2006 FIFA World Cup match may have been fixed: report

By DPA,

Hamburg (Germany) : A match at the 2006 World Cup involving five-time world champions Brazil may have been rigged by an Asian betting syndicate, a journalist has claimed in an interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel.


Support TwoCircles

In the report to be published Monday, the Canadian journalist Declan Hill said his research had shown that an Asian syndicate wanted Ghana to lose the quarter-final match by at least two goals. Brazil went on to win 3-0 in Dortmund.

Hill, who has a book on match-fixing published in Germany Tuesday, said three years of research had shown that a former Ghana international had acted as middleman between Ghana’s players and the head of a betting syndicate in Bangkok.

Spiegel said its own research had meanwhile shown two matches in Germany to be suspicious after huge sums were placed on them by a Malaysian who has been convicted of attempted match-fixing.

According to the report, William Bee Wah Lim placed 2.8 million euros ($4.1 million) with Asian bookmakers on Kaiserslautern losing a first-division match at Hanover on Nov 26, 2005. As a result of Hanover’s 5-1 victory he won 2.2 million euros.

He placed almost four million euros ($5.86 million) on Karlsruhe beating Sportfreunde Siegen in a second-division match Aug 7, 2005. Karlsruhe won the game 2-0.

The report said investigations had produced evidence that Lim had contacts with players from Kaiserslautern, Karlsruhe and Sportfreunde Siegen, although the players have protested their innocence.

Lim was sentenced to a jail term of two years and five months by a court in Frankfurt in June 2007 after being convicted of attempted fixing of matches in the German regional league (then third division) and the Austrian first division. The two Bundesliga matches were not part of the court proceedings.

He was released on conditional bail of 40,000 euros but has since left the country. A warrant for his arrest was issued in January.

SUPPORT TWOCIRCLES HELP SUPPORT INDEPENDENT AND NON-PROFIT MEDIA. DONATE HERE