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quote:
'Duel Ghana-Brazilië op WK 2006 verkocht'

Opnieuw opschudding in de voetbalwereld rond een mogelijk omkoopschandaal. Het Duitse blad Der Spiegel onthulde zaterdag dat Chinese gokmaffia het duel Ghana-Brazilië op het WK van 2006 hebben beïnvloed.

Dat zou zijn gebleken na onderzoek van de Canadese journalist Declan Hill. Er blijken abnormaal hoge bedragen op het duel zijn ingezet. Met name de variant dat Ghana het kwartfinaleduel met meer dan twee doelpunten verschil zou verliezen bleek populair.

Ghana verloor de wedstrijd uiteindelijk met 3-0. Volgens Hill zou voormalig international Abukari Dama de zaken tussen de Chinese gokkers en het nationale elftal van Ghana hebben geregeld.

Daarnaast maakte Hill in het blad ook bekend dat twee duels uit de Duitse Bundesliga de afgelopen seizoenen zijn beïnvloed. De DFB is een onderzoek gestart.
Tijdens de wedstrijd toen eigenlijk niks van gemerkt , maar zal vast wel weer een staartje krijgen dit verhaal.
pi_61245856


Geen heel schokkende fouten achterin bij Ghana, ofzo. Hoewel het er bij de 3e goal wel enigszins apathisch uitziet.
There's a monkey in the jungle watching a vapour trail. Caught up in the conflict between his brain and his tail.
Winnaar Voetbalfoto-onderschriftcompetitie 2006-II, 2008-I.
The Terrifying Snoman | De Wageningse Berg
pi_61246191
Niet alweer
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
  zaterdag 30 augustus 2008 @ 15:58:46 #4
91676 Plato1980
Gloriosus et liber
pi_61246358
Er staat dat het een kwartfinale was en dat was niet zo.
Giallo e nero è il tuo colore,
giallo e nero Roda nel cuore.
pi_61246621
TT verduidelijkt.
Achter-elkaar-bezochte-Ajax-thuiswedstrijden-meter: [b]29[/b].
[b]Laatste wedstrijd:[/b] FC Timişoara. [b]Volgende:[/b] ADO Den Haag.
Ray's Statshoekje - 2009/2010.
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Essien was toen geschorst. Was veruit de beste man van Ghana dat toernooi.
PSV --- Chelsea FC --- Frank Lampard --- Heinz-Harald Frentzen --- Timo Glock
pi_61247479
Dat was toch die wedstrijd waar er een buitenspel goal werd goedgekeurd en toen in de videobeelden in eht stadion duidelijk te zien was dat het buitenspel was en nog een aantal maal werd herhaald?
Wind extinguishes a candle and energizes fire
pi_61247840
quote:
Op zaterdag 30 augustus 2008 16:54 schreef Steven184 het volgende:
Dat was toch die wedstrijd waar er een buitenspel goal werd goedgekeurd en toen in de videobeelden in eht stadion duidelijk te zien was dat het buitenspel was en nog een aantal maal werd herhaald?
Er zijn inderdaad twee goals met een luchtje (2-0 en 3-0), ik denk dat je op de 2-0 doelt.
There's a monkey in the jungle watching a vapour trail. Caught up in the conflict between his brain and his tail.
Winnaar Voetbalfoto-onderschriftcompetitie 2006-II, 2008-I.
The Terrifying Snoman | De Wageningse Berg
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quote:
'Nog drie duels WK 2006 verkocht door gokmaffia'
01 september 2008

Naast Brazilië-Ghana zijn nog drie wedstrijden van het WK 2006 in Duitsland gemanipuleerd door de Aziatische gokmaffia. Dat onthult de Canadese onderzoeksjournalist Declan Hill in zijn boek The Fix. Het zou de wedstrijden Italië-Ghana (2-0), Italië-Oekraïne (3-0) en Engeland-Ecuador (1-0) betreffen.

In zijn boek beschrijft Hill hoe hij eind 2005 in contact kwam met enkele 'grote jongens' van de Aziatische gokmaffia. Hij maakte onder meer geluidsopnames en foto's van een vergadering met een Ghanese official, waarin onderhandeld werd over de som geld die Ghana zou ontvangen als het twee wedstrijden van het WK bewust zou verliezen. Opvallend is verder dat de Belgische arbiter Frank De Bleeckere twee van deze vier wedstrijden floot, maar Hill heeft geen enkele indicatie dat er ook scheidsrechters bij de manipulatie betrokken waren.

Vorige week onthulde het Duitse Der Spiegel al dat de kwartfinale Brazilië-Ghana 'verkocht' was. Ook dit blad voerde Hill aan als belangrijkste getuige hiervoor.
  maandag 1 september 2008 @ 14:13:08 #10
24807 NJ
Don't mention the war!
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quote:
Op zaterdag 30 augustus 2008 15:29 schreef vitessezuid113 het volgende:

[..]

Tijdens de wedstrijd toen eigenlijk niks van gemerkt , maar zal vast wel weer een staartje krijgen dit verhaal.
quote:
et name de variant dat Ghana het kwartfinaleduel met meer dan twee doelpunten verschil zou verliezen bleek populair.
Want dat is natuurlijk absoluut niet voor te stellen in het geval van Ghana tegen Brazilië. .
And now for something completely different, I'm on a horse.
pi_61291405
Nog wat artikelen:
quote:
Gokmaffia fikste vier wedstrijden op WK voetbal

Tijdens het wereldkampioenschap voetbal 2006 in Duitsland werden minstens vier wedstrijden gemanipuleerd door de Aziatische gokmaffia. Die baande zo mee de weg voor Italië, dat het toernooi zou winnen. Dat onthult de Canadese onderzoeksjournalist Declan Hill in zijn boek The Fix.

Hill beschrijft hoe hij eind 2005 in Bangkok in contact kwam met een van de grootste match-fixers van de Aziatische gokmaffia. De journalist kreeg de man zo ver dat die hem tijdens het WK in Duitsland vooraf zou tippen over de afloop van enkele wedstrijden.

Hill werd ook als getuige meegenomen naar een vergadering in Bangkok, waar op 25 mei 2006 met een official van het Ghanese elftal werd onderhandeld over de som die moest worden betaald opdat Ghana op het WK twee wedstrijden met opzet zou verliezen volgens een opgedragen scoreverloop. Hij maakte foto's en geluidsopnames van de vergadering.

Volgens Hill traden op het WK drie corrupte teams aan: Ghana, Ecuador en Oekraïne. Ghana zou twee matchen hebben verkocht, de andere twee teams elk één. Vooral de latere wereldkampioen Italië profiteerde daarvan. Het won zijn eerste wedstrijd tegen Ghana met de door de gokmaffia bestelde 2-0 en stootte door naar de halve finale doordat Oekraïne zich gewillig liet inblikken met de in Azië bestelde 3-0. De twee andere partijen waren Brazilië-Ghana (3-0) en Engeland-Ecuador (1-0). Twee van die wedstrijden werden geleid door de Belgische scheidsrechter Frank De Bleeckere, maar Hill heeft geen indicaties dat die bij de manipulaties enige rol speelde.

In het boek bevestigt Stephen Appiah, kapitein van het Ghanese elftal, dat hij tijdens het WK werd benaderd om matchen te vervalsen. De speler legt ook uit dat hij tijdens de Olympische Spelen in Athene namens zijn team 200.000 dollar ontving van 'een Chinees'. Ghana liet zich toen miraculeus uitschakelen door Japan.

De onthullingen in The Fix roepen sterke gelijkenissen op met het gokschandaal van Zheyun Ye, die tijdens de competities 2004-2005 en 2005-2006 een aantal kleinere Belgische clubs controleerde. Het boek laat zien hoe de Aziatische gokmaffia veel machtiger is dan altijd werd vermoed. Lee Chin, de match-fixer die Hill inwijdde in de geheime wereld van de voetbalmanipulatie, verklaart dat hij ook wedstrijden regelde op de Olympische Spelen in Athene in 2004. Hij zegt ook in een niet zo ver verleden spelers te hebben gecontroleerd bij topploegen als Kaiserslautern, Crystal Palace en Liverpool. (Douglas De Coninck)
pi_61291538
quote:
INTERVIEW WITH MATCH-FIXING INVESTIGATOR DECLAN HILL: 'I Am Sure the World Cup Game Was Manipulated'

Canadian journalist Declan Hill spoke to SPIEGEL about his investigation into betting syndicates in Asia. He claims to have uncovered evidence that the result of the last-16 football match between Ghana and Brazil during the 2006 World Cup was fixed.

SPIEGEL: You have spent three years investigating the international betting mafia. Have you lost all pleasure in football?
Declan Hill: I love football the way one loves a woman, but by now I ask myself quite early on in a match, whether there is anything suspicious going on. There are no precise statistics about betting manipulation in football, of course, but it is shocking how often people in the world of betting talk about matches that have been manipulated – not just in Asia or Eastern Europe, but also in the major football leagues, such as in Germany, and even during world championships.

SPIEGEL: Is that something you would have expected?
Hill: Absolutely not, and that’s why I took plenty of time in the book to allow the reader to follow my own process of realization. I still vividly remember standing at the edge of a dusty track after meeting an informer in Ghana, with the wind blowing across from the Sahara, thinking: This is just incredible.

SPIEGEL: In your book you claim that the match between Brazil and Ghana in the last-16 round at the 2006 World Cup was fixed. The starting point for your investigation is a figure from the Thai betting scene. How did you meet him in Bangkok?
Hill: That was a drawn-out process that took months. In the Asian gambling world, every insider knows his name. He is a shadow figure about whom not much is known. He’s said to have been manipulating games for 15 years, his name turns up in the case files of match fixing in Asia. He organizes the bets and their manipulation. In my book I called him Lee Chin. In November 2005 he finally invited me to a golf club on the outskirts of Bangkok. The conversation that ensued over the next two and a quarter hours was one of the strangest I have ever had.

SPIEGEL: In what way?
Hill: He claimed he was a leading member of a syndicate that manipulated football matches. He said he had 16 runners, that is middle men who approach the players, coaches or referees. He told me about manipulated games at the Olympics, the under-20s World Cup, the South Asian Games and he predicted the result of a Bundesliga game that was just about to begin in Hanover while we were talking to each other.

SPIEGEL: Did you believe him?
Hill: That evening I was torn to and fro all the time. Naturally I had heard of the Hoyzer scandal in German football, but it nevertheless seemed incredible to me that this sort of thing should be possible in a major league in which the professionals earn so much money.

SPIEGEL: Why did Chin agree to meet you in the first place and tell you this kind of thing?
Hill: I asked myself the same question for a long time. Maybe because he wants to prove to the world how good he is, and a book like this may have sounded tempting to him. Maybe the man, who is a social outsider in terms of his background, feels honored by the fact that a journalist and scientist from Oxford University takes him seriously and treats him respectfully. Perhaps it also has to do with the fact that, thanks to my research into the betting scene, I spoke his language.

SPIEGEL: He wanted you to recognize his art?
Hill: I think so.

SPIEGEL: He is a gambler, did he play with you too?
Hill: Perhaps.

SPIEGEL: Why do you safeguard his identity and refrain from using his real name in your book?
Hill: Because he would kill me.

SPIEGEL: Really?
Hill: I know I’m playing with fire, but there is a limit to my courage and heroism. Two journalists, Johnson Fernandez and Lazarus Rokk, who exposed match fixing in Singapore some years ago, were sent cartridges bearing their names.

SPIEGEL: Chin then offered to allow you to witness him fixing a match during the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany. That sounds like a cock-and-bull story.
Hill: Yes, but that’s what happened.

SPIEGEL: How exactly did he go about it?
Hill: After our first meeting in November 2005 I stayed in touch with him. He then reported about the preparations and the name of one country was mentioned very often: Ghana. He told me that people from his syndicate had already been in touch with Ghana’s players during the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens and that he had succeeded at the time in getting Ghana to lose the final match against Japan. He claimed contacts existed now too and that things would go ahead. Then, on 25 May 2006, he ordered me to come to a Kentucky Fried Chicken branch in a shopping centre in the north of Bangkok at night-time. I was to witness the deal being closed. Why was I allowed to be present? No idea. I sometimes got the feeling that Chin viewed my skepticism as a personal affront.

SPIEGEL: What happened there?
Hill: When I entered, four men were sitting at a table: Chin, next to him two younger Chinese, and a black guy, a large, athletic man in a blue shirt and blue jeans. I sat down a few tables further along, I was rather nervous, my hidden camera wasn’t working, instead I tried to take a photograph with my mobile phone. The black man was a runner, the middle man for the Ghanaian team. The meeting lasted a little over an hour.

SPIEGEL: Did you know who the black man was?
Hill: Chin told me that in his office, two days after the meeting. He said he was a coach for Ghana’s under 17s team, someone who knew his way around Ghanaian football. Chin said the man had obtained the consent of eight of Ghana’s players. A few days earlier I had read in the newspaper that Ghana’s team would receive $20,000 for each victory at the Word Cup. I asked Chin whether that wouldn’t be more important to Ghana’s players. He replied: “But a victory is not 100 percent certain. And each player is guaranteed to receive $30,000 from me." And at the end of our conversation he asked me whether I had taken a photograph in the Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant. “I was able to see you,” he said, “I know you tried to take a picture. I know. I know everything.”

SPIEGEL: Did he threaten you?
Hill: No, but I felt very uneasy, after all I was recording this conversation too. After that I realized I had to be more careful.

SPIEGEL: You then flew straight to the World Cup in Germany?
Hill: I watched Ghana’s first game against Italy in my flat in Oxford. Incidentally, Chin had predicted that Italy would win by at least two goals. Italy won 2:0, the performance of the Ghanaian team felt very strange, they played well but you got the sense that they were not necessarily out to score goals. Even before the final whistle I jotted down on a slip of paper: This game was manipulated. Then I flew to Germany where I booked into the Hotel Maritim, where the Ghana team was staying in Würzburg.

SPIEGEL: Was that easy to do?
Hill: Interestingly enough, it was. Anyone who wanted to could get up close to the Ghanaian players. During the six days I was there, I was in touch with almost all the players, coaches and officials. No problem. Of course I looked around for the Ghanaian runner, the man from the Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant in Bangkok, but I never saw him. It was very sociable in the hotel, and superficially everything seemed to be in order, no sign of the runner, no Asians hanging around. Two days before the match against Brazil in the round of 16, Chin called and said that the deal with the Ghanaians was on, 100 percent, he said, he was absolutely certain Ghana would lose by at least two goals.

SPIEGEL: On June 27, 2006 the match ended 3:0 for Brazil.
Hill: The Ghanaians played as though they were putting their whole heart into it, but then there were a number of stupid mistakes: passes didn’t succeed, the defense was careless, the team collected three stupid goals. After the game I was in the stands in Dortmund with tears in my eyes because I was convinced, at least emotionally, that the match had been fixed. I phoned Chin from the stadium: “I didn’t believe you, but you are a genius.” He said: “How can I be a genius if I earn so little money with this?”

SPIEGEL: What did you do in order to find out whether your feelings weren’t misleading you?
Hill: After the World Cup I first of all had to finish writing my dissertation in Oxford and in the summer of 2007 I flew to Ghana to find the runner. A crazy plan really, but if there was anyone who could confirm Chin’s stories then it was that runner.

SPIEGEL: How did you find him?
Hill: By chance. While I was in Ghana, Ghana’s under-23 team played Iran. After the game there were reports that the game had been manipulated, one of the coaches was dismissed from the team. A newspaper printed a photograph of the coach: it was the man from the Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant. His name is Abukari Damba.

SPIEGEL: And then you met him?
Hill: Yes, four times in all. The first time was in a bar called the Bus Stop in Accra, and after that in the Beverly Hills Hotel. I did not identify myself as a journalist, but as someone from the betting scene. Damba had been one of the goalkeepers in the great Ghanaian team surrounding Abédi Pelé in the 1990s. Later he played in Malaysia and met a Malaysian match fixer there. He had been the under-17s coach for Ghana and for some time now assistant coach of the under-23 team. At a hearing by the Ghanaian association about the fixed match against Iran, Damba confessed to having put players from the team in touch with two Chinese and an Iranian, and to have received money in return.

SPIEGEL: And what did Damba say about the World Cup match between Ghana and Brazil?
Hill: That he had been in Würzburg with two match fixers from Malaysia. They had lived in a hotel opposite the Ghanaian team quarters, and Damba also admitted that he had given the Malaysian access to the team and that the match fixer also approached the team captain Steven Appiah.

SPIEGEL: And?
Hill: Damba says that he doesn’t know what happened after that.

SPIEGEL: Did you speak with Appiah about the accusations?
Hill: Not just with Appiah, but also with the goalkeeper Richard Kingson and other national players too. They all assured me that they were completely unaware of the manipulation of the team in Germany. However one of the players did admit that he had been approached by Asian betters in 2004 during the Olympic Games. And they all said that Appiah was the captain of the team and that you would have to talk to him. I then met with him in an industrial area in Accra. We talked in his car and he said that he had been approached a number of times in the course of his career and that he had taken money too. The first time was in 1997 during the under-17s World Cup in Malaysia and also in 2004 at the Olympic Games in Athens; however he had been given money in order to win games, not to lose them. He had then shared the bonus among the players.

SPIEGEL: Ghana’s team captain, who was until recently signed to Fenerbahce Istanbul, says that he has accepted money from third parties twice during his career?
Hill: That’s exactly what he says. I had trouble comprehending this, so I spoke to him again over the phone, and he repeated his account.

SPIEGEL: And during the 2006 World Cup in Germany?
Hill: He was approached there too, but he says that he refused. I also asked him whether the Malaysian had gone to other players too. He replied: “Yes, I think he did the rounds.”

SPIEGEL: But you don’t know which of Ghana’s players might be involved?
Hill: No, but I am nevertheless sure that the game was manipulated. Once again: there is an Asian betting manipulator, Lee Chin, who announces that he will fix a game during the World Cup. He allows me to witness a preparatory meeting at a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant in Bangkok. This meeting is attended by the former Ghanaian national player Abukari Damba and a match fixer from Malaysia. The two of them travel to Germany and approach players. And the match ends as predicted by Chin.

SPIEGEL: But does a player want to deliberately lose the round of 16 match at the World Cup, and into the bargain against the world champions from Brazil, if winning could make him famous?
Hill: In Ghana making it into the last 16 is already considered a huge success. After the victories against the Czech Republic and the United States, they were celebrated as heroes -- and after their defeat by Brazil too. Besides, there had been a huge argument about the payment of the players within the Ghanaian delegation a week before the start of the World Cup. The players were in quite a bad mood. However I want to make it very clear that not all the players were involved. Many did everything they could to win that game.

SPIEGEL: Have you informed the world football association FIFA of your findings?
Hill: I visited FIFA President Joseph Blatter in Zurich and told him that an Asian better had predicted the outcomes of matches during the 2006 World Cup. He did not believe this to be true. If it had happened, he said, then it had not affected the overall outcome. But if it were true “then all the work done by FIFA during the past 30 years was in vain. In that case, we have failed.”
pi_61322880
quote:
Ecuador wil FIFA-onderzoek naar omgekocht WK-duel
Door Sander Berends
Dinsdag, 02 september 2008, 14:54

De Ecuadoraanse voetbalfederatie (FEF) gaat de wereldvoetbalbond FIFA vragen een onderzoek op te starten naar de geruchten over een mogelijk omkoopschandaal op het WK 2006 in Duitsland. De FEF reageert daarmee op een artikel in het gerespecteerde Duitse weekblad Der Spiegel, waarin wordt beweerd dat de Zuid-Amerikanen met opzet met 1-0 verloren van Engeland. Een resultaat dat was beïnvloed door een Thais consortium, dat haar basis in Parijs kent.

De Canadese onderzoeksjournalist Declan Hill schreef in zijn boek 'The Fix' dat er op het laatste WK vier wedstrijden werden gemanipuleerd in opdracht van de gokmaffia. Eén van de matchen zou de 8e finale Engeland-Ecuador zijn. Engeland won de partij dankzij een doelpunt van David Beckham in de 60e minuut. De match werd geleid door de Belg Frank De Bleeckere.

De FEF meldt dat haar voorzitter Luis Chiriboga wil dat de zaak onderzocht wordt. ``Als blijkt dat de geruchten kloppen, moet de FIFA actie ondernemen", klinkt het. De FEF verwerpt alle beschuldigingen aan het adres van de Ecuadoraanse ploeg.
pi_61322929
Heel het voetbal is verrot.
pi_61381037
quote:
Op maandag 1 september 2008 14:13 schreef NJ het volgende:

[..]


[..]

Want dat is natuurlijk absoluut niet voor te stellen in het geval van Ghana tegen Brazilië. .
Tuurlijk niet altijd.
Het komt vaak genoeg voor dat ze met 1 goal verschil winnen.
Als je dan op zo'n marge wed leverd dat veel meer op in Azie dan als je voorspeld dat Brazilie gaat winnen.
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