SNOOKER SCANDAL TRIGGERS POLITICAL ACTION
19 December 2008
UK Parliamentary committee to review suspect sport
betting
Controversy over alleged cheating in a UK snooker
championship match earlier this (December 2008) month
has triggered the appointment of a parliamentary select
committee, which will investigate suspected betting
patterns in sport next year, reports the UK newspaper,
The Guardian.
The committee's enquiries will form part of a
wide-ranging review of recent legislation in the area,
as the Gambling Commission insisted it was up to the job
of investigating corruption, the newspaper revealed.
The review will take evidence from sporting bodies and
bookmakers, including the controversy surrounding a
first-round match in the UK snooker championships in
Telford, when betting was suspended by leading
bookmakers after a run of suspicious bets on Stephen
Maguire beating Jamie Burnett 9-3.
The issue has been widely reported in the British media,
with bookmakers warning that snooker could lose its
public appeal and sponsorship income if the game's
governing body, the World Professional Billiards and
Snooker Association, was not seen to thoroughly
investigate the allegations. The WPBSA is likely to ask
the BBC for television footage of the match after the
corporation said it was happy to cooperate with the
authorities. That opens up the possibility of experts
being asked to review the match to analyse the players'
shot choices.
The Association of British Bookmakers, which issued an
advisory note to its members on Friday warning of
unusual betting patterns, has passed on details of its
investigation to the Gambling Commission and the WPBSA.
The WPBSA said that in cases where irregularities were
flagged up by the ABB or betting exchange Betfair,
"...the match in question is carefully monitored by
World Snooker and a thorough assessment of the players'
performance will be made".
Ian Marmion, the trading director at Victor Chandler,
which suspended betting on Friday after spotting a run
of bets on the 9-3 scoreline, said snooker's appeal
would be damaged if corruption was not rooted out.
"Casual punters will be turned off," he said. "Are you
going to have a bet on a match if you think it's fixed?
There are bigger ramifications for the sport."
Top players added their voices to the tumult,
emphasising that their comments were general and not
pegged to Maguire's match with Burnett. Former world
champions Stephen Hendry, Dennis Taylor and Ken Doherty
have all spoken out. "Anyone throwing a result should be
banned for life," said Hendry, while Taylor added:
"Anyone found guilty of match-fixing has no place in the
game." Doherty said: "I think the game is clean but the
only way to make sure is to investigate the matter."
Privately, some policymakers have voiced fears that the
Gambling Commission lacks the expertise and resources to
properly tackle corruption involving complex, often
international, investigations.
Philip Davies, a former bookmaker who is now a Tory MP
and sits on the culture, media and sport committee,
said: "I'm not a big fan of the Gambling Commission.
They are not quite as knowledgable as they need to be in
all things gambling."
But the Department of Culture, Media and Sport yesterday
reiterated its determination to address the issue. John
Whittingdale, the Tory MP who chairs the department's
select committee, said that it would conduct a review of
the 2005 Gambling Act next year.
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