BWIN DEFENDS ONLINE GAMBLING IN SLANDER CASE
18 April 2008
Austrian online gambling group strikes back for
the industry
The Vienna-listed online gambling group Bwin has
revealed that it has taken the organisers of the French
Open tennis tournament to court for slander in a legal
counterattack following litigation to ban Internet
betting at the Grand Slam tournament.
The case dates back to February this year, when the
tennis organisers filed complaints in Belgium and Paris
claiming that computer betting companies stain the
reputation of the clay-court championship.
"Following claims by the French tennis federation that
services offered by online sports betting operators
present a danger to the ethics of sport, Bwin is suing
the organisers of the French Open for damages before a
Paris court," a Bwin statement advised.
A Belgian court in Liege heard arguments in the case
last Friday and is expected to rule before the French
Open starts on May 25.
The issue of integrity in tennis surfaced last year when
an online betting site - Betfair.com - voided all wagers
on a match in Poland between fourth-ranked Nikolay
Davydenko and 87th-ranked Martin Vassallo Arguello
because of irregular betting patterns.
The French federation is suing Bwin, Betfair and
Ladbrokes - demanding a court injunction to stop these
companies from taking bets on the French Open. It seeks
a fine of Euro 50 000 euros a day for any violations
(see previous InfoPowa report).
Bwin spokesman Antoine Costanzo claims that the head of
the French tennis federation made slanderous comments
when he launched the court case and that his company
seeks Euro 1 million in damages as a consequence. Bwin
claims legal standing because it is a major provider of
online gaming entertainment.
Countering the allegations of French Open organisers,
the European Gaming and Betting Association said that
the Internet is an excellent tool to trace any
irregularities in betting operations. The organisation,
which has most of Europe's top online gambling companies
among its members, said Internet operations left "...a
perfect audit trail, one that can, where appropriate, be
shared with regulators and other authorities in order to
trace bets and hence provide valuable evidence in the
fight against fraud."
French Open organisers said that betting companies are
tainting the reputation of the tournament and unfairly
using it as a way of making money. They argued that if a
match-fixing scandal hit the French Open, it would
undermine the value of the tournament, which in 2007 had
revenue of Euro 118 million and attracted 450 000 fans
to Roland Garros.
The EGBA insisted betting companies stood to lose just
as much. "Any match-fixing would penalise bookmakers
severely as they take financial risk when setting odds
for all sporting events," it said in a statement.
Vienna-based bwin has said it was confident it would be
able to stave off the legal challenge, insisting it does
no more than offer a fair and legal service. Along with
football and horse racing, tennis is among the most
popular sports to bet on in Europe.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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