OffsAIde
·3 de junio de 2026
World Cup faces spot-fixing threat as global warnings grow

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Yahoo sportsOffsAIde
·3 de junio de 2026

The World Cup’s vast betting markets make it a prime target for spot-fixing. According to NY Times, at least two players representing different nations and bound for the tournament have been reported by independent integrity experts to the national federations where they play their club football on suspicion of manipulation.
One case from earlier this season centres on a player who allegedly took a deliberate yellow card in a league match to serve a suspension before a derby. The plan was so widely trailed that heavy betting on his booking triggered alerts, and the incident was reported to the relevant federation, which did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
The second case followed bookmaker alerts last month about first-half card markets. The player was cautioned after three fouls in under five minutes, and the matter was passed to the appropriate integrity unit.
The players are not being named to avoid compromising any investigation. Experts warn that spot-fixing can be a gateway to deeper manipulation, with those involved exposed to pressure to repeat or escalate.
A leading monitoring network logged more than 1,000 suspicious football matches between January and late November 2025, most frequently in India, Australia and Vietnam. Analysts note that stronger oversight uncovers more cases, yet Australia remains attractive to fixers given its time zone. Bookmakers apply very low limits in markets such as Bulgaria, Uzbekistan, Cambodia, Myanmar, Tunisia, Bhutan, Uganda and Kenya.
Source: NY Times







































