Germany widens match-fixing probe
The German Football Association (DFB) set up a special commission to investigate possible match-fixing amid growing signs the country's worst sporting scandal for 30 years may go deeper than first thought. The announcement followed an admission by...
The German Football Association (DFB) set up a special commission to investigate possible match-fixing amid growing signs the country's worst sporting scandal for 30 years may go deeper than first thought.
The announcement followed an admission by regional side SC Paderborn that its captain took money from an unidentified man before a game at the centre of the scandal.
Dutchman Thijs Waterink accepted €10,000 ($13,000) shortly before Paderborn's German Cup tie against Hamburg SV on the understanding he could keep the money if his side won.
"I think this €10,000 could be just the tip of the iceberg," club president Wilfried Finke told a news conference.
The first round match on August 21 was refereed by Robert Hoyzer who admitted last week that he had fixed matches.
Late on Monday, German sports news agency SID quoted a player from second-division side Dynamo Dresden who also said he had accepted payment from an individual following a match.
Goalkeeper Ignac Kresic told the agency he had taken €15,000 after a regional league victory against Preussen Muenster in June 2003.
"It is correct that we got additional money for this victory from a third party," he was quoted as saying.
Germany is hosting the 2006 World Cup and FIFA, soccer's world governing body, has urged the DFB to resolve the scandal as quickly as possible.
The DFB said appeals had been launched against a total of nine matches, including four second division games, three Cup fixtures and two matches in the Northern Regional League. It said the special commission would examine all information on the affair as it emerged.
"It is very important that these steps help us achieve what we need, namely to find the truth," DFB president Theo Zwanziger told a news conference in Frankfurt on Monday evening.
Berlin prosecutors have launched a separate investigation of their own into the affair but have not shared the results of their inquiries with the DFB.
Meanwhile, German daily Bild published the names of three other referees and nine players from lower division clubs whom it said Hoyzer had implicated in the affair.
In the game at the centre of the scandal, first division Hamburg took a 2-0 lead before losing 4-2 after Hoyzer sent off their striker and awarded Paderborn two controversial penalties.
Finke said he was willing to hold a re-match with Hamburg, who have said the result must be declared void. However, the quarter-finals are only four weeks away. Paderborn lost on penalties to Freiburg in the third round.
Bild said on its website that Hoyzer had named three other referees, including Juergen Jansen who was pulled from Sunday's Bundesliga match between Werder Bremen and Hansa Rostock as a precaution.
The DFB said on Sunday that Jansen, who has denied any involvement in the affair, was not under suspicion. Bild said Hoyzer had also named Waterink and eight other players.
Munich-based bookmaker ODDSET gave details of unusually heavy betting, predominantly from Berlin, on two matches under Hoyzer's control. It said it had written to the DFB about the matter on August 23.
Germany was rocked by a corruption scandal in 1971, with sanctions imposed on 53 players, two coaches, six officials and clubs Arminia Bielefeld and Kickers Offenbach.