fouled. How? Well, that is something I do not care to reveal, but I will assert that it was done—that is enough. There is no doubt that Fitzsimmons was entitled to the decision and did not foul Sharkey. I got $1,000 for my part in the affair."[32]

Match fixing to a draw or a fixed score

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Match fixing does not necessarily involve deliberately losing a match. Occasionally, teams have been accused of deliberately playing to a draw or a fixed score where this ensures some mutual benefit (e.g. both teams advancing to the next stage of a competition.) One of the earliest examples of this sort of match fixing in the modern era occurred in 1898 when Stoke City and Burnley intentionally drew in that year's final "test match" so as to ensure they were both in the First Division the next season. In response, the Football League expanded the divisions to 18 teams that year, thus permitting the intended victims of the fix (Newcastle United and Blackburn Rovers) to remain in the First Division. The "test match" system was abandoned and replaced with automatic relegation.

A more recent example occurred in the 1982 FIFA World Cup, West Germany played Austria in the last match of group B. A West German victory by 1 or 2 goals would result in both teams advancing; any less and Germany was out; any more and Austria was out (and replaced by Algeria, who had just beaten Chile). West Germany attacked hard and scored after 10 minutes. Afterwards, the players then proceeded to just kick the ball around aimlessly for the remainder of the match. Algerian supporters were so angered that they waved banknotes at the players, while a German fan burned his German flag in disgust.[33] By the second half, the ARD commentator Eberhard Stanjek refused any further comment on the game, while the Austrian television commentator Robert Seeger advised viewers to switch off their sets. As a result, FIFA changed its tournament scheduling for subsequent World Cups so that the final pair of matches in each group are played simultaneously.[34][35]

Another example took place on the next-to-last weekend of the 1992–93 Serie A season. Milan entered their match needing only a point to secure the title ahead of crosstown rivals Inter, while Brescia believed a point would be enough for them to avoid relegation. In a 2004 retrospective on the "dodgiest games" in football history, two British journalists said about the match, "For over 80 minutes, the two teams engaged in a shameful game of cat-and-mouse, in which the cat appeared to have fallen asleep and the mouse was on tranquilisers." Milan scored in the 82nd minute, but Brescia "mysteriously found themselves with a huge overlap" and equalised two minutes later. The 1–1 draw gave Milan their title, but in the end did not help Brescia; other results went against them and they suffered the drop.[33]

In knockout competitions where the rules require drawn matches to be replayed, teams have sometimes been accused of intentionally playing one or more draws so as to ensure replays. In this case, the motive is usually financial since the ensuing replay(s) would typically be expected to generate additional revenue for the participating teams. One notorious example of this particular type of alleged fix was the 1909 Scottish Cup Final, which sparked a riot after being played twice to a draw.

Intentional loss to prejudice third-party rival

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A team may deliberately lose a match, giving a victory to the opposing team that damages a third-party rival. An example of this occurred in Sevilla, Spain, during the 1999–2000 La Liga. Sevilla FC were in last place and were already officially relegated. In their thirty-fifth match of the season (out of 38), Sevilla faced Real Oviedo of Asturias, which was itself fighting to avoid relegation. An Oviedo victory would put Sevilla's fierce cross-town rival, Real Betis, in the relegation zone. Sevilla performed poorly, while their fans showed support for Oviedo and expressed concern for missed scoring chances by the Asturian side. Oviedo defeated Sevilla 3–2, contributing to the eventual relegation of Betis.[36] Twelve years later, former Sevilla goalkeeper Frode Olsen admitted the team had lost intentionally in order to relegate Betis.[37]

Similarly, a National Football League (NFL) team has also been accused of throwing its final regular-season game in an attempt to keep a rival out of the playoffs. An alleged example of this was when the San Francisco 49ers, who had clinched a playoff berth, lost their regular-season finale in 1988 to the Los Angeles Rams, thereby knocking the New York Giants (who had defeated the 49ers in the playoffs in both 1985 and 1986, moreover injuring 49ers quarterback Joe Montana in the latter) out of the postseason on the intra-conference record tiebreaker; after the game, Giants quarterback Phil Simms angrily accused the 49ers of "laying down like dogs."[38][39][40]

Increased gate receipts

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In addition to the aforementioned incidents of alleged fixing of drawn matches to ensure replays, mutual fixes have sometimes been alleged in "best of X" knockout series where draws are either not possible or very uncommon. Early versions of baseball's World Series were a common target of such allegations. Because the players received a percentage of the gate receipts for postseason games (a privilege they did not enjoy in the regular season), there was a perception that the players had an incentive to fix an equal number of early games in favor of each team so as to ensure the series would run the maximum number of games (or very close thereto).

Partly as an effort to avoid this sort of controversy, early World Series sometimes saw all scheduled games played even if the Series winner was already determined. That did not prove satisfactory since few fans were willing to pay to watch lame duck contests. Eventually, following the controversy at the conclusion of the 1904 season in which the New York Giants boycotted the World Series in part because of dissatisfaction with the financial arrangements surrounding the Series, Major League Baseball agreed to a number of reforms proposed by Giants owner John T. Brush. Among other things, the so-called "Brush Rules" stipulated that the players would only receive a share of ticket revenue from the first four games, thus eliminating any financial incentive for the players to deliberately prolong the World Series.

Abuse of tie-breaking rules

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On several occasions, creative use of tie-breaking rules have allegedly led teams to play less than their best.

An example occurred in the 2004 European Football Championship. Unlike FIFA, UEFA takes the result of the game between the two tied teams (or in a three-way tie, the overall records of the games played with the teams in question only) into consideration before overall goal difference when ranking teams level on points. A situation arose in Group C where Sweden and Denmark played to a 2–2 draw, which was a sufficiently high scoreline to eliminate Italy (which had lower-scoring draws with the Swedes and Danes) regardless of Italy's result with already-eliminated Bulgaria. Although Italy beat Bulgaria by only one goal to finish level with Sweden and Denmark on five points and would hypothetically have been eliminated using the FIFA tie-breaker too, some Italian fans bitterly contended that the FIFA tie-breaker would have motivated their team to play harder and deterred their Scandinavian rivals from, in their view, at the very least half-heartedly playing out the match after the score became 2–2. The same situation happened to Italy in 2012, leading to many pre-game complaints from Italy, who many commentators suggested were right to be concerned because of their own extensive experience in this area.[41] However, Spain-Croatia ended in a 1–0 win for Spain, and the Italians went through.

The FIFA tie-breaker, or any goal-differential scheme, can cause problems, too. There have been incidents (especially in basketball) where players on a favored team have won the game but deliberately ensured the quoted point spread was not covered (see point shaving). Conversely, there are cases where a team not only lost (which might be honest) but lost by some large amount, perhaps to ensure a point spread was covered, or to grant some non-gambling related favor to the victor. Perhaps the most famous alleged example was the match between Argentina and Peru in the 1978 FIFA World Cup. Argentina needed a four-goal victory over Peru in order to advance over Brazil, a large margin at this level of competition, yet Argentina won 6–0. Much was made over possible political collusion,[42][43][44] that the Peruvian goalkeeper was born in Argentina, and that Peru was dependent on Argentinian grain shipments, but nothing was ever proven.[45]

Although the Denmark–Sweden game above led to calls for UEFA to adopt FIFA's tiebreaking formula for future tournaments, it is not clear if this solves the problem; the Argentina-Peru game shows a possible abuse of the FIFA tie-breaker. Proponents of the UEFA tie-breaker argue that it reduces the value of blow-outs, whether these be the result of a much stronger team running up the score or an already-eliminated side allowing an unusually large number of goals. Perhaps the most infamous incident occurred in December 1983 when Spain, needing to win by eleven goals to qualify for the Euro 1984 ahead of the Netherlands, defeated Malta by a score of 12–1 on the strength of nine second half goals. Especially in international football, such lopsided results are seen as unsavoury, even if they are honest. If anything, these incidents serves as evidence that the FIFA tie-breaker can cause incentives to perpetrate a fix in some circumstances, the UEFA tie-breaker in others.

Tie-breaking rules played the central role in one of cricket's more notorious matches. In a 1979 match in England's now-defunct Benson & Hedges Cup, a one-day league, Worcestershire hosted Somerset in the final group match for both sides. Going into that match, Somerset led their group with three wins from three matches, but would end in a three-way tie for the top spot if they lost to Worcestershire and Glamorgan defeated the then-winless Minor Counties South. In that event, the tie-breaker would be bowling strike rate. The Somerset players calculated that a large enough loss could see them miss the quarter-finals. Accordingly, Somerset captain Brian Rose determined that if Somerset batted first and declared their innings closed after one over, they would protect their strike rate advantage, assuring advancement to the quarter-finals. When Somerset won the toss, Rose implemented the plan, batting in the first partnership and declaring at the close of the first over after Somerset scored only one run on a no-ball. Worcestershire won during their second over. Rose's strategy, although not against the letter of the rules, was condemned by media and cricket officials, and the Test and County Cricket Board (predecessor to the current England and Wales Cricket Board) voted to expel Somerset from that season's competition.

Prize sharing

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A player can concede with the understanding that the opponent will share the prize equally with him or her. Depending on the game, this can lead to disqualification.[46]

Protest action

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On occasion, teams tank games as a protest against actions in earlier games. The most lopsided professional football match in history, AS Adema 149–0 SO l'Emyrne, was a result of SO l'Emyrne intentionally losing the game in protest against the referee's action in a previous game.

Conflicts of interest

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Sometimes, match fixing may simply be motivated by ownership having controlling interests in two or more teams. In such circumstances, there is often incentive for the common owners' poorer team to deliberately lose to a championship contender, or at least to make roster and/or coaching decisions that increase the contenders' chances of winning.

Such collusion is often not limited to individual games, rather, owners may deliberately try to transfer all of their best players to the more lucrative team. A particularly notorious example occurred in the 1899 Major League Baseball season when the owners of the Cleveland Spiders bought a more profitable team, the St. Louis Perfectos, and brazenly traded Cleveland's best players to St. Louis. The Spiders finished the season 20–134 (by far the worst record in MLB history) and were contracted after the season.

Modern major sports leagues usually prohibit such ownership arrangements. Where it is necessary or desirable for a single ownership group to control two teams, salary caps often limit the ability of owners to stack one roster at the expense of another. Typically, to forestall so much as any perception of impropriety, such teams will be prohibited from trading directly with each other and any head-to-head match(es) will usually be scheduled early in the season to ensure there are no obvious championship and/or playoff implications. An example of this arrangement occurred in the early 21st century in the Canadian Football League; between 2010 and 2015, the BC Lions and the Toronto Argonauts were owned by the same person.

Individual performance in team sports

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Bookmakers in the early 21st century accept bets on a far wider range of sports-related propositions than ever before. Thus, a gambling-motivated fix might not necessarily involve any direct attempt to influence the outright result, especially in team sports in which such a fix would require the co-operation (and prerequisitely the knowledge) of many people and/or perhaps would be more likely to arouse suspicion. Fixing the result of a more-particular proposition might be seen as less likely to be noticed. For example, the disgraced former National Basketball Association referee Tim Donaghy has been alleged to have perpetrated some of his fixes by calling games in such a manner as to ensure more points than expected were scored by both teams, thus affecting "over-under" bets on the games whilst also ensuring that Donaghy at least did not look to be outright biased. Also, bets are increasingly being taken on individual performances in team sporting events, which, in turn, has seen the rise of a phenomenon known as spot fixing although it is now unlikely that enough is bet on average players to allow someone to place a substantial wager on them without being noticed.

One such attempt was described by retired footballer Matthew Le Tissier, who in 2009 admitted that while he was playing with Southampton FC back in 1995, he tried (and failed) to kick the ball out of play right after the kick-off of a Premier League match against Wimbledon FC so that a group of associates would collect on a wager made on an early throw-in.[47] Likewise, a tennis pro was paid to make sure she lost her first service game. She was free to play normally for the rest of the match.[9]

Similarly, in 2010, Pakistani cricket players were accused of committing specific no-ball penalties for the benefit of gamblers.[48] The scandal centred on three Pakistani players accepting bribes from a bookmaker, Mazhar Majeed, during the Lord's test match against England. Following investigations by the News of the World and Scotland Yard, on 1 November 2011, Majeed, Pakistan's captain, Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir were found guilty of conspiracy to cheat at gambling and to accept corrupt payments. As a result, all three of the players were banned by the International Cricket Council (ICC): Butt for ten years, Asif for seven and Amir for five.[49] On 3 November 2011, jail terms were handed down of 30 months for Butt, one year for Asif, six months for Amir and two years eight months for Majeed.[50]

Effect of non-gambling-motivated fixing on wagering

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Whenever any serious motivation for teams to manipulate results becomes apparent to the general public, there can be a corresponding effect on betting markets as honest gamblers speculate in good faith as to the chance such a fix might be attempted. Some bettors might choose to avoid wagering on such a fixture while others will be motivated to wager on it, or alter the bet they would otherwise place. Such actions will invariably affect odds and point spreads even if there is no contact whatsoever between teams and the relevant gambling interests. The rise of betting exchanges has allowed such speculation to play out in real time.

History

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Evidence of match fixing has been found throughout recorded history,[51] and the history of match fixing is closely related to the history of illegal gambling.[52]

The ancient Olympic Games were almost constantly dealing with allegations of athletes accepting bribes to lose a competition[53] and city-states which often tried to manipulate the outcome with large amounts of money. These activities went on despite the oath each athlete took to protect the integrity of the events and the severe punishment sometimes inflicted on those who were caught. Chariot racing was also dogged by race fixing throughout its history.

By the end of the 19th century gambling was illegal in most jurisdictions, but that did not stop its widespread practice. Boxing soon became rife with fighters "taking a dive", likely due to boxing being a sport involving individual competitors, which makes its matches much easier to fix without getting caught. Baseball also became plagued by match fixing despite efforts by the National League to stop gambling at its games. Matters finally came to a head in 1919 when eight members of the Chicago White Sox threw the World Series. In an effort to restore confidence, Major League Baseball established the office of the Commissioner of Baseball, and one of Kenesaw Mountain Landis's first acts was to ban all involved players for life.

MLB Rule 21 prohibits players from participating in any form of betting on baseball games, and a lifetime ban for betting on a player's own games. A poster with Rule 21 must be posted on all professional baseball clubhouses.

In the 1990s, match fixing in Asia was especially common. In Malaysia, authorities suggested that 70% of football matches were being manipulated, and corruption scandals in China resulted in gamblers choosing to bet on overseas matches.[52]

Japan

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Yaochō (八百長) is a Japanese word meaning a cheating activity which is committed at places where a match, fight, game, competition, or other contest, is held, where the winner and loser are decided in advance by agreement of the competitors or related people. It is believed that the word Yaocho came from the name ("Chobei") of the owner of a vegetable stand (yaoya) during the Meiji period. Created from the first syllable of Yaoya and chobei, the word yaocho was created as a nickname for Chobei. Chobei had a friend called "Isenoumi Godayu" (7th Isenoumi stablemaster) with whom he played the game Igo, who had once been a sumo wrestler "Kashiwado Sogoro" (former shikona: "Kyonosato") and now was a "toshiyori" (a stablemaster of sumo). Although Chobei was a better Igo player than Isenoumi, he sometimes lost games on purpose to please Isenoumi so that Isenoumi would continue to buy merchandise from his shop. Afterward, once people knew of his cheating, they started to use yaocho as a word meaning any decision to win/lose a match in advance by negotiation etc. with the expectation of secondary profit, even though the match seems to be held seriously and fairly.

Economists using statistical analysis have shown very strong evidence of bout fixing in sumo wrestling.[54] Most of the motive for match fixing is helping each other's ranking to keep their salary higher, according to Keisuke Itai. For example, wrestlers in jūryō (the second tier) desperately try to avoid finishing the tournament with a losing record (7–8 or worse) and exchange or buy the match result, or their salary would be nothing, 0 yen, with the participation wage of 150,000 yen every two months if they finish the tournament with a losing record, and their ranking would go down to makushita (third level) and only participate in seven matches, the lesser ranking from jūryō in which one can earn 1,036,000 yen monthly with some prizes and a full 15-match tournament.

The sumo association appears to make a distinction between yaocho (the payment of money to secure a result) and koi-ni-yatta mukiryoku zumo (the deliberate performance of underpowered sumo in which an opponent simply lays a match down without exchange of money). The intricacies of Japanese culture, which include subordination of individual gain to the greater good and knowing how to read a situation without the exchange of words (I know my opponent's score, he needs help, and I should automatically give it to him) mean that the latter is almost readily accepted in the sumo world and is also nearly impossible to prove.[55]

Cricket

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Some of the most notorious instances of match fixing have been observed in international cricket. In 2000 the Delhi police intercepted a conversation between a blacklisted bookie and the South African cricket captain Hansie Cronje in which they learnt that Cronje accepted money to throw matches. A court of inquiry was set up and Cronje admitted to throwing matches. He was immediately banned from all cricket. He also named Saleem Malik (Pakistan), Mohammed Azharuddin and Ajay Jadeja (India) as fellow match fixers. Jadeja was banned for 4 years. Although Cronje was a kingpin of betting, following untimely death in 2002 most of his fixing partners escaped law enforcement agencies. Earlier in 1998, Australian players Mark Waugh and Shane Warne were fined for revealing information about the 'weather' to a bookmaker.

The fourth Test of Pakistan's summer 2010 cricket tour of England contained several incidents of spot fixing, involving members of Pakistan team deliberately bowling no-balls at specific points to facilitate betting through bookmakers.[56] Following investigation, three Pakistani players were banned from cricket and sentenced to prison terms.[50] Similarly, in Indian Premier League in 2013, S. Sreesanth and two other players were banned by the Board of Control for Cricket in India for alleged match fixing.[57] Sreesanth's ban was briefly lifted, but the Kerala High Court upheld the ban in 2017.[58]

In July 2017, ex-Sri Lanka cricket captain Arjuna Ranatunga alleged that the 2011 Cricket World Cup Final match between India and Sri Lanka had been fixed. The investigation was dropped by Sri Lankan authorities and the International Cricket Council in 2020 due to a lack of evidence.[59][60][61]

In July 2022, it was reported that local authorities had shut down an operation in Gujarat, India, that had been running a fictitious, kayfabe version of the Indian Premier League in an attempt to scam Russian sports betters. The matches took place on a field with floodlights, with players dressed in replica jerseys of real IPL teams; based on bets received on a Telegram channel, umpires instructed the players and "referees" to perform specific plays and calls. Broadcasts of the "matches" were streamed on YouTube, and utilized artificial crowd noise, a sound-alike of cricket commentator Harsha Bhogle, and camera angles that never showed clear shots of the pitch, players, or deliveries. The participating players were paid 400 rupees per-game, and the operation was estimated to have scammed punters out of 300,000 rupees before it was shut down by police. The actual 2022 Indian Premier League had already concluded at the end of May.[62]

Association football

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In 2006, the European football powerhouse Juventus FC drew a match against minnows Rimini in a fixed encounter. Following investigation, Juventus Manager Luciano Moggi, Italian Football President Franco Carraro, and Vice-president Innocenzo Mazzini had to resign.[63] In 2010, several Korean footballers were punished by FIFA with a lifelong ban from all sports for fixing several matches in the Korean League Cup. During the subsequent investigation, many top Korean players were also found to be involved in match fixing after the initial discovery.[64]

Professional wrestling

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In professional wrestling, most matches have predetermined results; however, as it is an open secret that professional wrestling is staged, it is not considered match fixing.

Up until the 1920s, professional wrestling was considered a legitimate sport. This did not endure as professional wrestling became identified with modern theatrics or admitted fakery, moving away from actual competition. The "worked", known as "kayfabe" nature of wrestling led critics to deem it an illegitimate sport, particularly in comparison to boxing, amateur wrestling, and, more recently, mixed martial arts.

Many individuals began to doubt the legitimacy of wrestling after the retirement of Frank Gotch in 1913.[65] As wrestling's popularity was diving around the same time that Major League Baseball had its own legitimacy issues, wrestling started to take on a more worked approach while still appearing as a legitimate sport, beginning with the Gold Dust Trio of the 1920s.[65] Even after the formation of the National Wrestling Alliance in 1948, wrestling continued to have legitimacy issues.

Nevertheless, wrestling was still regulated by state athletic commissions in the United States well into the 1980s, until Vince McMahon, owner of the World Wrestling Federation, convinced the state of New Jersey in 1989 that wrestling was considered a form of entertainment (or "sports entertainment", as McMahon used) rather than as a legitimate sport, and that it should not be regulated by state athletic commissions.[66] The move was seen as more of a relief to those who had questioned wrestling's legitimacy, since at least one major company (in this case, the WWF) was now publicly willing to admit that wrestling was staged; however, the move did anger many wrestling purists.[66]

Due to the lingering legitimacy issues that surrounded wrestling from the 1910s until the 1980s, gambling was generally not allowed on wrestling matches while it was still considered a legitimate sport. Despite wrestling having openly acknowledged that the results are predetermined for years, since the late 2000s gambling has increased on wrestling events, though the maximum bets are kept low due to the matches being predetermined.[67][68] By contrast, when the WWF co-founded an American football league with NBC known as the XFL (which played for a single season in 2001), the league had to emphasize that its games were not staged in this manner (despite drawing upon wrestling, and in particular the WWF's "Attitude Era", in its overall image and presentation), and specifically promoted the willingness of Las Vegas bookmakers to take wagers on the games as evidence of its legitimacy.[69][70]

Quiz shows

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In the 1950s, the producers of several televised quiz shows in the United States were found to have engaged in match fixing, as part of an effort to boost viewer interest and ratings. Geritol, the sponsor of the new quiz show Twenty-One, showed concerns over the poor performance of its early contestants—which they felt were causing the show to trail behind its main competitor, The $64,000 Question. At the time, the majority of television programs were effectively controlled by their single sponsors, with broadcasters only providing studios and airtime. Geritol demanded that Barry & Enright Productions make changes to the show, which included the outright choreography of contestants around predetermined outcomes.[71][72]

The most infamous example of this strategy came when champion Herbert Stempel was to be replaced by Charles Van Doren—a Columbia University English teacher whom the producers felt would be more popular with viewers.[72][73] On Twenty-One, winners of matches received $500 for every point within their margin of victory, but this pot increased by $500 after every tie game. To build anticipation for the episode where Van Doren would defeat Stempel, the first episode of their match was played to three tie games; this meant that the next game would be played for $2,000 per-point.[72] After one more tie game, Stempel threw the match to Van Doren by answering specific questions incorrectly. Among them, he incorrectly guessed that On the Waterfront was the winner of the Best Picture award at the 28th Academy Awards. The correct answer was Marty, which was also one of Stempel's favorite films.[72][73]

The cancellation of the competing quiz Dotto under similar allegations prompted a U.S. government investigation into both it and Twenty-One. The investigation similarly revealed that Revlon—the sponsor of The $64,000 Question—had instructed the show's producers to balance its questions more favorably towards contestants they felt would be more popular among viewers (although it stopped short of outright rigging games to the same extent as Twenty-One). The scandal resulted in regulations being implemented to prohibit the rigging of game shows and other contests by broadcasters.[72][73][74][75]

Esports

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Match fixing controversies have also emerged in Esports, including in particular Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, Dota 2, League of Legends, Overwatch, Paladins, and StarCraft. Major scandals have included those of the iBuyPower and NetcodeGuides.com Counter-Strike teams, where it was found that the iBuyPower team had received around $10,000 worth of items via skin gambling—the practice of wagering CS:GO weapon skins in a similar manner to sports betting, based on real-world market values on Steam's Community Market—after they threw matches in a major tournament. South Korean StarCraft II player Life was also convicted of having partaken in match fixing.[76][77]

Dota 2 matchfixing is most prominent in Chinese and SEA regions. Rustam "Adekvat" Mavliutov attributes this to a more complex structures with enough players of different skill:

Why does it happen more often in Asia? In my opinion - where there is more structuring in the environment, where the whole cyber sports part is better structured, specific tier-divisions are identified, a huge number of tournaments and leagues are built on this structure, then the appearance of 322-matches is most possible. This structure implies the participation of bookmakers, the presence of large prize money, investors and so on. Where there is money, there will be matchfixing. Roughly speaking, if we know for sure that in China there is the first, second league and the third division, about which less is known, but some teams also play there, we understand that there will naturally be rigged matches there. We have less of this, because we have fewer leagues. We don't have a clear structure of tiers. We won't be able to put together a league with twelve tier-2 teams. You can do that in China. More teams, bigger organisations, the percentage of rigged matches is also higher, that's a fact.[78]

Protection against manipulation

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By monitoring the pre-match betting markets it is sometimes possible to detect planned match fixing. It is also possible to detect on-going match manipulation by looking at the in-game betting markets. Several federations have employed services that provide such systems for detecting match manipulation.[4] Prior to the 2016 MLB season, Major League Baseball (MLB) hired Genius Sports, a sports technology company specialising in integrity, to monitor the betting patterns on all of their games.[79] In addition, Interpol monitors and publishes major developments in match-fixing and corruption in sports around the world.[80]

In addition, several federations run integrity tours where players and officials participate in educational workshops on how match fixing work and how they are prevented.[81]

See also

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References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Match fixing, also known as manipulation, refers to the deliberate and illicit influencing or predetermining of a sports event's outcome, course, or specific elements—such as scores, timings, or player performances—through actions like , threats, or underperformance, primarily to secure financial profits from betting or other ulterior motives. This practice violates core principles of sporting by eroding the inherent uncertainty of , which underpins public trust and participation in . Common methods include (manipulating isolated incidents within a match, like the number of corners or yellow cards) and full-result fixing, often orchestrated by networks that exploit legalized betting markets to launder proceeds with minimal detection risk. These schemes frequently target lower-tier or financially vulnerable competitions where oversight is weaker, though levels are not immune, as evidenced by anomalous betting patterns that signal manipulation. Empirical data underscore its prevalence: surveys of elite athletes indicate that approximately 8% have been solicited to participate in fixing, with around 7.5% admitting involvement in some form of manipulation during their careers, particularly in Olympic disciplines. Over half of documented cases link directly to betting , amplifying economic harms through distorted markets and long-term erosion of spectator engagement. Detection relies on statistical anomalies, whistleblower reports, and international cooperation, yet underreporting and jurisdictional challenges persist, rendering it a persistent threat to global sports governance.

Definition and Forms

Match fixing constitutes the intentional manipulation of the outcome or specific elements of a sports competition—such as the final score, number of goals, or occurrence of particular events like yellow cards—to achieve a predetermined result, typically through illicit agreements, , threats, or other forms of . This practice violates the fundamental principles of fair play and competitive integrity inherent to organized sports, distinguishing it from legitimate strategic decisions by introducing external, non-sporting factors that predetermine events rather than allowing outcomes to emerge from participants' genuine efforts. Legally, match fixing is prohibited by the statutes of major international sports governing bodies, including , which defines it as an "unlawful influencing or alteration" of a sports event and imposes sanctions such as lifetime bans, and the , which classifies it as a breach of the subject to expulsion or ineligibility. Nationally, it is criminalized as a form of , , or in numerous jurisdictions, often linked to proceeds estimated at €120 million annually from betting-related manipulations according to Europol's 2021 Serious and Organised Crime Threat Assessment. For instance, Italy's Law No. 401/1989 establishes criminal liability for offering or promising benefits to sports participants to alter results, with penalties including fines and imprisonment. Similarly, imposes up to five years' imprisonment and fines of S$100,000 per offense under its Prevention of Corruption Act and related provisions. At the international level, the Council of Europe's Convention on the Manipulation of Sports Competitions (Macolin Convention), opened for signature in 2014, mandates criminalization of match fixing through harmonized legal frameworks, requiring signatory states to prosecute intentional arrangements or omissions altering competition outcomes for improper advantage. As of 2024, the convention has been ratified by over 50 states, primarily in Europe, facilitating cross-border cooperation via bodies like Interpol, which treats match fixing as organized crime enabling money laundering with minimal detection risks. In jurisdictions without sport-specific statutes, such as parts of the United States, it is prosecuted under general fraud laws like wire fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1343) when involving interstate betting schemes, though enforcement varies and often relies on federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act applications for syndicate involvement. Despite these measures, global uniformity remains incomplete, with some countries addressing it primarily through civil or administrative sports penalties rather than criminal law, contributing to ongoing challenges in enforcement against transnational networks.

Types of Match Fixing

Match fixing encompasses several distinct forms, differentiated primarily by the extent and nature of the manipulation involved in altering a sporting event's outcome or elements thereof. The most prevalent type is outcome fixing, where participants deliberately ensure a predetermined result, such as a win, loss, or draw, often to profit from bets on the overall match result. This form has been documented across sports like football and , where syndicates influence teams to underperform entirely. A subset and increasingly common variant is spot-fixing, which targets specific, isolated incidents within a match rather than the final score, such as conceding a certain number of corners in football, bowling a in , or receiving a yellow card. Spot-fixing exploits granular betting markets that allow wagers on micro-events, making detection harder as the overall contest may appear competitive. Notable instances include the 2010 Pakistan scandal, where players fixed no-balls for betting purposes, leading to bans by the . Point shaving represents another key type, particularly in sports with point spreads like , where the favored team intentionally limits its margin of victory to affect betting outcomes while still winning. This manipulation ensures the game fails to "cover the spread," enabling fixers to profit without altering the apparent winner. Historical cases, such as the 1951 City College of New York scandal involving multiple players and games, illustrate its prevalence in U.S. , often tied to organized rings. Match fixing fundamentally involves the deliberate manipulation of a sporting event's overall outcome, typically through among participants and often driven by external incentives like gambling syndicates, whereas targets isolated incidents within the event—such as the number of runs scored in an over in or the timing of a yellow card in soccer—without necessarily altering the final result. This distinction matters because exploits granular betting markets that allow wagers on micro-events, enabling manipulators to profit while maintaining regarding the match's end result, as evidenced in the 2010 scandal where players fixed specific no-balls for betting purposes without throwing the game. In contrast to tanking, where teams or athletes intentionally underperform to secure advantages like higher draft picks in league systems (e.g., NBA teams losing games late in the season to improve lottery odds), match fixing usually entails external corruption, such as bribes from , rather than internal strategic decisions aligned with league rules or incentives. Tanking, while ethically contentious and sometimes penalized (as in the NBA's 2018-2019 reforms introducing play-in tournaments to deter it), does not inherently involve third-party financial inducements or betting manipulation, preserving a degree of absent in match fixing's transnational criminal networks. Doping, the use of prohibited substances or methods to enhance performance, differs from match fixing by aiming to gain an unfair edge toward victory rather than predetermining or subverting the outcome, often through individual or team efforts independent of external payers. Unlike match fixing's focus on orchestrated losses or draws for profit, doping correlates with winning incentives and is policed via biological testing protocols, as seen in the World Anti-Doping Agency's enforcement yielding over 2,000 sanctions annually by 2022, whereas match fixing detection relies more on betting pattern anomalies and whistleblower reports. Other related manipulations, such as referee bias or equipment tampering (e.g., the 2015 scandal involving biased officiating for competitive edges), may erode fairness but lack match fixing's hallmark of coordinated, outcome-determinative agreements with outsiders, often stemming from internal pressures rather than illicit markets estimated to handle $150 billion in fixed-event bets yearly. These distinctions underscore match fixing's unique threat via integration, prompting specialized bodies like Interpol's Integrity in Sport program to prioritize it over isolated cheating forms.

Motivations and Incentives

Gambling and Direct Financial Gains

constitutes a primary motivation for match fixing, as participants manipulate outcomes to secure profits from wagers placed on predetermined results, often through illegal betting markets that offer higher and compared to regulated platforms. Fixers, including players, coaches, referees, or organized syndicates, exploit insider knowledge to bet large sums via offshore operators, primarily in , where unregulated markets facilitate billions in annual turnover vulnerable to . This yields direct financial gains, with global criminal proceeds from betting-related match fixing estimated at €120 million annually, underscoring the scale of economic incentives driving such activities. Organized crime groups frequently orchestrate these schemes, recruiting vulnerable individuals with bribes ranging from thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars, then coordinating bets across networks to maximize returns while minimizing detection risks. In football, a 2013 Europol investigation uncovered 680 suspected fixed matches across Europe since 2008, involving 425 players, officials, and criminals, which generated over €8 million in betting profits and implicated transactions exceeding €2 million in suspicious wagers. These operations often target lower-tier leagues or non-elite competitions where oversight is weaker, allowing syndicates to exploit discrepancies in betting patterns for compounded gains. Cricket provides notable examples of gambling-driven fixing, as seen in the 2000 scandal involving South African captain , who accepted bribes from Indian bookmakers, including an offer of $250,000 to influence match outcomes during a series against . confessed on April 7, 2000, following interception of phone records, revealing his role in fixing one-day internationals for direct payments totaling over $100,000, which led to his lifetime ban and implicated several teammates. Such cases highlight how personal financial desperation or among key figures enables syndicates to infiltrate teams, with betting markets amplifying profits through manipulated results like underperformance or specific scorelines. The proliferation of online betting has intensified these incentives, enabling rapid placement of high-volume bets and complicating regulatory efforts, though empirical data links the majority of detected fixes—estimated at 300 to 700 events yearly—to syndicates rather than isolated actors. In response, bodies like monitor betting anomalies, but the underlying causal driver remains the disparity between low athlete salaries in certain regions and the lucrative returns from fixed wagers, perpetuating a cycle of .

Competitive and Strategic Advantages

Match fixing for competitive advantages involves manipulating match outcomes to influence broader tournament structures, such as league standings, promotion/relegation battles, or playoff qualifications, without primary reliance on betting markets. This form prioritizes long-term positional benefits, like maintaining elite-tier status to access higher revenues, better talent pools, or favorable seeding against weaker opponents. Unlike gambling-driven fixes, these manipulations often entail internal inducements, such as bribes to or officials, to ensure specific results that cascade through standings; for example, a team on the cusp of relegation might pay an opponent to underperform, thereby preserving points gaps with direct competitors. A documented case occurred in Spanish football during the season, where faced relegation threats alongside clubs like and Deportivo La Coruña. Investigations revealed Osasuna allegedly paid €420,000 to to defeat Levante 2–0 on the final day, a result that denied Levante points and indirectly aided Osasuna's survival by widening the gap to the drop zone; Osasuna finished 18th but avoided immediate relegation, later receiving a points deduction and drop to in 2017 due to the scandal. This incident, adjudicated by Spanish authorities and the Royal Spanish Football Federation, underscored how clubs risk corruption to sustain competitive viability, as relegation can cost millions in broadcast and sponsorship income. In tournament formats, strategic fixing targets group-stage or qualification outcomes to engineer easier paths forward, such as colluding to eliminate stronger rivals early. Association football examples include rumored pacts in European competitions where mid-table clubs underperform against each other to control Champions League spots for affiliated teams, though prosecutions remain rare due to evidentiary challenges. These tactics erode merit-based competition, prompting regulators like to impose stricter monitoring of anomalous results in interconnected fixtures.

Institutional and Non-Monetary Factors

Institutional weaknesses within governing bodies and clubs often create environments conducive to match-fixing by prioritizing competitive outcomes over enforcement. Weak structures, including inadequate oversight, conflicts of interest, and insufficient transparency in club financing, enable manipulation as organizations may overlook irregularities to safeguard reputations or financial stability. For instance, the Office on Drugs and Crime highlights how low prioritization of match-fixing by sports federations and , coupled with opaque ownership, allows organized influences to infiltrate vulnerable clubs. Similarly, reports on and note that reliance on volunteers, precarious contracts, and poor heighten susceptibility, as under-resourced structures fail to implement programs or monitor unbetting matches effectively. Non-monetary incentives frequently stem from pressures to secure institutional survival or strategic positioning, such as avoiding relegation or optimizing tournament draws. In football, clubs have manipulated results to escape demotion, which preserves league status and associated prestige without direct financial transactions; the identifies such "sporting motivations" as involving qualification for higher competitions or averting drop to lower divisions. A notable case occurred in the 2006 Italian scandal, where Juventus and other teams influenced referee assignments to accumulate points for title contention and relegation avoidance, driven by competitive imperatives rather than immediate betting gains. Likewise, the 2012 London Olympics badminton controversy saw players from , , and deliberately underperform in group stages to sidestep top-seeded opponents, prioritizing easier paths to medals over ethical play. Athletes and officials may also engage in fixing due to fears of career or institutional loyalty, where anticipated or failure to meet performance expectations overrides constraints. Studies on athletes reveal voluntary participation linked to preemptive concerns over post-career instability or inability to sustain lifestyles, fostering amid power imbalances within teams. In cases like the 2004 FK Pobeda scandal, a Macedonian club's president ordered fixes in qualifiers not solely for funds but to bolster the institution's viability amid operational distress, illustrating how survival imperatives intersect with weak internal controls. These factors underscore that while financial lures dominate, institutional pressures and non-pecuniary stakes—such as prestige, , and hierarchical demands—perpetuate fixing by framing it as a rational response to systemic vulnerabilities.

Methods of Execution

Player and Team-Level Manipulation

Player and team-level manipulation in match fixing refers to the deliberate alteration of on-field performance by individual athletes or coordinated groups within a to influence the outcome or specific elements of a contest, typically to profit from betting markets. This form contrasts with external interference by officials or organizers, focusing instead on insiders who control execution through subtle or overt errors. Such actions exploit the athletes' direct agency over play, making detection challenging as anomalies can mimic natural variance. Common techniques include , where players ensure a but limit the margin to undercut betting spreads; , targeting isolated incidents like intentionally conceding a , earning a yellow card, or executing a specific play such as a in ; and outright tanking, involving sustained sub-par effort to secure a loss. In team contexts, manipulation may entail collective agreements among squad members to underperform, as seen in coordinated efforts to throw entire games. Players are often approached by intermediaries offering bribes, with vulnerabilities like low pay or financial distress increasing susceptibility. Notable cases illustrate these methods across sports. In cricket, South African captain accepted payments from an Indian betting syndicate in March 2000 to fix one-day internationals against India, instructing teammates like to underperform in batting; Cronje received approximately $100,000 and was banned for life by the . In baseball, eight Chicago White Sox players, including pitcher and outfielder "Shoeless" Joe Jackson, conspired with gamblers in 1919 to lose the to the , receiving bribes totaling up to $10,000 per player despite the team's talent; all were acquitted in a 1921 trial but permanently banned by Commissioner . In association football, South Korean player Choi Sung-kuk was banned for life by in 2010 after admitting to accepting bribes to manipulate K-League matches through deliberate underperformance. Team-level tanking appeared in badminton at the 2012 London Olympics, where eight players from , , and were disqualified for intentionally losing group matches to secure easier knockout draws, prioritizing bracket manipulation over competition integrity. These incidents highlight how player-driven fixes undermine sport's competitive foundation, often linked to organized betting networks.

Official and Referee Involvement

Referees involved in match fixing typically manipulate outcomes through biased calls, such as issuing unwarranted penalties, fouls, or dismissals to favor one team, often motivated by bribes from gamblers or organized syndicates. In , former NBA referee bet on games he officiated from 2005 to 2007, providing insider information on officiating tendencies to gamblers and influencing calls to align with wagers, which led to his guilty plea on August 15, 2007, to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and transmitting betting information across state lines. Donaghy's actions affected at least 10 playoff games, including influencing foul calls to sway point spreads, as detailed in federal investigations revealing payments of up to $75,000 from associates. In , referee corruption often intersects with club officials who pressure or bribe for favorable appointments. The 2006 Calciopoli scandal in exposed how Juventus general manager and other executives influenced the Italian Football Federation's referee designators, such as Pierluigi Pairetto and Paolo Bergamo, to assign sympathetic referees to key matches during the 2004-05 and 2005-06 seasons, resulting in Juventus' relegation to and stripped titles on July 14, 2006. Referees like received a one-year for in the scheme, which involved wiretapped conversations confirming rigged selections rather than direct on-field fixing. Higher-level officials enable fixing by controlling referee pools or overlooking anomalies. In Germany, referee Robert Hoyzer fixed at least 17 matches in the and from 2004 to 2005 by awarding phantom penalties and influencing outcomes for bribes totaling €70,000 from Croatian gambling syndicates, leading to his lifetime ban by the in July 2005. Brazilian referee Edílson Pereira de Carvalho manipulated results in the 2005 Brazilian Championship, including the final between Corinthians and Internacional on December 15, 2005, via questionable decisions for payments linked to betting rings, as exposed by investigative reporting. FIFA has addressed international cases, banning former Ibrahim Chaibou for life on January 24, 2019, after he accepted $100,000 in bribes to fix exhibition matches in the South Pacific in May 2010 and attempted to solicit funds for influencing qualifiers. In , four Malawian referees—Aziz Nyirenda, Limbani Chisambi, Stephano Gomani, and Jimmy Phiri—were banned for life on September 26, 2017, for attempting to fix a 2017 preliminary match between Silver Strikers and DC Akademik City by pre-arranging a 1-0 result. These incidents highlight referees' leverage in low-visibility decisions and officials' role in systemic vulnerabilities, often detected via betting irregularities or whistleblower tips rather than on-field reviews alone.

External and Organized Crime Tactics

Organized crime groups (OCGs) primarily engage in match-fixing through transnational networks that exploit vulnerabilities in lower-tier competitions, where participants often receive modest compensation and face limited oversight. These syndicates, frequently originating from or , deploy specialized "runners" or intermediaries—often former athletes sharing cultural or national ties with targets—to identify and approach players, coaches, or referees susceptible to influence due to financial distress, family obligations, or debts. This recruitment favors , such as manipulating specific events like double faults in or over/under goals in football, over outright match outcomes, as it minimizes detection risk while enabling precise betting exploitation. Execution follows a hierarchical structure: leaders provide funding and strategic direction, while mid-level coordinators handle logistics, including encrypted communications and signal-based coordination during events to trigger fixed actions without direct oversight. tactics, including threats of violence or via gathered personal intelligence, supplement initial bribes, ensuring compliance even from reluctant participants; for instance, Eurasian OCGs manipulated approximately 500 matches between 2014 and 2018 by pressuring players through such means. Remote operations predominate, with syndicates avoiding physical presence by routing instructions through proxies, as seen in Malaysian groups influencing Australian via intermediaries who bribed players for micro-manipulations like deliberate no-balls. International amplifies reach, with European fixes often executed to feed bets into high-liquidity Asian markets, where anonymity facilitates large-volume wagering. Profits derive from disproportionate bets placed via mule accounts, fake identities, and e-wallets on unregulated platforms, yielding estimated annual proceeds of €120 million from online betting alone, with tactics evolving to include VPNs for evasion and "ghost matches" in unmonitored settings. Laundering integrates fixed outcomes into broader criminal enterprises, such as acquiring distressed sports clubs for sustained influence or channeling gains through legal betting operators. Asian syndicates, controlling about 65% of global betting turnover, exemplify this by orchestrating fixes in European lower leagues for export to illegal markets in or , as evidenced in operations dismantled by in 2023 involving Spanish networks and manipulations. These methods underscore match-fixing's low-risk profile for OCGs, blending it with and fraud while evading fragmented jurisdictional enforcement.

Detection and Investigation Techniques

Betting Market Anomalies

Betting market anomalies serve as a primary indicator for detecting potential match-fixing by revealing discrepancies between expected and observed wagering behaviors. These irregularities typically include abrupt surges in betting volume on improbable outcomes, unexplained drifts—such as a favorite's lengthening significantly without reports or other public developments—and disproportionate late-stage wagers that skew market lines. Such patterns arise because fixers, possessing advance knowledge of manipulated events, place coordinated bets to maximize returns, often through networks exploiting both legal and illegal markets. Integrity units, including private firms like , employ real-time analysis of global betting data from licensed operators to flag these anomalies. By cross-referencing volume spikes against historical benchmarks, player form, and contextual factors, algorithms detect signals like elevated activity on niche markets (e.g., yellow cards or first-half goals) that correlate poorly with overall match expectations. In 2023, issued alerts on 1,329 suspicious matches across 90 sports, primarily in football and , where betting volumes exceeded norms by factors of 10 or more in affected markets. These alerts trigger investigations, often shared via platforms like the Integrity Exchange or Europol's networks, leading to forensic reviews of transaction timestamps and IP origins. Machine learning enhances precision by modeling baseline market efficiency and isolating outliers; for instance, deep learning frameworks trained on historical odds data from leagues like South Korea's K-League have achieved high accuracy in classifying anomalous pre-match betting as potential fixing precursors. Europol's analyses of betting patterns have similarly uncovered organized crime links, as in operations targeting lower-tier European football where irregular wagers on halftime results prompted raids yielding convictions. However, false positives occur from legitimate arbitrage or misinformation-driven bets, necessitating corroboration with performance data; conversely, anomalies in unregulated Asian markets—estimated to handle 80-90% of global sports wagers—evade detection, underscoring monitoring gaps.
Type of AnomalyDescriptionExample Detection Trigger
Volume SurgeUnusually high bets on low-probability events10x normal volume on a underdog in a lower-tier tournament, as flagged by in 2022 alerts exceeding 1,200 cases.
Odds MovementRapid line shifts without newsFavorite's doubling in football's first half market, linked to yellow card fixing syndicates.
Pattern ClusteringCoordinated bets from multiple accountsGeographic bet clusters on spot events like no-balls in , correlating with IPL investigations.
This approach's efficacy is evidenced by a reported decline in detected incidents to under 1,000 in , attributed to proactive alerts disrupting schemes pre-event, though underreporting in non-monitored jurisdictions persists.

Statistical and Performance Analysis

Statistical analysis of match outcomes and in-game events forms a of match-fixing detection by identifying deviations from probabilistic expectations derived from historical data, team form, and player abilities. Predictive models, such as Poisson or bivariate Poisson regressions for football goal tallies, estimate baseline probabilities for scores, /fulltime results, or specific incidents like corners and cards; anomalies arise when observed frequencies exceed thresholds, such as a 1% probability of occurrence, prompting further . In , similar approaches model serve-hold percentages against opponent rankings, flagging matches where top players concede breaks at rates incompatible with prior performance, as seen in empirical monitoring of ATP tours where suspicious patterns correlated with 67% of investigated betting alerts. Performance metrics at the player and team levels provide granular indicators, often revealing subtle manipulations like of non-outcome events. In football, tracking data from optical systems or GPS devices quantify effort proxies—such as total distance covered, high-intensity sprints, or accelerations—which drop markedly in fixed scenarios without or explanations; for instance, positional x-y coordinates yield metrics like pass accuracy and shot creation rates that diverge from norms in manipulated . Studies confirm these anomalies in empirical datasets, where fixed teams exhibit reduced pressing intensity or unnatural clustering of defensive lapses, distinguishable via multivariate detection. Conformal anomaly detectors, applied to seasonal result sequences, further isolate nonconforming by comparing them against league-wide distributions, achieving detection in simulated fixing scenarios with high specificity when tuned to entire cycles. Advanced techniques integrate for , such as random forests or neural networks trained on historical anomalies to score match risk, though empirical validation emphasizes hybrid models combining stats with contextual variables like assignments to mitigate false positives from natural variance. Limitations persist, as isolated statistical flags require cross-verification—performance alone detects only overt underperformance, missing sophisticated fixes where efforts appear normal but outcomes are engineered—necessitating thresholds calibrated via back-testing on verified scandals, like those in Italian circa 2006. Overall, these methods enhance investigative efficiency, with organizations reporting that statistical reviews corroborate betting signals in over two-thirds of probed cases, underscoring their empirical utility despite reliance on quality and model robustness.

Advanced Technological Tools

Advanced technological tools have revolutionized match-fixing detection by leveraging (AI) and (ML) to analyze vast datasets in real-time, identifying anomalies that deviate from expected patterns. Systems like Sportradar's Universal Fraud Detection System (UFDS) monitor betting markets across over 600 operators, using AI-driven algorithms to flag suspicious activity; in 2023, UFDS detected 73% of the 1,070 suspicious matches identified globally, focusing on irregular betting volumes and odds movements. These tools process historical and live data from 850,000 events annually, enabling proactive alerts to sports bodies before outcomes are finalized. Machine learning models further enhance detection by modeling normal performance and betting behaviors, pinpointing deviations indicative of manipulation. A 2024 study applied supervised ML algorithms, including random forests and neural networks, to betting odds data from football matches, achieving high accuracy in classifying fixed outcomes based on pre-match and in-play anomalies. Similarly, deep learning approaches, such as ResNet architectures, have been tested on datasets like South Korea's K-League, demonstrating improved detectability of subtle betting irregularities that traditional statistical methods overlook. These models integrate variables like team form, player statistics, and , reducing false positives through iterative training on verified fixing cases. Video analytics and performance tracking tools complement betting-focused AI by scrutinizing on-field actions for unnatural patterns. Stats Perform's Integrity Unit employs AI-assisted video review against Opta databases to evaluate decisions, player efforts, and tactical anomalies, as used in investigations of potential fixing in football leagues. Biometric and data from wearables, though primarily for performance optimization, can indirectly flag irregularities in player exertion levels during suspected events, though their application remains emerging and less standardized across sports. Overall, these technologies enable federations like and to cross-verify betting signals with empirical gameplay data, improving detection rates amid rising global betting volumes.

Prevention and Mitigation Strategies

The Convention on the Manipulation of Sports Competitions, adopted in 2014 and known as the Macolin Convention, serves as the primary international addressing match fixing, ratified by over 50 states as of 2025. It mandates signatories to criminalize match manipulation, enhance cooperation among authorities, regulate to curb illegal operations, and implement preventive measures such as education and monitoring within sports organizations. The convention emphasizes harmonizing definitions of manipulation across jurisdictions, including acts like influencing outcomes for betting gains or external pressures, while requiring national platforms for reporting and intelligence sharing. Sports governing bodies enforce parallel regulatory codes. The requires adherence to its Olympic Movement Code on the Prevention of Manipulation of Competitions, which prohibits any attempt to alter competition outcomes and imposes sanctions including lifetime bans for violations. The IOC collaborates with through initiatives like the Integrity in Sport Programme, providing training and forensic tools to detect anomalies. Similarly, defines match manipulation in its Disciplinary Code as any unlawful influence on a match's course or result, punishable by fines up to CHF 1 million and permanent ineligibility, with mandatory reporting channels for suspicions. upholds zero-tolerance policies under its Disciplinary Regulations, integrating match-fixing prohibitions into competition rules and mandating education for players and officials. Nationally, varies but increasingly targets match fixing as a distinct offense. In , section 10b of the Act on Promoting in Sport explicitly criminalizes manipulation, with penalties including imprisonment. states influenced by the Macolin framework, such as those in the EU's 2012 recommendation on , have enacted laws imposing prison terms of up to 5–10 years for organized fixing linked to betting. In the United States, federal statutes like wire fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1343) prosecute cross-border schemes, though dedicated match-fixing laws remain state-level and limited post-PASPA repeal in , with calls for uniform criminal penalties amid rising legalized betting. These frameworks often intersect with laws, enabling and in transnational cases via coordination.

Monitoring and Intelligence Sharing

Monitoring and intelligence sharing form a critical layer in match-fixing prevention, primarily through collaborative networks that aggregate betting data anomalies and disseminate alerts among stakeholders. Licensed betting operators, representing a significant portion of global wagering volume, contribute real-time transaction data to centralized systems, enabling the detection of irregular patterns such as abrupt odds shifts or disproportionate bets on obscure outcomes. This data pooling, facilitated by organizations like the International Betting Integrity Association (IBIA), allows for cross-verification against historical benchmarks and rapid alert generation, with IBIA reporting 219 suspicious activity alerts in a recent operational period to aid investigations. IBIA, established in 2005 as the European Sports Security Association (ESSA) and rebranded in 2019 to reflect its global scope, coordinates intelligence among over 90 operators and 200 betting brands, sharing findings with sports governing bodies, regulators, and . For instance, in 2018, formalized an information-sharing agreement with ESSA (now IBIA), enabling the transfer of betting intelligence on potential match manipulations in European competitions, which has supported disciplinary actions including lifetime bans for offenders. IBIA's framework emphasizes transparency and regulatory compliance, prioritizing alerts from regulated markets to distinguish them from unregulated betting hubs prone to manipulation. At the international level, Interpol's Integrity in Sport Initiative, launched in partnership with the since 2014, facilitates cross-border intelligence exchange via its Match-Fixing Task Force (IMFTF). The IMFTF, comprising experts from sports federations, betting monitors, and national police, harmonizes data on transnational syndicates, as evidenced by joint operations that have disrupted networks laundering proceeds through fixed events. FIFA's Integrity Task Force, convened as recently as September 2025, integrates confederation-level inputs to propagate alerts globally, often outsourcing initial detection to firms like , whose systems flagged betting irregularities in FIFA events since 2017. Additional platforms, such as the Universal League Integrity Service (ULIS) and its Monitoring & Intelligence Group (UMIG), provide event-specific oversight for major tournaments like the and Women's EURO, channeling intelligence from multiple sources to leagues and authorities. These efforts underscore a reliance on probabilistic rather than definitive proof, with shared intelligence prompting forensic follow-ups, though challenges persist in unregulated Asian markets where much manipulation originates. Effectiveness is gauged by declining detection rates, as Sportradar's 2024 report noted a reduction in global match-fixing incidents amid heightened monitoring.

Education and Internal Controls

Sports organizations deploy targeted education programs to equip athletes, officials, coaches, and administrative staff with the knowledge to identify match-fixing approaches, understand legal and ethical implications, and report suspicions promptly. These initiatives emphasize recognizing common tactics, such as unsolicited financial incentives or pressure from intermediaries, and highlight severe consequences including bans, criminal prosecution, and reputational damage. For example, FIFA's Global Integrity Programme, initiated in March 2021 with the Office on Drugs and , delivers standardized modules to over 200 member associations, focusing on capacity-building workshops that have reached thousands of participants by 2024. In European football, UEFA's Fight the Fix academic program, launched in November 2022, provides specialized courses for integrity officers, athletes, and partner organizations, integrating case studies from past scandals to foster proactive prevention. Similarly, the NCAA offers free anti-match-fixing sessions integrated into its sports wagering , mandatory for Division I athletes and officials since 2023, covering and ethical decision-making. Other bodies, such as the via IBIA partnerships, conduct tailored face-to-face sessions for elite competitors, emphasizing rejection strategies against fixer contacts. Internal controls within sports entities reinforce education through structural safeguards, including the designation of integrity officers tasked with monitoring compliance, conducting audits, and coordinating responses to threats. FIFA's second-edition Integrity Handbook, released in June 2024, mandates associations appoint such officers to manage education rollout, risk assessments, and internal investigations, drawing from empirical reviews of global vulnerabilities. These officers often oversee codes of conduct that explicitly ban participant betting—enforced via financial disclosures and access restrictions—and require immediate reporting of fixer approaches under penalty of sanctions. Whistleblower mechanisms form a core , featuring anonymous hotlines and secure digital platforms to encourage disclosures without retaliation fears, as evidenced by FIFA's web-based system updated in June 2025 for reporting match manipulation knowledge. Protections include protocols and non-punitive policies for good-faith reports, though empirical studies note uneven implementation, with NCAA programs showing limited whistleblower safeguards as of 2025. Financial and operational controls, such as segregated betting feeds and background vetting for staff, further deter internal collusion, per UNODC guidelines adopted by multiple federations.

Historical Development

Early Instances and Pre-Professional Era

One of the earliest documented instances of match fixing occurred during the 98th in 388 B.C., when boxer Eupolus of bribed three opponents to lose their bouts against him, allowing him to advance and claim victory. The Olympic judges, known as Hellanodikai, fined Eupolus and the bribed fighters, using the proceeds to erect bronze statues called Zanes dedicated to as a public mark of shame. Bribery and deliberate underperformance were recurrent issues in ancient Greek athletics, including at the Olympics, where competitors sought fame, olive wreaths, and local honors that could translate into financial rewards through or endorsements. Archaeological , such as the Zanes statues at Olympia, confirms multiple convictions for such , with fines funding these monuments to deter future offenses. Punishments extended to public flogging for lesser infractions and lifetime bans from competitions for severe cases like match fixing. In , while specific match-fixing cases in gladiatorial combats or races are less explicitly recorded, the pervasive on these spectacles—often involving massive sums bet on outcomes in venues like the —created strong incentives for manipulation. factions, which operated as semi-professional stables with drivers and owners profiting from wagers, were particularly susceptible, as historical accounts describe rivalries and financial pressures mirroring later fixing scandals. of officials or participants, though not uncommon in broader Roman athletics, relied on indirect evidence from literary sources rather than judicial records. By the , as organized sports emerged in and prior to widespread , match fixing surfaced in nascent and amid growing betting markets. In , the first exposed fixing occurred in 1865, when players from the Mutual Club of New York intentionally lost games to for bribes, highlighting vulnerabilities in amateur and semi-pro play before the National League's formation in 1876. saw similar issues, such as the 1818 case involving English player William Lambert, who conspired to fix a match outcome for gains, leading to his from the sport. These pre-professional eras underscored how unregulated betting, rather than salaried , drove early , with limited oversight allowing small-scale syndicates to influence results.

20th Century Professional Scandals

The professionalization of sports in the early amplified vulnerabilities to match fixing, primarily driven by interests exploiting underpaid athletes and lax oversight. One of the earliest documented cases in occurred in 1915, when players from and Manchester United conspired to fix matches to secure points and avoid relegation, accepting bribes totaling around £200 from gamblers; nine players were banned for life by . This incident highlighted how financial desperation in wartime conditions enabled syndicates to influence outcomes in England's top division. In baseball, the 1919 Black Sox Scandal represented a pivotal betrayal of public trust, as eight Chicago White Sox players, including stars like and , accepted payments ranging from $5,000 to $10,000 from gamblers to deliberately lose the against the ; the fix involved underperforming in key games, such as Cicotte hitting a batter with a pitch as a signal. The conspiracy, orchestrated by figures like , unraveled through confessions and testimony, leading Commissioner to impose lifetime bans on the players in 1921, despite their acquittal in a criminal trial due to evidentiary issues. This event prompted stricter integrity measures in , underscoring gambling's corrosive effect on competitive purity. Mid-century scandals persisted in European football. The 1971 Bundesliga scandal exposed widespread bribery in Germany's top league, where over 50 players and officials from clubs like and accepted sums up to 40,000 Deutsche Marks to manipulate relegation battles, including a taped revealing payments for throwing matches; investigations triggered by a birthday party recording led to fines, suspensions, and a temporary spectator drop-off. Similarly, Italy's affair involved illegal betting rings corrupting fixtures, with players from and , including national team forward , implicated in fixing outcomes for payouts; Milan was relegated to , and Rossi received a three-year ban, though he later contributed to Italy's 1982 victory upon reinstatement. These cases demonstrated systemic risks in high-stakes leagues, where bookmaker anomalies and whistleblower tips exposed networks blending with sport.

Late 20th to Early 21st Century Globalization

The globalization of sports in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, coupled with the explosive growth of transnational betting markets, transformed match fixing from localized scandals into a borderless enterprise dominated by organized crime syndicates. By the 1990s, illegal betting operations in Asia, particularly in Malaysia and Singapore, had ballooned, with Malaysian authorities estimating that up to 70% of domestic football matches were manipulated for gambling profits, often involving bribes to players and referees. This era's technological advances, including the internet's proliferation from around 1990, enabled Asian syndicates to place massive wagers—sometimes in the billions—on international events via underground networks, decoupling betting volumes from the relatively modest stakes of the manipulated games themselves. The causal driver was economic disparity: low-paid athletes in peripheral leagues worldwide became vulnerable targets, as syndicates exploited globalization's freer movement of capital and people to infiltrate distant competitions. A pivotal example emerged in with the 2000 , where South Africa's captain admitted to accepting approximately $100,000 from an Indian bookmaker to provide team information and influence outcomes in five One Day Internationals against in 2000, including throwing the final match. This case exposed the reach of South Asian betting rings into high-profile international series, implicating players from multiple nations and prompting the to impose lifetime bans on Cronje and others, while revealing over 70 offshore accounts linked to the scheme. In football, Singapore-based fixer led a syndicate that rigged hundreds of matches across , , and from the late onward, often by corrupting referees and lower-tier players; he later claimed involvement in manipulating qualifiers to secure spots for teams like and at the . These operations thrived on the opacity of Asian markets, where annual illegal betting turnover exceeded $1 trillion by the early , dwarfing legal global figures and incentivizing fixes in obscure European leagues for predictable "spot" outcomes like yellow cards or corners. By the mid-2000s, this globalization manifested in scandals like Italy's 2006 , where Juventus executives influenced referee assignments to sway results, indirectly fueled by betting pressures, and Germany's probe revealing referee Robert Hoyzer's fixes for Croatian gamblers in 2005. Europol's later analysis traced patterns back to Eurasian networks active since the , with fixes often originating in Asia but executed via proxies in . Empirical data from the period, including a surge in reported cases from under 10 annually pre-2000 to over 50 by 2010 across regions, underscored how deregulated betting and sports' commercialization eroded barriers, making integrity a transnational enforcement challenge rather than a national one. Despite early warnings, such as goalkeeper Grobbelaar's 1994 acquittal on charges of rigging English matches for Asian syndicates, systemic underreporting persisted due to jurisdictional silos and reluctance by sports bodies to expose vulnerabilities. In the 2010s, gained renewed international attention through large-scale investigations revealing organized criminal networks, particularly those linked to Asian betting syndicates, manipulating outcomes across and beyond. 's 2013 probe identified 380 suspicious matches fixed between 2008 and 2011, including qualifiers for the and , involving over 425 players, officials, and criminals who generated approximately €8 million in profits. This exposed systemic vulnerabilities in lower-tier leagues and international fixtures, driven by the expansion of betting markets that facilitated anonymous, high-volume wagers on obscure events. A notable evolution during this decade was the proliferation of , where manipulators targeted specific in-game events—such as the number of runs in an over in or yellow cards in football—rather than entire outcomes, making detection harder amid the rise of granular betting options. The 2010 , involving players like and Mohammad Asif deliberately bowling no-balls during a Test against , exemplified this trend and led to criminal convictions, highlighting how financial incentives from illegal bookmakers could corrupt even high-profile athletes. incidents surged in formats due to their fast-paced nature and proliferation, with similar patterns emerging in football through manipulated corners, bookings, and halftime scores. By the 2020s, while detections in major sports like football showed fluctuations, overall suspicious activity trended downward in monitored markets due to enhanced surveillance, though alerts persisted in under-resourced disciplines. Sportradar's Universal Fraud Detection System flagged 1,108 suspicious matches globally in , a 17% decline from 2023, with football comprising 66% of cases but corruption decreasing in and ; this followed peaks tied to pandemic-era disruptions, where reduced oversight and economic pressures fueled opportunistic fixes. Conversely, the International Betting Integrity Association (IBIA) reported 219 suspicious alerts in , up 17% from 187 in 2023, and 63 in Q1 2025 alone (an 11% year-over-year increase), indicating persistent risks in emerging regulated markets like , where addressed incursions. These variances reflect improved monitoring in elite football reducing outright fixes, but a shift toward niche manipulations in sports like , , , and , which receive less integrity investment. Esports emerged as a vulnerability hotspot in the 2010s–2020s, with match fixing amplified by rapid betting market growth and the influx of novice players susceptible to grooming by gamblers. Scandals included the 2014 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive iBUYPOWER incident, where players threw matches for skin-betting profits, and 2020–2021 cases in and , exacerbated by COVID-19 lockdowns that blurred lines between professional and amateur scenes. By 2024, fixers diversified into virtual simulations and lower-tier tournaments, prompting calls for unified anti-corruption protocols amid the sector's €1.45 trillion+ annual betting turnover. Recent non-football cases, such as lifetime bans for Maltese footballers in 2023 and 10 Chinese players in 2023 for outcome manipulation, underscore ongoing challenges in individual and regional leagues. Broader trends indicate match fixing's adaptation to regulatory gaps, with fixers exploiting globalization and digital anonymity, though empirical declines in detections suggest deterrence via intelligence sharing and AI tools is yielding results in prioritized sports. In 2025, Swedish police revelations of top English players betting on cards and corners signaled potential infiltration into elite domestic competitions, prompting heightened scrutiny. Despite these advances, under-monitored sports and esports remain at risk, as illegal betting—estimated to dwarf legal volumes—continues incentivizing corruption through untraceable channels.

Notable Cases by Sport

Association Football

Match fixing in has manifested in various forms, including outright result manipulation, such as deliberate yellow cards, and referee influencing, often linked to networks profiting from illegal betting markets. from investigations reveals patterns driven by financial incentives, with syndicates targeting lower-profile matches for higher manipulation success rates due to weaker oversight. In and , scandals have exposed systemic vulnerabilities, particularly in domestic leagues where volumes exceed billions annually, enabling fixes to yield profits up to €100,000 per match. One of the earliest major scandals occurred in with the affair, where illegal betting rings implicated 27 players from 12 and clubs, including , , and . Alimede and Massimo Cruciani, two bettors arrested on March 1, 1980, provided evidence leading to convictions for fixing outcomes to favor bets on totals and spreads. Consequences included relegations for and to , point deductions for others, and a two-year ban for forward , who later redeemed himself in the 1982 . The 2006 Calciopoli scandal further eroded trust in Italian football, centering on Juventus executives and Antonio Giraudo's alleged influence over referee appointments to secure favorable officiating in 2004–2005 matches. Wiretaps revealed discussions pressuring the Italian Football Federation's designator, leading to Juventus' relegation to , revocation of their 2004–05 title (awarded to ), and 30-point penalty; other clubs like , Fiorentina, and faced point deductions or bans. A July 2006 imposed these sanctions, though later appeals reduced some penalties, highlighting enforcement challenges amid club lobbying. Europol's 2013 Operation VETO exposed a transnational network fixing at least 380 European matches from 2008–2011, including Champions League and Europa League games, with 680 total suspicions worldwide generating €8–11 million in illicit profits and €2.6 million in bribes. Involving 425 suspects from 15 countries, primarily Asian-led syndicates, the probe identified fixes in national cups and qualifiers, underscoring how exploits football's global betting ecosystem. In , South Korea's K-League faced a 2011 scandal where 57 players from 13 clubs were implicated in deliberate losses for gambling syndicates, resulting in lifetime bans for 10 by the and extending 41 such bans globally on January 9, 2013. Investigations traced fixes to loanshark debts and broker coercion, affecting 2010–2011 matches. China's football suffered recurrent issues, with 2003–2009 probes convicting officials and players for ; by September 2024, the imposed lifetime bans on 38 players and five officials for fixing 120 matches, many during isolation periods when oversight lapsed, involving club executives directing outcomes. Recent cases from 2020–2025 include allegations against West Ham's in 2023 for intentionally receiving yellow cards in and international matches to settle bets, though proceedings remain ongoing. Broader trends show persistent risks in lower divisions, with Swedish investigations in 2025 implicating unnamed players in fixes, per police claims of widespread betting rings. These incidents affirm causal links between unregulated expansion and corruption, as syndicates target isolated events for minimal detection.

Cricket and Baseball

In cricket, match fixing gained international notoriety with the 2000 scandal involving South African captain , who on April 11 admitted to that he had accepted approximately $100,000 from Indian bookmakers to provide team information and influence outcomes in one-day internationals against in March 2000, including discussions to underperform in specific matches. The (ICC) imposed a lifetime ban on Cronje in October 2000 following a commission report confirming his central role, which implicated several other players and exposed systemic vulnerabilities tied to unregulated betting syndicates in . This case prompted the ICC to establish its Anti-Corruption Unit in 2000 to monitor and investigate fixing attempts globally. A decade later, —a subset of match fixing involving predetermined events within a game for betting purposes—erupted in the 2010 team during a Test match against at from August 24 to 28. Captain , bowlers Mohammad Asif and conspired with bookmaker to bowl three no-balls at specific points, receiving £150,000 in payments; undercover recordings by the exposed the plot, leading to their ICC suspensions in September 2010. In 2011, Butt and Asif received five-year prison sentences in the UK for conspiracy to accept corrupt payments, while Amir, then 18, served three months; the ICC issued five-year bans to all three, with Amir's later reduced after rehabilitation. This incident highlighted spot-fixing's appeal due to its subtlety in exploiting in-play betting markets, particularly in formats like Tests where isolated actions evade detection. The (IPL) faced its own crisis in 2013, when arrested players , , and on May 16 for manipulating run rates and conceding specific overs in matches against and , linked to underworld bookmaker Chavan associates. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) issued lifetime bans to the trio in September 2013, though courts later suspended them pending appeals, with Sreesanth's ban lifted in 2019 after he pursued legal challenges; Chandila and Chavan received reduced penalties. These cases underscored the IPL's due to high-stakes T20 betting, prompting enhanced BCCI monitoring and player education programs. In baseball, the paradigmatic match-fixing event remains the 1919 Black Sox Scandal, where eight Chicago White Sox players, motivated by low salaries and gambler inducements, accepted bribes totaling around $100,000 to deliberately lose the best-of-nine World Series to the Cincinnati Reds, resulting in a 5-3 series defeat despite the White Sox's superior regular-season record. Key figures like pitcher confessed to grand juries in September 1919, admitting to throwing specific games, such as Cicotte hitting a batter with a pitch to signal gamblers; confessions were later suppressed, but evidence from teammate "Swede" Risberg's testimony confirmed the conspiracy's scope. MLB Commissioner banned all eight players for life on August 3, 1921, irrespective of their 1921 acquittal on conspiracy charges, establishing precedent for strict integrity enforcement to restore public trust eroded by the fix. Post-1919, outright match fixing in has been infrequent, attributable to rigorous oversight and prohibitions, though isolated betting-related integrity breaches persist. In June 2024, Padres infielder received a lifetime ban under MLB Rule 21 for wagering over $150,000 on 25 Padres games in 2022-2023, including his own team's contests, marking the first such player expulsion since 1924. More recently, in 2025, pitchers Luis Ortiz and faced investigations for anomalous betting activity on individual pitches during games, with Ortiz placed on leave in July after a monitoring firm flagged irregularities and Clase similarly sidelined amid probes, reflecting heightened scrutiny in an era of legalized expansion. These developments, while not yet proven as match manipulation, illustrate causal links between granular prop betting markets and potential incentives for micro-level fixes, prompting MLB to bolster data analytics for detection.

Basketball and American Sports

In college basketball, point shaving—where players intentionally underperform to manipulate point spreads for gamblers—has been a recurring issue, with the 1951 scandal representing the most extensive historical case. Investigations revealed that 33 players from seven schools, including (CCNY), , and , participated in fixing 86 games between 1947 and 1950, often influenced by figures promising bribes averaging $1,000 per game. CCNY's entire was implicated, leading to the program's disbandment and lifetime bans for several athletes, underscoring vulnerabilities in amateur athletics tied to syndicates. Subsequent scandals, such as those at Tulane (1985) and Toledo (2008), involved smaller-scale player conspiracies to shave points, resulting in program suspensions and NCAA sanctions, though convictions often hinged on undercover FBI operations revealing payments from local bookmakers. Professional basketball faced its most prominent fixing incident through NBA referee Tim Donaghy, who from 2005 to 2007 bet on games he officiated, influencing outcomes via calls on fouls and technicals to push point totals. Donaghy pleaded guilty to federal charges of wire fraud and transmitting betting information across state lines, admitting to wagering over $100,000 through intermediaries connected to organized crime, with federal probes uncovering irregularities in 25 of his officiated games. Sentenced to 15 months in prison in 2008, the case prompted the NBA to enhance referee oversight and gambling education, though Donaghy later claimed broader systemic issues in officiating without evidence of widespread player involvement. Recent developments, amplified by legalized sports betting post-2018 PASPA repeal, include the NBA's 2024 lifetime ban of Toronto Raptors player Jontay Porter for disclosing injury information to bettors and manipulating prop bets in three games, netting gamblers undisclosed sums. A broader 2025 federal probe into NBA point shaving indicted multiple players and associates, alleging a syndicate orchestrated fixes yielding millions in illicit profits through insider bets on manipulated performances. In college ranks, ongoing FBI investigations as of 2025 target point-shaving rings across at least six programs, with suspicious betting patterns flagged on small-conference games, highlighting heightened risks from app-based wagering. In other American like the and NHL, outright match fixing remains rare compared to , with documented cases limited and often tied to individual betting rather than coordinated outcome manipulation. NFL integrity has been preserved through strict policies prohibiting personnel from wagering on any football, with violations like those by coaches or players in 2023–2024 resulting in suspensions but no proven game alterations, as high salaries and league surveillance deter syndicates. Similarly, the NHL's few incidents, such as a 2023 41-game suspension for an player betting on unrelated games, reflect personal infractions rather than fixes, with no major scandals akin to basketball's scale. These leagues' emphasis on data analytics and partnerships with betting monitors has thus far limited systemic threats, though experts warn of rising vulnerabilities from expanded access.

Other Sports Including Esports

In , match-fixing has predominantly affected lower-tier professional events, where financial incentives from s exploit vulnerable players. A 2023 investigation revealed over 180 professional players implicated in a transnational ring manipulating outcomes in ITF futures tournaments, often involving elements like throwing specific games or sets. In January 2025, the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) sanctioned six players, including five French nationals, for corruption offenses linked to matches fixed between 2017 and 2018 as part of a Belgian ; bans ranged from three to five years. By October 2025, authorities arrested 14 suspects in an operation targeting fixes across 40 tournaments, underscoring ongoing infiltration despite ITIA monitoring. Snooker has faced recurrent fixing scandals, often tied to betting irregularities in lower-ranked or invitational events. In 2023, the World Professional Billiards and Association (WPBSA) charged 10 Chinese players with offenses including match manipulation and betting during 2022 events, resulting in lifetime bans for and , and suspensions up to five years for others like . In November 2024, veteran Mark King received a five-year ban for fixing a 2022 match against Leo Fernandez and sharing inside information. These cases highlight how syndicates target players facing financial pressures, with WPBSA investigations revealing a "perfect storm" of lax oversight and access. Darts, particularly in non-PDC circuits, has seen a surge in detected fixes linked to online betting. In April 2025, former PDC semifinalist was banned for 11 years and fined £17,580 by the Darts Regulation Authority (DRA) for manipulating 12 matches between 2022 and 2023. December 2024 rulings imposed an eight-year ban on and a 10-year ban on Billy Warriner for similar offenses in Modus Super Series events. By 2025, three additional players—collectively banned for 21 years—were sanctioned for fixes in 2022-2023 Modus tournaments, demonstrating how unregulated lower-tier events enable betting-driven corruption. Esports match-fixing has emerged as a in titles like Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO), , and , driven by rapid betting market growth and pseudonymous online wagering. In 2014, banned the North American iBUYPOWER and individuals for intentionally underperforming in a Map 1 match against NetCodeGuides.com to profit from skin betting, marking one of the earliest high-profile esports fixes. In , China's Professional Association permanently banned in 2022 amid allegations of deliberate losses in qualifiers, reflecting syndicate influence in regional circuits. incidents include 2022 Australian arrests for manipulating professional matches, while broader probes by the Esports Integrity Commission (ESIC) have yielded bans in multiple titles since 2019, often involving coerced for gambling payouts. These cases illustrate causal links between unregulated betting platforms and player , with ESIC reporting "incredibly widespread" risks in lower-stakes events.

Consequences and Impacts

Effects on Sports Integrity and Participation

Match fixing fundamentally erodes the core principle of by deliberately subverting the of outcome, which constitutes the essential appeal of competitive athletics. This manipulation transforms genuine contests into predetermined spectacles, betraying participants, officials, and spectators who rely on fair play to validate results. Empirical analyses confirm that such corruption hollows out public confidence, as evidenced by surveys linking perceived fixing incidents to diminished belief in competitive legitimacy across disciplines like football and . The fallout extends to stakeholder trust, with governing bodies and sponsors facing heightened risks of reputational damage and financial withdrawal. reports that match fixing jeopardizes associations' sponsorship revenues, as commercial partners prioritize verifiable integrity to avoid association with tainted events. In , for instance, fixing scandals have demonstrably reduced fan viewership and sponsorship commitments, with studies attributing up to a 20-30% drop in engagement metrics following high-profile exposures. Participation suffers as fans disengage from suspect competitions, leading to measurable declines in and viewership. Conceptual frameworks modeling impacts predict reductions in ticket sales and broadcast audiences, corroborated by NCAA analyses showing that eroded trust correlates with lower event consumption. Quantitative fan surveys in football reveal that awareness of fixing lowers perceived integrity, prompting reduced motivations to watch or attend, with one Belgian study finding no significant overall trust erosion but notable dips among informed demographics. Athletes, too, face demoralization, as pervasive fixing threats discourage ethical participation and talent investment, perpetuating a cycle of cynicism within professional ranks.

Economic Ramifications for Stakeholders

Match fixing imposes substantial economic burdens on leagues and clubs through diminished commercial revenues and heightened operational costs. Scandals erode spectator confidence, leading to reduced , merchandise sales, and deals, while prompting sponsors to terminate partnerships to avoid association with tainted events. For example, the exposure of can deprive organizations of millions in annual sponsorship income, compounded by long-term reputational harm that deters future investments. Sponsors, as key stakeholders, face indirect losses from scandals that devalue their brand alignments and necessitate costly re-evaluations of partnerships. High-profile cases, such as those in football and , have triggered immediate withdrawals of endorsements, with affected entities reallocating budgets to less risky ventures amid fears of consumer backlash. This extends to revenues, as media coverage shifts from promotion to litigation, further straining sports entities' financial ecosystems. Betting operators endure direct financial hits from fixed outcomes, including elevated payouts on manipulated wagers and subsequent declines in betting turnover due to eroded trust. Legal betting markets lose competitive edge to illicit networks, which siphon profits estimated at €120-165 million annually from global match-fixing schemes in 2021 alone. Overall, the sports sector incurs costs exceeding £100 million yearly for anti-corruption measures, investigations, and legal defenses, diverting funds from development and . Players and teams involved suffer acute losses via fines, contract voids, and bans that sever income streams, often totaling hundreds of thousands per individual. Broader stakeholder impacts include governments forgoing tax s from faltering sports economies, as seen in leagues where scandals like Italy's 2006 triggered sustained revenue erosion and competitive downgrades. These dynamics underscore how match fixing disrupts value chains, prioritizing short-term illicit gains over sustainable economic health. Match fixing is increasingly prosecuted as a criminal offense in jurisdictions worldwide, typically under frameworks addressing , , , or bespoke statutes on sports manipulation, with penalties including imprisonment, fines, and designed to deter organized syndicates often linked to illegal . As of assessments by the Office on Drugs and , at least 28 countries have adopted specific criminal laws targeting competition manipulation, reflecting a global shift toward treating it as a serious economic rather than mere sporting misconduct. Enforcement varies by region, with harsher penalties in compared to some European systems that integrate it into existing codes, though cross-border remains hampered by differing legal thresholds for proof of intent. The Convention on the Manipulation of Sports Competitions (Macolin Convention), opened for signature in 2014 and ratified by over 50 states including non-European nations like and by 2025, mandates criminalization of deliberate influence over competition outcomes for gain, alongside requirements for information-sharing on suspicious betting patterns and protection of whistleblowers. This treaty emphasizes harmonizing definitions—such as spotting (manipulating specific events within a match) and prop betting fixes—to facilitate and joint investigations, though non-ratifying major powers like the rely on federal wire fraud or state gambling laws, leading to jurisdictional gaps in transnational cases. Penalties reflect the perceived threat to and economic stakes, with prison terms ranging from 2–10 years in many systems; for instance, Singapore's Prevention of Corruption Act and Criminal Law (Temporary Provisions) allow up to 7 years' imprisonment and fines exceeding SGD 100,000 for individuals, escalating to life sentences for leaders, as evidenced in operations dismantling Asian fixers targeting . In , it falls under section 240 of the Crimes Act as deception causing loss or gain, punishable by up to 7 years. European nations like classify betting-related fixing as under amended penal codes, with sentences up to 10 years and €1 million fines, while Germany's criminal code has been applied to manipulation with similar fraud-based penalties of up to 5 years. High-profile convictions underscore enforcement rigor: In the United Kingdom, three individuals were found guilty in 2016 of conspiracy to bribe football players for scoreline manipulation, receiving sentences of 3–4 years under bribery laws, highlighting ties to Eastern European networks. The 2010 Pakistan cricket spot-fixing scandal led to captain Salman Butt receiving a 10-year prison term in a London court in 2011, with bowlers Mohammad Asif (5 years) and Mohammad Amir (3 years suspended) convicted under English criminal law for corruption and cheating, marking a precedent for prosecuting foreign athletes in host jurisdictions. In the United States, a 2025 federal indictment charged 31 defendants, including organized crime associates, with racketeering and wire fraud for basketball game-fixing schemes involving bribed players, facing potential 20-year sentences under RICO statutes that treat such operations as enterprise corruption. Tennis networks have yielded criminal outcomes, such as Belgian prosecutions of fixers in 2023 yielding multi-year terms for manipulating low-tier ITF events. Despite these repercussions, challenges persist, including evidentiary hurdles in proving non-public communications and the extraterritorial nature of syndicates, which often evade full accountability through jurisdictional arbitrage; for example, overseas fixers targeting U.S. events face barriers absent bilateral treaties. Sports governing bodies like complement criminal law with lifetime bans and fines—such as the 2025 sanctioning of Kenyan club Muhoroni Youth for manipulation—but defer to national courts for prosecutions, underscoring that administrative penalties alone insufficiently deter profit-driven actors without incarceration risks. Overall, escalating convictions correlate with legalized betting expansions, amplifying financial incentives for fixes while bolstering detection via monitored wager data.

Controversies and Debates

Role of Legalized Gambling Expansion

The rapid expansion of legalized sports gambling, particularly following the U.S. Supreme Court's 2018 decision in Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Association to strike down the federal ban on state-sponsored sports betting, has fueled debates over its causal role in exacerbating match-fixing vulnerabilities. By 2025, sports betting had become legal in 38 U.S. states, generating billions in annual revenue and shifting substantial wagering from unregulated black markets to licensed operators. Globally, sports betting turnover surpassed €1.45 trillion in 2021, correlating with a rise in detected suspicious matches to 903 across 76 countries, up 2.4% from prior peaks, as larger financial stakes incentivize organized syndicates to target outcomes for profit estimated at €165 million from fixed events that year. Critics contend this volume amplification, even in legal frameworks, heightens systemic risks by normalizing high-stakes wagering and providing fixers with accessible platforms to launder illicit gains or exploit in-game betting markets. Proponents of counter that regulated environments bolster through enhanced monitoring and data-sharing protocols, which illegal markets lack. In the U.S., suspicious matches remain rare, with only 35 flagged in out of 850,000 monitored events in 2023, representing less than 0.005% incidence and no of substantial post-legalization surge in fixing. Legal operators' mandatory reporting of anomalous betting patterns has enabled early detection, as seen in the 2024 NBA investigation of , where sportsbooks identified irregular wagers leading to his lifetime ban for leaking information and self-betting. This contrasts with unregulated contexts, where oversight gaps allow undetected manipulation, and U.S. professional leagues' high athlete salaries further deter compared to lower-tier European competitions, which accounted for 630 of 1,212 global suspicious matches in 2022. Notwithstanding these safeguards, empirical gaps persist in assessing long-term causal impacts, particularly as betting extends to niche sports like or , where regulatory scrutiny is thinner. High-profile incidents, including the MLB's 2024 case involving Shohei Ohtani's interpreter stealing $17 million for illegal bets, underscore how legalization's cultural normalization—coupled with athlete gambling rates as high as 56.6% in , including 37% on their own sports—may indirectly erode ethical barriers against corruption. State-level laws often prioritize licensing revenues over robust anti-fixing statutes, leaving vulnerabilities to cross-border syndicates that blend legal and illegal operations. Debates thus hinge on whether expanded legal gambling's transparency offsets its scale-driven incentives, with evidence suggesting mitigation in mature markets but elevated risks in transitional or under-monitored ones.

Institutional Failures and Accountability

Sports governing bodies have frequently demonstrated institutional shortcomings in detecting and addressing match fixing, often prioritizing reputational protection over rigorous enforcement, leading to delayed responses and incomplete investigations. For instance, in , and FIFA's anti-fixing initiatives, including monitoring systems established post-2000s scandals, proved ineffective against organized criminal networks, as evidenced by a 2013 probe uncovering 380 suspicious matches across 2010-2011 without significant disruption to Asian betting syndicates profiting from the corruption. These bodies' reliance on self-reported data from clubs and players, coupled with limited inter-agency cooperation, allowed fixes to proliferate, with FIFA's head of security in 2013 admitting likely failure in fully eradicating the issue despite investigating only 20 incidents that year. Accountability mechanisms within these organizations remain weak, characterized by internal disciplinary processes that rarely penalize or systemic flaws, instead deflecting blame onto lower-level actors such as players and referees. Academic analysis of cases like the 2011 K-League scandal in highlights how governing bodies shift responsibility downward, treating institutional ethical lapses as secondary to individual moral failings, a pattern encapsulated in the "too big to jail" dynamic where powerful entities evade proportional sanctions due to their economic and cultural centrality. In , the (ICC) faced similar criticism following the 2010 Pakistan spot-fixing scandal, where despite convictions of players, board officials escaped scrutiny for oversight failures, underscoring a broader aversion to that hampers transparency. Reforms have been incremental and uneven, with bodies like issuing 11-point plans in 2013 emphasizing sanctions but lacking enforcement teeth, as subsequent scandals in lower divisions revealed persistent gaps in player education and betting oversight. This institutional inertia persists because investigating match fixing incurs high costs in resources and potential revenue loss from exposed , incentivizing minimal action over comprehensive audits or third-party oversight, thereby perpetuating vulnerability across sports including and where national federations similarly underperform. True accountability would require mandatory external audits and whistleblower protections, yet adoption remains limited, as seen in ongoing debates over FIFA's judicial system's flaws in cases like the 2023 exoneration of a Latvian player after a year-long wrongful ban, exposing procedural biases favoring institutional narratives.

Effectiveness of Anti-Fixing Measures

Anti-fixing measures in sports typically encompass betting pattern monitoring, educational programs for athletes and officials, whistleblower protections, disciplinary sanctions, and collaboration with law enforcement. Organizations like employ AI-driven analysis to flag anomalies in wagering data, contributing to the detection of 1,212 suspicious matches across 12 sports in 92 countries in 2022, which supported 169 sanctions—a record high for that year. These efforts have led to tangible outcomes, such as lifetime bans imposed by bodies like the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA), formerly the Tennis Integrity Unit, on players involved in fixing schemes. Similarly, the International Cricket Council's Anti-Corruption Unit has investigated and penalized numerous cases since its establishment, deterring overt in high-profile international matches through proactive and . Despite these advancements, empirical trends reveal persistent vulnerabilities, particularly in lower-tier competitions where monitoring is less intensive. In , suspicious incidents rose 34% from the previous year, with soccer accounting for 64% (775 cases) and seeing a 250% surge, suggesting that detection improvements may outpace outright prevention. Educational initiatives, such as integrity courses, show mixed results; while they raise awareness, a study on university-level programs indicated limited long-term behavioral change without reinforced enforcement. In American college sports, NCAA assessments found widespread low adoption of prevention strategies, classifying Division I programs as "at-risk" due to inadequate protocols amid legalized betting expansion. Key limitations undermine overall effectiveness, including chronic underfunding—football, rugby, and cricket allocate minimal resources to anti-corruption relative to revenues—and jurisdictional hurdles in prosecuting transnational syndicates reliant on illegal betting markets. Gathering prosecutable evidence remains challenging without betting data, as match-fixing often involves subtle manipulations undetectable post-event, and cultural factors like player financial precarity in lower leagues exacerbate risks. Reports highlight a "tsunami" of fixing in low-level tennis, persisting despite ITIA interventions, underscoring how measures reactive to symptoms fail to address root causes like organized crime infiltration. Consequently, while sanctions provide deterrence, the upward trajectory in detected cases signals that current strategies mitigate but do not eradicate the threat, necessitating enhanced global coordination and incentives for reporting.

References

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