Breaking News :

Tennis officials prep for rise in match-fixing alerts

Anti-corruption officials in tennis are bracing for a potential uptick in match-fixing alerts when the official tours resume later this summer due to the significant number of formal reports of “suspicious matches” that came to the attention of the Tennis Integrity Unit during the lockdown triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.

“We anticipate a heightened sense of integrity concerns when the tours resume, especially at the lower levels [Challenger and ITF World Tour events],” Mark Harrison, head of communications for the TIU, told ESPN on Tuesday.

“There will be a renewed level of gambling, and a small percentage of that may involve corrupt gambling. That’s why we made a [recent] statement that there continues to be suspicious activity.”

Last Friday, the TIU reported that regulated betting operators had reported 24 suspicious matches for the second quarter of the year.

Such reports are not outright claims of match-fixing but alerts to suspicious betting patterns and/or activity. That was despite the lack of tour play since the coronavirus outbreak caused the official game to shut down in mid-March.

The number concerns anti-corruption officials because there were only 33 reports of suspicious matches in the same quarter in 2019, when both the ATP and WTA, along with the minor league circuit operated by the ITF, were in full swing.

“This was not a huge spike in activity,” Harrison said of the most recent reports. “But there also was a great deal less tennis being played.”

The 24 alerts issued for this last quarter all stemmed from events created and staged while the ATP and WTA have been idle. As the events that have been created and played over the past four months are not part of the official game, they do not come under the jurisdiction of the TIU.

While the TIU has no jurisdiction over exhibitions and other special events or tournaments that exist outside the ATP, WTA and ITF game, players are covered at all times by the anti-corruption rules they must agree to in order to compete in the official match.

While the TIU has no jurisdiction over non-tour events, players are still subject to the same punitive measures should they be found guilty of anti-corruption violations.

Read Previous

Impact, Toronto FC aim to bounce back after disappointing 1st matches

Read Next

Canada’s deputy public health officer concerned about Blue Jays playing at home

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

/var/www/betregal_net