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Game, set and match ... fixing

China Daily | Updated: 2018-05-02 10:10
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A report by the Independent Review Panel has concluded that corruption is rampant in professional tennis, particularly in the lower levels of the sport. [Photo/Agencies]

Independent panel claims lower levels of the sport are dogged by corruption, Agence France-Presse reports.

Lower-level tennis has a "tsunami"-like problem with match-fixing, according to a review body set up to look into allegations of corruption in the sport.

The Independent Review Panel (IRP), which published its findings recently, says there is a "very significant" corruption problem at "lower and middle levels of the sport", especially in the men's game.

The panel was set up in January 2016 following allegations made by the BBC and Buzzfeed that leading players, including Grand Slam winners, were involved in match-fixing and that evidence had been suppressed.

The panel - which spoke to over 100 players and, according to the BBC, cost $28 million to fund - found no evidence to support those allegations.

However, it said there was 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, which are the lowest-level of men's events.

However, the highest level competitions and governing bodies did not escape criticism.

Investigation of suspicious incidents at Grand Slam events was deemed "insufficient" by the report, while other inquiries were "inappropriate or ineffective, resulting in missed opportunities".

The ATP, the governing body of men's professional tennis, was also found to be guilty of "failing to exhaust potential leads before ending investigations".

The panel claimed tennis faces a "serious integrity problem", particularly at the lower levels of the sport where players often struggle to break even, and especially on the men's circuits.

The panel made several recommendations to tackle corruption because it believes the current system used by the TIU (Tennis Integrity Unit) and international governing bodies is "inadequate to deal with the nature and extent of the problem now faced".

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