Tennis match-fixing: 'Tsunami' of corruption at lower levels says report
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A
"tsunami" of match-fixing is plaguing lower-level tennis events, says
a long-awaited report into corruption in the sport.
But the
Independent Review Panel (IRP) found no evidence of a cover-up of these issues
by governing bodies or the Tennis Integrity Unit (TIU).
The report
also shows no evidence of top-level players being implicated.
The two-year
review - which BBC Sport understands cost close to £20m to fund - spoke to more
than 100 players.
It also
surveyed more than 3,200 professionals.
Of those
surveyed, 464 said they had first-hand knowledge of match-fixing.
Led by Adam
Lewis QC, the panel was set up in January 2016 after a BBC and BuzzFeed
News investigation uncovered suspected illegal betting.
It found a
"very significant" corruption problem at "lower and middle
levels of the sport" which Lewis described as a "fertile breeding
ground for betting breaches".
He also said
that from 2009 to 2017, men's matches were responsible for 83% of alerts to
suspicious matches.
The report
also shows "evidence of some issues" at higher levels, such as Grand
Slams and Tour events, but the evidence does not reveal a "widespread
problem" in elite professional tennis.
Asked if
tennis fans could believe what they are seeing at major tournaments this
summer, Lewis replied: "Yes, the data shows that there is very little
incentive to breach integrity at the top level therefore it's unlikely it will
happen."
Other key
findings and recommendations include:
Report
authors were told of a "match-fixing 'season'" from October until the
end of the year with "traces of up to two or three fixed matches per
day" in International Tennis Federation (ITF) tournaments
investigations
at Grand Slams were "insufficient", while the ATP, the organisational
body of men's professional tennis, was guilty of "failing to exhaust
potential leads before ending investigations"
the sale of
official live scoring data, at least at ITF and Pro Circuit levels, should be
discontinued because it has increased the problem
adopting a
realistic approach to how many players can be considered professional.
and a
reorganisation and reform of the TIU, the sport's anti-corruption body.
The report
also proposes an end to betting sponsorship in tennis, especially tournaments.
It also
draws on statements from more than 200 key stakeholders in professional tennis,
including from governing bodies, tournament organisers and betting operators.
In the
course of its investigation, the panel was told by one betting operator that
"the situation in tennis was grimmer than grim".
But report
author Lewis maintained that suspicious matches were more suited to lower
levels of tennis where a blend of factors came together to create "a
fertile breeding ground".
Chief among
them include the number of players struggling to make a living, few people
watching the matches in person and the ITF's decision to sell official live
scoring data in 2012, making betting on lower-ranked matches far easier to
achieve.
"Only
the top 250 females and 350 male players are making enough money to break even
before coaching costs, yet there are 15,000 nominally professional
players," Lewis said. "It's a small step for a player who already
intends to lose for other reasons to then bet or inform others of his or her
intentions so as to make enough money to continue playing."
He also said
the number of alerts to suspicious matches had risen from three in 2012 - the
year the ITF sold live scoring data - to 240 in 2016.
"According
to [European Sports Betting Integrity firm] ESSA, since 2015 tennis has been
responsible for more suspicious betting than for any other sport in each and
every quarter," Lewis said.
The report
added that since the data deal, 60,000 matches were available to the betting
market in 2016, up from 40,000 in 2013.
As well as
recommending that the sale of scoring data should discontinue "at least at
ITF and Pro Circuit levels", the report also said tennis should stop
tournaments being sponsored by betting firms and governing bodies should
introduce measures to deal with the "intolerable levels of online abuse,
often from disappointed bettors".
Although the
TIU has been cleared of any cover-up of match-fixing, Lewis said its staff were
made up of former law-enforcement offers and included no tennis or betting
experts.
And while
the number of staff had increased from six to 17, he said there were "too
few staff to combat the problem".
The report
also contained numerous examples of how the TIU - which is funded by the
sport's major stakeholders - should reform, be more accountable and improve its
independence, including a move away from its current home at Roehampton, the
same west London site where the ITF resides.
Other
reforms could include:
• A new
board, independent from governing bodies.
• More, and
more diverse, staff to deal with the scale of the problem, and be more
transparent, including an annual external audit.
• Make
better use of betting data and match footage to support disciplinary
proceedings, improve its processes for gathering and storing intelligence.
• Make the
disciplinary process more streamlined and cost-effective, and make greater use
of criminal law.
The
governing bodies of professional tennis - the ATP, WTA, ITF and Grand Slam
Board - released a joint statement in response to the report, agreeing with its
findings and confirming an "agreement in principle" to implement all
the recommendations.
They said
they "recognise" the "vulnerabilities" in the sport,
particularly at lower levels, and are "committed to seizing the
opportunity to address these concerns through firm and decisive action".
The
statement also welcomes the IRP's finding that the panel has "seen no
evidence of any institutional corruption" or a cover-up by tennis
authorities and the TIU.
But it does
not directly address the report's judgement the ATP "failed to exhaust
potential leads before ending investigations".
Each body
will conduct "detailed exploration and analysis" before responding to
the 12 recommendations prior to publication of the final report.
FROM .bbc.com/sport/tennis
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