SPORTS BETTING CHEATS
1 May 2009
Last weekend was a bad one for sports betting
scares
In a previous bulletin, InfoPowa flagged recent
sportsbetting scares from Ireland and Bulgaria, but
these were apparently augmented over the weekend by
further alarms in diverse sports from the UK to the
United States.
In America, the newspaper USA
Today reported that Adam Cuomo, a former Toledo running
back, admitted he helped set up a betting scheme aimed
at influencing the outcome of football and men's
basketball games between 2003 and 2006, according to
court documents unsealed in U.S. District Court in
Detroit last week.
The five-page affidavit also
included information gleaned from wiretaps of Ghazi
"Gary" Manni, a self-described gambler from Detroit who
has been at the centre of all of the US government's
lengthy investigation. Such filings often precede
criminal charges.
And in Britain, the Telegraph
reported that two bookmakers suspended betting on
Sunday's game between Grays Athletic and Forest Green
Rovers after betting patterns raised their suspicions.
Blue Square and William Hill suspended betting
on the match after a large number of wagers were placed
on Grays to win after trailing at half-time. Grays won
2-1 after going 1-0 down in the first 45 minutes.
"We'll be reporting this to the FA on Monday to ask
how we progress," a Blue Square spokesman told BBC
Sport. "We are withholding stakes in line with our
regulations."
Hill's spokesman Graham Sharpe
said: "We saw a most unusual betting pattern on this
match involving a large number of requests for bets on
Grays to be losing at half-time and winning at
full-time."
Grays scored twice in just 50
second-half seconds to come from behind and beat Forest
Green 2-1 in the Blue Square Premier game, the division
from which teams are promoted to the Football League.
"We did see unusual betting patterns," said Blue
Square spokesman Alan Alger, the firm that sponsors the
division.
"We closed the market on Saturday. It
looked extremely dodgy."
Earlier this month, the
Football Association charged five players for breaching
betting rules, with some accused of gambling thousands
of pounds. The five have been charged with betting on a
victory for Bury in Accrington's last game of last
season (see previous InfoPowa reports).
Earlier
this month, Macedonian club FK Pobeda were banned from
European competitions for eight years after being found
guilty of deliberately losing a match by governing body
UEFA (see previous InfoPowa report).
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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