Wager Mage
Photo: Pedro Figueras
Ghost games are so-called for a simple reason – they do not exist. No players, referees, substitutes or coaches took to the field of play, and no spectators were in the stands. The two actual physical teams may have been many miles away from where the match was reported to have been played.
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Read More »So how are scouts becoming involved in this type of activity? Commonly, it is through bribery by criminals looking to take them under their wing, sometimes combined with some form of intimidation or threat. It can also be through opportunity, with former scouts realising their own unique position to influence bookmakers and allying this with criminal intent. Typically, a scout will be paid around €50 by a betting data provider to cover a match, whereas a criminal may offer them €300-€500 to delay the reporting of goals. Scouts already under criminal control are also known to have become involved in driving this activity and in recruiting their own scout networks. It would seem that over the past three years, scouts and criminals that control or work with them appear to have branched out from frauds such as delayed reporting and into ghost games. They have developed the know-how of misreporting match information into a co-ordinated operation of misreporting the whole match – from pre-match information and reports (such as team news) right through to ‘live’ match reporting and post-game statistics and even press reports. The first identified ghost game that was believed to have been set up to profit on the betting markets was a supposed match between Turkmenistan U21 v. Maldives U21 on 16 January 2012, that ‘ended’ 3-2. The betting data service company, RunningBall, had a scout at the game monitoring the match, who advised that the match did exist. Enquiries revealed that neither the Maldives FA, nor the Turkmenistan FA, or the Football Association of Malaysia had any knowledge of this international friendly. The RunningBall scout advised that there were two teams who did play the match and that he believed the two teams were the U21 Maldives and U21 Turkmenistan teams. This matter was referred to the Royal Malaysian Police for further investigation, but to date no further information about this matter has been reported. In 2014, the ICSS looked into reports of a friendly match ‘played’ in Armenia between Ulisses Yerevan FC and FC Gandzasar on 29 January 2014 and that ended 0-2. Sources who spoke to the two clubs confirmed that both teams were having training camps that day but in different locations, 300km from each other, and that they did not play the friendly match that had been reported. In the lead up to the match, the fixture had been listed on a website that purported to be an official website of one of the clubs involved – in fact the website was a fake that was set up by an individual who used to be employed as a betting scout. The pre-match betting markets did not show anything suspicious (such as strong support for Ulisses to lose) and it was very difficult to verify whether any live markets were actually offered. It was also difficult to ascertain whether money was paid out on the match by any bookmakers. Having said this, the fact this match did not exist indicates that those behind its reporting online were likely to have attempted to profit from it in the betting markets by taking advantage of their inside information. That there appeared to be no suspicious betting activity may be a sign that it was a failed attempt, or was highly localised from a geographic perspective. In February 2015, it was reported in the press that another ghost match had been identified between Slutsksakhar Slutsk v. FC Shakhtyor Soligorsk; a match between the two Belarusian sides allegedly played on 3 February in Minsk. Reports of the match indicated that with only minutes left, Shakhtyor were winning 0-1 and had also missed a penalty. But then Slutsksakhar scored two goals in the final moments of the game to become unlikely winners; they were clear underdogs before the match, having only just been promoted to the Premier League. FC Shakhtyor later claimed in a statement that their website had been hacked and misinformation added regarding the supposed match. Sources within Slutsksakhar apparently also confirmed that they had no knowledge of the game; indeed they were listed on online football results sites as having played their last game on 1 February, only two days before. SBOBET and Bet365 both took bets on this match and it is believed that they traded normally until the match was allegedly over. Although SBOBET were suspicious of the fixture, an email purportedly from FC Slutsk along with the false match report posted on the Shakter website convinced the bookmaker that the match was regular, so it paid out on bets. Both of the Belarusian Premier League clubs denied any involvement in the fixture and the Belarus FA reported the case to the police and UEFA. Ghost games have several characteristics in common. In a similar vein to scenarios the ICSS is seeing in standard match-fixing, those organising ghost games have favoured friendly fixtures. Like match-fixing, the reasons are clear – the teams are from lower level leagues or in low profile fixtures that still generate interest from the betting markets.
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Read More »In the digital age, criminals have simply diversified their tactics when defrauding the betting markets, now by also using the companies’ own tools and operational weaknesses against them. For the criminals, this is much less labour intensive than standard match-fixing, inordinately cheaper and easier to pull off and less risky in terms of discovery. Yet the rewards will still be worthwhile, so long as the bookmakers pay out. Match venue changes are often reported around ghost games and could act as an early warning sign to bookmakers and football authorities. The Belarus incident featured this, with reports at the last minute that the venue was to be moved a considerable distance. This often means any legitimate betting scouts that were planning to cover it then decide not to, due to logistics, effectively removing the possibility of the match being covered and therefore its mythical action to be solely reported on by the fraudsters who have invented it. Finally, as mentioned earlier, the most common characteristic brings us back to the betting scouts themselves and those that previously had this job that are now using their ‘expertise’ for illegal benefit.
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