23 November 2009 / REUTERS, BERLIN
German coaches and officials on Saturday demanded stiff sentences for members of a ring suspected of having fixed or tried to rig at least 200 matches across Europe, including three in the Champions League.
German police said on Friday they had dismantled a gang with more than 200 suspected members operating in nine European leagues. “We will punish these people. They do not belong to us any more,” German soccer federation chief Theo Zwanziger said, adding prison sentences could await the main culprits just like those convicted in a 2005 match-fixing affair involving referee Robert Hoyzer. “The message here is not that it happened but how we deal with it. Where there is money there is corruption. (Prison sentences) could be the case here as well.” Police in Germany, Britain, Austria and Switzerland staged simultaneous raids on Thursday, arresting 15 people in Germany and two in Switzerland. The gang is suspected of having paid off referees, players and officials to win at least 10 million euros after betting on those matches, with officials speculating this to be the “tip of the iceberg.”