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A king in the making, and the throne is for the taking
So I climb the mountain top and put my stake in
Got the weight of the world on my shoulder
Not a nigga nor a hoodrat bitch can stop me from taking it over
pi_57832744
quote:
FA will investigate bribe claims

The Football Association is to investigate allegations that a former Premier League footballer accepted a £50,000 bribe to help throw a game. The player got himself sent off and persuaded three team-mates to get booked in a game "in Britain" in the last two years, says The Independent. In exchange, a bookmaker allegedly agreed to write off a £50,000 debt the player had racked up.

"We will be making inquiries about the story," an FA spokesman told BBC Sport. Players are prohibited from betting on matches or competitions in which they are involved under FA rules.

"First we need to find out if the match was inside our jurisdiction - the story says it was in Britain, but we don't know if it was in England," the FA spokesman added.

The case was disclosed privately by a source at a seminar on gambling at the Sporting Chance Clinic in Hampshire this week. The player in question has been treated at Sporting Chance, which is supported financially by the FA and Professional Footballers Association.

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said any player proven to have accepted a bribe to throw a game should be banned for life.

"I believe that the most important thing is that our game is clean," Wenger said. "It is surprising news and very bad news. I am convinced that if it is proven they should be banned for life. If one player has done that you have 99.9% of players who have never done it. But you have to convict the one player who has done that. It's not down to human nature. Everyone has to stand up for their own acts and take responsibility for what he is doing."
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  vrijdag 4 april 2008 @ 18:24:39 #53
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pi_57833567
quote:
Op vrijdag 4 april 2008 17:34 schreef BliksemSchigt het volgende:

[..]

!!!!
zal wel weer met sisser aflopen.
Rene van der Gijp: Als het hele stadion ''Je moeder is een hoer'' scandeert, dan moet er wel een kern van waarheid inzitten.
Feyenoord: RR
pi_57847061
quote:
FA launches investigation into £50,000 thrown match

By Nick Harris
Saturday, 5 April 2008

The Football Association has opened an investigation into The Independent's report yesterday that a footballer with a serious gambling problem has admitted to getting sent off deliberately after colluding with a bookmaker. The player owed the bookmaker £50,000, a source familiar with the situation told The Independent, and the bookie wrote off the debt when the player collected his card, as arranged, having profited from gambling on it.

The player's chronic gambling addiction – the root cause of his action – led him to treatment at the Sporting Chance clinic in Hampshire. The clinic's chief executive, Peter Kay, declined to comment on specifics of the case but corroborated the story.

As part of the investigation, which may involve the FA asking gambling companies to review suspicious betting patterns over the last few years, the FA has asked Kay and The Independent to pass on the name of the player and the bookmaker to assess whether disciplinary action should be taken.

A meeting will be scheduled with Kay, but he is unlikely to provide information that would breach the confidentiality of a player referred for treatment for a serious addiction. It is understood, however, that he has already made the FA aware that the case reported by The Independent was not a one-off. Kay has already confirmed to this newspaper that footballers have gambled or colluded to gamble on being booked – or on other incidents in matches – "to my knowledge on several occasions".

With problem gambling an "epidemic" in football, according to Kay, the FA is considering how best to improve its own methods of preventing the problem. But an FA spokesman conceded: "I have to be honest and say that there is no specific preventative education in place in respect to gambling provided by the FA at the moment.

"We do lots of work with players, especially young players, on alcohol and drugs awareness. This is a key part of their education as players. There is a lot of general education about lifestyle.

"We also hold seminars each season about betting, but this deals essentially with the rules. Gambling is something we have been looking at, and are planning to do further work in line with what we do with alcohol and drugs."

A lot of education to young players which touches on problem gambling but is not necessarily delivered by specialist agencies, is provided and funded by the Professional Footballers' Association.

The PFA's chief executive, Gordon Taylor, described the situation as "beyond belief." He added: "We support the [Sporting Chance] clinic and their attempts to get players on track and it is disappointing that something like this should emanate from them." Taylor said he believed that stories such as the player taking a bribe "can get over-elaborated for effect" at a gambling seminar, which is where The Independent sourced its story.

In fact, that case was among a number of gambling-related incidents disclosed privately to The Independent, more than once – but not in open session – at a seminar at Sporting Chance this week. Those present included players and former players wanting to highlight the dangers of gambling, and its threat to the integrity of the game.

Several spoke in open session about having their lives wrecked by addiction, while the seminar also heard public testimony from respected experts about a large-scale gambling culture in football.

The FA defended its rules on betting, which were softened a few years ago to allow players to bet on football matches they are not involved in and cannot affect. Previously there had been a blanket ban.

An FA spokesman said: "We have clear rules on betting and work with through the clubs and PFA to ensure that these rules are understood by all participants in the game. We remain vigilant."

Kay told The Independent yesterday that football needs to be more vigilant, and provide more education to all players at all levels. Of gambling-related corruption, he said: "Yes, it's happened and probably will happen again, but really that only makes our work and the responsibility of football in general more important. For too long there has been an ambivalent attitude which is changing, and we are listened to now by the authorities."
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