According to a study of eso gold Eastern European football by global player union FIFPro in 2012, 12 per cent of the 3,357 players interviewed had been approached to fix games, and out of those 55 per cent did not have their salaries paid on time.
Mutschke said he was nervous about the amount of money some of the biggest fixers had at their disposal. He said a suspected fixer called Tan Seet Eng, known around the world as Dan Tan and arrested by authorities in his homeland Singapore last year, told authorities he offered bribes of as much as US$1 million.
European police body Europol last year said it uncovered a Singapore-based network responsible for rigging or attempting to fix 680 local, national and international matches across the world between 2008 and 2011. Italian authorities named Tan as the head of the gang. www.mmoteso.com He remains in custody in Singapore.
Welcome to
iPeace.us
© 2024 Created by David Califa. Managed by Eyal Raviv. Powered by
You need to be a member of iPeace.us to add comments!
Join iPeace.us