Tennis match-fixing: ‘He’s young. That’s the worst part.’
Leading stars in Australian Open bemoan 18-year-old prodigy Oliver Anderson's attempts to fix a youth tournament last year.
Oliver Anderson has been accused of match-fixing. Photo: Scott Barbour/Getty Images.
A match-fixing charge in Australia has underlined concerns about corruption in tennis ahead of the year’s opening Grand Slam, with top players frustrated at another scandal hitting the sport.
Police said an 18-year-old had been charged with match-fixing at a tournament in Victoria last October and would appear in court in March.
Australian media Friday named him as Oliver Anderson, an emerging star who is the reigning Australian Open boys champion.
The claim, just days before the world’s leading players assemble in Melbourne for the first Grand Slam of the season, related to a first-round match at the second-tier Traralgon Challenger event.
World number one Andy Murray, playing in the Qatar Open in Doha, said he had read about the case and that although he did not want to comment on the specifics, corruption must be tackled.
“It’s disappointing for the game any time something like that comes out,” said Murray.
“However, if people are caught and charged, I see that as being a positive thing.
“If it’s going on and nothing is happening about it that’s much worse for the future of the sport.
“So, if it’s happening, there should be the most severe punishments for whoever is involved in it.”
He was backed by rival Novak Djokovic, also in Doha, who said he was saddened by the news.
“Very disappointing to hear, especially considering the fact that he’s young and won the junior Grand Slam,” said Djokovic.
“You know, obviously the quality is there and the potential is there.
“I don’t understand why he has done it,” he said, before adding: “Everyone makes mistakes.”
Fourteen-time Grand Slam champion Rafael Nadal said the latest police case showed the fight against match-fixing was working.
“You get tired about this kind of stuff, but the most important thing is (to) fight against these kind of things,” he told reporters at the Brisbane International tournament.
“And he is young. That’s even the worst part.”
On the eve of the Australian Open last year, there were bombshell media allegations that match-fixing was rife in tennis and the authorities had done little to counter corruption.
They included claims that players who had reached the top 50 had been repeatedly suspected of fixing matches but had never faced action.
It sparked an independent review headed by Adam Lewis QC, a London-based expert on sports law, aimed at shaking up tennis’s under-fire anti-corruption body, the Tennis Integrity Unit.
In the wake of the revelations, Australian tennis authorities boosted measures to fight corruption.
They included having anti-corruption officers at all sanctioned events, a block on accessing gambling websites via public wifi at tournaments, and bolstering its National Integrity Unit.
Ann West, head of the integrity unit, said much had been done to address the problem since the scandal broke last year.
“My first reaction was disappointment, to be honest. Whilst we understand that we’ll always fight the battle I would have anticipated the message was getting out there,” she told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
“We’re realists, we have to continue and will increase our education opportunities with our players,” she added. “We have zero tolerance to match-fixing. That’s our mantra.”
Neil Paterson, assistant commissioner of Victoria Police, said targeting match-fixers and illegal betting was a key focus of authorities heading into the Australian Open which gets under way on January 16.
“Match-fixing is one of the fastest growing organised crime types across the world at the present time,” he warned.
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