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Italian football faces new match-fixing scandal

Xinhua, May 19, 2015 Adjust font size:

The Italian football faced a new surge of scandal on Tuesday in relation to a millionaire match-fixing probe suspected to be infiltrated by 'Ndrangheta, the most powerful mafia syndicate in Italy.

Media reports said more than 30 teams from Lega Pro and Serie D, the third and fourth tiers of Italian football, were involved. Some 50 people were detained and more than 70 were placed under investigation including managers, coaches, players and investors, according to ANSA news agency.

The operation was coordinated by investigators of Catanzaro, a city in Calabria, the southern region where 'Ndrangheta has its roots. Named "Dirty Soccer", it extended to a number of Italian cities including Milan, Naples and Ravenna.

"If the scenario is this one, then it is a dramatic situation," Renzo Ulivieri, President of the National Soccer Coaches Association of Italy (AIAC), told Milan-based Gazzetta dello Sport, Italy's leading sports newspaper.

"Minor tiers are in very difficult conditions from the economic point of view, we all know what the situation of Lega Pro and Serie D is like ... more controls are needed in the management of championships," he said.

In a press conference held in Catanzaro later on Tuesday, investigators highlighted the seriousness of the match-fixing phenomenon in the Italian football which they said is "far from being solved." They described the illegal activity as "very flourishing and pronged in foreign countries as well."

"Our investigation lasted seven-eight months and produced clamorous results," Catanzaro's chief prosecutor Antonio Vincenzo Lombardo told the press conference. He said the investigation was born from a wiretapping of Pietro Iannazzo, the head of a powerful 'Ndrangheta clan.

Lombardo said two match-fixing associations composed of Italians and foreigners including Serbians, Slovenians, Albanians and Maltese were trying to extend the scam also to matches of Italian higher divisions.

The Italian football has been at the center of match-fixing scandals in recent years. A noted 2006 scam named "Calciopoli" extended to Serie A. Juventus, the worst hit, was stripped of two Serie A titles and demoted to the second tier, where it remained a season.

Dozens of people were allegedly implicated in the Calciopoli scandal, but most of them were acquitted as their verdicts were declared timed out.

Earlier this year, jail verdicts against former Juventus general director Luciano Moggi and former Juventus CEO Antonio Giraudo were declared expired thus cancelled by the Italian supreme court. Endite