Ronaldo and Real Madrid are pound for pound better than Manchester United. Here’s why…

Graham Hunter byline

The Champions League is back and Real Madrid take on Manchester United at the Bernabeu on Wednesday. Graham Hunter writes for the Paddy Power Blog on why United are going to find it hard to cope with former hero Cristiano Ronaldo

When Steve McManaman produced the name of Manchester United to face Real Madrid during the Champions League knockout round draw back in December there must have been many United fans who thought the Liverpool legend had done them the first favour of his career.

Not only were Spain’s champions languishing in third place in La Liga they immediately went out and lost 3-2 at Málaga to drop 16 points behind league leaders Barcelona.

The mighty Santiago Bernabéu stadium, which Sir Alex Ferguson’s team visit on Wednesday night for the third time under the Scot’s management, had been brewing its unhappiness

Against Espanyol the match-announcer, for the first time in the ‘Special’ One’s reign, didn’t read out the phrase “… and coach, José Mourinho” at the end of the team announcement.

Why? To avoid the booing, jeering and whistling which had been growing week by week.

When Mourinho’s name was re-introduced for the next home league game, Real Sociedad, it received easily the most hostile ‘bronca’ (abuse) of his reign.

Real Madrid were in disarray

Perhaps still more encouragingly for United aficionados, one of the biggest running themes in the never-ending Real Madrid soap opera was Cristiano Ronaldo’s ‘unhappiness’.

They would have easily been forgiven for thinking: ‘what better time to receive an old friend, applaud him for days of wine and roses and then spank his team’s backside?”

Ronaldo announced his nose was out of joint and that the club ‘knew why’ and he was hammered by Leo Messi in the Ballon D’Or voting having expected to win. Then came potentially the best news for United fans.

In short succession Ronaldo suffered a further twist to his troublesome right ankle, strained a leg muscle in the defeat to Granada and, most interestingly of all, had a massive blow up with Mourinho.

It came directly after the vital 2-0 home Copa del Rey win over Valencia in mid-January. Towards the end of the hard-fought victory where the visitors had scorned a hatful of chances to score, Mourinho was visibly unhappy with Ronaldo’s decision-making and positioning in the final few minutes. He shouted, he gesticulated, he returned to the dugout with steam emanating from both ears.

In the dressing room it was all off at Ludlow. Mourinho criticised Ronaldo’s work ethic, commitment to closing down the game at 2-0 and the fact that he hadn’t paid attention to the coach’s forcefully yelled instructions.

The player hit back with justified comments about the nerve it took to hammer him when he stepped up to support his beleaguered manager on every possible occasion – on the pitch, in the media and during some notable goal celebrations – when powerful journalists and growing number of fans were attacking him.

But however attractive all these details are to those at United who yearn to return to Wembley, scene of the club’s first European Cup in 1968 and a place which now needs some reparation after the most comprehensive defeat of Sir Alex’s entire 26-year reign, against Barcelona in 2011, the fact is that all that glitters is not gold.

Against this backdrop of confusion, aggression, doubt and a title weakly defended Ronaldo has been utterly and absolutely sublime. The worse things get, the better he performs.

Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates

In the 10 games since the Champions League draw was made in Nyon Ronaldo has scored 13 times, including three hat-tricks.

What is most admirable is that while others have let their form peak and trough like the graph on a lie detector in the manager’s office at a horsemeat plant, Ronaldo has always led from the front.

At Granada in a 1-0 defeat his team stunk the house out. But his work ethic and his attitude proved that he’s unwilling to accept the vagaries of form or fitness.  Even when literally nothing is going for him he’s still up for it.

For a player of that talent, wealth and achievement to be in a side so fractured that they barely even got one effort on goal against a team which was nearly relegated last season must have been frustrating beyond words.

But his attitude, play and goal record is extremely reminiscent of that 2007/8 season at United when he won the title, the Champions League, Ballon D’Or and FIFA World Player.

Ronaldo is carrying Madrid

Some months before Ronaldo banged out 42 goals during that amazing season Carlos Queiroz told a friend of mine that United planned to use Ronaldo as a central striker a great deal in the coming 12 months.

Partly because Sir Alex Ferguson and Queiroz thought he could become an effective new weapon, partly to free Wayne Rooney to play on the left but partly because ‘Cristiano needs to have the ceiling raised, he needs a challenge because he’s so, so talented that, otherwise, he’ll get bored or hit a comfort zone’.

It proved to be a dazzling idea. Ronaldo carried an ankle problem all that season, often phoned his friend and former fitness coach Walter Di Salvo to vent his frustration at having to carry an injury and at having to play ‘out of position’.

But adversity was his stimulus. The tougher the going, the more he produced.

So it is at the moment. His form is such that he’s carrying the team. No question.

His determination, his goals and his naked ambition to win Real Madrid the ‘Decima’ (their 10th Champions Cup) have converted the Bernabéu faithful, previously a little chilly and underwhelmed by his manner, into an adoring public.

His name is now, finally, chanted, the front cover of Marca proclaims him the new Alfredo Di Stefano, his overall team play is superior to that at United and the goal flow is prodigious.

The three which destroyed Sevilla at the weekend take him beyond the legendary Paco Gento (six European Cup winners’s medals) to sixth in Real Madrid’s all-time scoring list – after three and a half seasons!

He has 182 goals in 179 competitive matches and now only Hugo Sánchez, Ferenc Puskas, Santillana, Di Stéfano and Raúl are ahead of him – but nobody on that list has scored at a better goal per appearance rate.

‘The fact that the Bernabéu is finally singing my name, that the ‘feeling’ has changed is a dream come true for me’, Ronaldo told AS last week.

‘The support has taken note that I give body and soul for this club and the amount of affection and appreciation I now get on the street, at the games and from fans in the media touches me. I can really feel that the Bernabéu has taken me as one of ‘their own’ now.

‘It still surprises me that I was viewed and treated differently before because I’ve not changed. It’s just that more people have focussed on how much I give to the team, how determined I am to win the ‘Decima’ and set aside other, less important things.

‘I’m even noticing fewer insults and fewer chants of ‘Cristiano we hope you die’ at other grounds around the country. I can’t please all the people all the time – not even God manages that. It’s part of a big change since I told the President that I was unhappy here. I’m enjoying my football, I like playing with these team mates and I swear on my son’s life that when I was sad it was never, under any circumstances, to do with money.

‘As for what happened with the manager, the things which happen in the dressing room stay there. “It’s a personal matter which is now all sorted out – everything’s fine’.

Jose Mourinho

As for the utter nonsense people used to trot out about Ronaldo not being a ‘big game’ player it’s worth noting that he’s made scoring against Barcelona a personal domain in recent Clásicos, he perpetually puts Atlético Madrid to the sword in derby matches, he hit two goals and an assist while Madrid were knocked out of the Champions League semi-final by Bayern Munich last season and this term he’s the competition’s leading scorer.

In a variety of interviews Ronaldo has made it clear that he thinks Madrid, pound for pound, are better than United but that they have to ‘go out and prove it’.

Fair point.

The loss of a world class keeper like Iker Casillas who has yet to taste defeat in four games against United, is a negative. But Diego López, signed from Sevilla, was once a very firm target for United themselves after playing them twice in the Champions League for Villarreal and not conceding a goal.

Equally, part of Ronaldo’s assertion may stem from his manager’s record against Sir Alex. Mourinho, with Porto, Chelsea and Inter has gone head to head with the United boss in 13 League, Champions League, Cup or League cup matches winning six, drawing five and losing only twice.

One key element for United, in this evenly balanced tie, is how they attack in Madrid. Any team, literally anyone, who is caught upfield and allows even this rather fractured version of Mourinho’s Madrid to break at speed will be punished.

Ronaldo, too, is at his absolute best when careering away upfield in a one v two or two v three battle just like 2007/8 at United.

If England’s champions-elect can defend, press and keep possession with calm and intelligence and not be caught on the counter then it’ll be over to Ronaldo to produce something special in order for Madrid to take an advantage to Manchester.

On his current form you might be wise not to bet against that happening.

Betting: Real Madrid v Manchester United
[Web bet click here | Mobile bet click here]

United v Madrid MBS


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[video] Graham Hunter gives 3 reasons why Real Madrid will beat Manchester United (and a 40/1 tip)

La Liga expert and all-round good guy Graham Hunter put in a Skype call with the Paddy Power Blog on Sunday night. We asked Graham where he saw the value in the betting for Manchester United vs Real Madrid in the Champions League on Tuesday night at Old Trafford. As you’d expect from someone who spends an unhealthy amount of time watching Spanish football, he’s got a few interesting insights ahead of the game….

[Scroll down to watch video]

1. It’s got something to do with a former favourite son at Anfield

Xabi Alonso

IN THE THICK OF IT: Expect some heated exchanges from former Anfield hero Xabi Alonso

2. A little bit of this fella, of course

Ronaldo

THE MAIN MAN: There’s only one reason Real Madrid forked out on Ronaldo

3. …and might well finish with these

Wayne Rooney

ON THE SPOT: Let’s hope Manchester United have been practicing penalties. Real have…

Graham Hunter’s tip: Real Madrid to beat Manchester United on penalties @ 40/1 click here

MAN-UTD_REAL-MADRID_MBS


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Graham Hunter exclusive: Barca believe they can beat AC Milan

Graham Hunter byline

Champions League: Barcelona v AC Milan

The cynics, perhaps let’s dub them the realists, will argue it’s all case of ‘too little too late’  for FC Barcelona with regard to putting AC Milan out of the Champions League.

For precisely the last two months there has been a drop in the intensity of Barça’s play, not just defensively with only a couple of clean sheets in that time, but the way in which they can put the pedal to the floor and tear even the best teams apart.

Last week, without a match, interim coach Jordi Roura mixed a little bit of time off with a double stint on Wednesday and pretty high-intensity work during the other training sessions.

This is the moment of the season when, since the beginning of the Guardiola era, the Blaugrana’s form begins to peak for the second time. There is a high priority put on having the turbo-chargers available in November and December, then again in March and April.

However this season the dip in late January, and particularly February, has seemed more pronounced and perhaps the surge will come too late for this tie – particularly taking into account the current scoreline.

Yet the players believe.

MBSBarcelonavMilan

Around the training ground over the last five or six days there has been no slumped shoulders, plenty of positive words and two meetings when the coach, but particularly the senior players, confronted problems, solutions, tactics and general ideas of how to eliminate Milan.

But can Barça really shift from a low gear to the type of Formula 1 performance which can make Milan “fearful” as their legendary coach Arrigo Sacchi says must be the case if the home side is to have any chance?

At this stage over the last four seasons Barça have beaten Bayer Leverkusen 7-1, Arsenal 3-1, Stuttgart 4-0 and Lyon 5-2. If that level of performance is about to arrive then, added to the fact that they have distinctly the better XI, then the Catalans will progress. Anything less and the weight of history, no side with a two-goal deficit and no away goal has gone through, will bear down on them too heavily.

If Andres Iniesta scores any time in this match, Paddy Power will refund all losing First Goalscorer, Last Goalscorer, Correct Score & Scorecast singles on the match.

  • Betting: Barcelona v AC Milan 
  • Graham Hunter on the Paddy Power Blog


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Graham Hunter exclusive: How PSG’s aerial threat can exploit Barca’s weaknesses

Graham Hunter

European football expert Graham Hunter previews tonight’s Champions League quarter final between moneybags PSG and runaway La Liga leaders Barcelona.

Champions League | PSG v Barcelona

It should be simple enough to predict Paris St Germain’s most likely avenues to score at home to FC Barcelona tonight.

In Thiago Silva (who scored a headed equaliser for Milan at the Camp Nou last season), Alex and Zlatan, Carlo Ancelotti’s side have three players perfectly able to take advantage of the fact that Barça have perpetually lost goals or goal assists to headers inside the box this season.

More specifically, the Spanish champions-elect consistently allow crosses too easily from their left back position and Dani Alves, who is having an absolutely exceptional season in an attacking sense, continually fails to order his centre halves to take a couple of steps towards the back post.

The Brazilian, instead, will dive into the penalty spot melee (usually to little effect given that he’s … little) and the crossed ball will drop to an opponent hovering or arriving at the back post to create or score a goal.

There has been a lot of delightful, Machiavellian ‘did he, didn’t he’ in the Spanish media this week about whether Jose Mourinho volunteered to supply Ancelotti with Real Madrid’s ‘golden’ scouting manual which over the last few weeks was sufficient to inspire Los Blancos to a 3-1 Camp Nou win and a 2-1 home victory in La Liga.

How to score against Barcelona

Lesson No 1: Punt the ball long from the edge of your own penalty box to a runner in the wide positions (Di Maria or Ronaldo for Madrid) Lavezzi or Lucas for PSG) and then support him more quickly than Barça get back for the perfect breakaway goal.

Lesson No 2:  exploit Barcelona’s aerial vulnerability.

Did the Special One send the document? ‘Oh yes he did … OH NO HE DIDN’T…’ that’s been the enjoyable tone over the last few days.

However even for a project in construction PSG must have scouts capable of doing their own homework and these conclusions won’t have been hard to draw.

Champions League

In reality, the counter attack goal is just a version of what PSG inflicted on Valencia at the Mestalla in the last round. They could have won by five or six (had Lavezzi who is their top scorer in the Champions League not missed a hat-trick of chances) and they looked viciously dangerous. However, at home, PSG flirted with going out and Valencia ruled the night.

As for Barça if you favour them to win away then take into account that their record since 2006 reads –winners-last 16, semi final-winners-semi final-winners-semi final ….

The Hurt Locker

Losing 2-0 at Milan in the opening-leg of the last round hurt them terribly badly and I’d expect a higher tempo, physically more robust display tonight.

Good though PSG are on their day, and while they own players who threaten Barça’s specific weaknesses they don’t often encounter players of the calibre of Iniesta, Xavi, Villa, Messi and Alba. Messi has 50 goals and 15 assists in his last 50 Champions League appearances. I take him to add another of one or other (goal or assist) and Barça to get a 2-2 draw.

Those who follow such things might note that referee Wolfgang Stark has sent off a couple of Barça players (Saviola and Motta back in 2004 against Celtic) but he’s also red-carded three opponents Rab Douglas, Pepe and Alberto Aquilani and awarded Barça a penalty last time out in Milan.

Four of the seven times he’s reffed a Barça game have yielded a total of only 13 bookings total but Stark’s only time out with PSG the game held eight yellow cards. Make of that what you will. There’s a Parisian threat for Barça here, no doubt, but perhaps they know how to take the right result home this time?

  • Betting: PSG v Barcelona 
  • Graham Hunter: Bayern are chokers and here’s why Juventus will get a draw


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Soccer Referees Charged With Sex-for-Fixing Remanded

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Two Lebanese soccer match officials charged in Singapore with accepting sexual favors to fix an Asian Football Confederation Cup match were remanded pending a bail hearing next week.
A third official who had also been charged yesterday has been hospitalized, Singapore subordinate court Judge Kamala Ponnampalam said today at a hearing into the case.
Each of the men was provided with a woman at Singapore’s downtown Amara Hotel on April 3 who gave them free sexual services as an inducement to fix the soccer match which was to be played later that day, according to the charges filed last night. Each of the men faces a maximum jail term of 5 years and a fine of as much as S$100,000 ($80,700) if convicted.

Match fixers and sports gamblers have placed bets at Singapore IBCbet

Assistant referee Ali Eid, 33, had an “episode” in lock- up before today’s hearing and was rushed to a public hospital, Judge Ponnampalam said. No further details on Eid’s condition were available.
Referee Ali Sabbagh, 34, and assistant referee Abdallah Taleb, 37, shouldn’t be allowed bail given the circumstances of the case, the attention it has drawn and possible links to a syndicated operation, prosecutor Asoka Markandu said. The prosecutor asked for the two men to be remanded in separate cells.
Wider Concerns
Taleb had initially refused to be represented by lawyer Gary Low, who was hired by the Lebanese Football Association to act for all three referees. Taleb agreed after speaking with the vice consul of the Lebanon consulate.
The charges come amid wider concerns about match-fixing in soccer. In February, global governing body FIFA suspended people in Italy, South Korea and China for allegedly being involved in rigging games. The three Lebanese officials were replaced before the AFC Cup match between Singapore-based Tampines Rovers and East Bengal, which won 4-2 in a game that included an own goal by its opponent.
“Singapore has always adopted a zero tolerance approach towards corruption and match-fixing of any form is not condoned in Singapore,” the Asian city’s Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau said in a statement yesterday.
Europol, Europe’s law enforcement agency, said in February a Singapore-based operation tried to fix more than 380 games, including World Cup and European Championship qualifiers, to generate a profit of more than 8 million euros ($10.4 million). An 18-month investigation, Operation VETO, found 425 match officials, club executives, players and others in 15 countries were involved.
‘Excellent Referees’
The Football Association of Singapore previously said Sabbagh, Eid and Taleb were pulled from the match after it was informed they were assisting the anti-graft bureau with investigations.
Lebanese Football Association head Hachem Haydar said in a telephone interview before today’s hearing that he was “shocked and surprised” by events in Singapore.
“Of course I know them,” he said. “They are some of the excellent referees here. They are good referees, they have a good performance and their attitude is very good. We are all surprised that something happened.”
The men officiate in the Lebanese top league, AFC games and have overseen matches between national teams, Haydar said.
“They are the elite,” he added. “All the people here are shocked, we know them they are very good persons. I don’t know what happened with this exactly.”
The criminal cases are Public Prosecutor v Ali Sabbagh, DAC11104/2013, Public Prosecutor v Ali Eid, DAC11106/2013 and Public Prosecutor v Abdallah Taleb, DAC11105/2013, Singapore Subordinate Courts.

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Singapore to study overseas data on match-fixing

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Singapore is examining information on match-fixing gathered by its officers who visited the Interpol office in Lyon, France, recently.

The Singapore Police Force said on Monday that the team of four officers from the police and Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau met officials from Interpol and Europol and representatives of law enforcement agencies from European countries affected by match-fixing.

The police said the meetings were on issues and areas of mutual cooperation against organised crime activities, “particularly match-fixing”. The team will examine the information gathered from the trip before deciding on the next course of action.

The team of four officers from SPF and CPIB has returned from the trip to the INTERPOL Headquarters in Lyon, France. Match fixers and sports bettors have placed bets at IBCbet in Singapore

While in France, the team met officials from INTERPOL, EUROPOL, as well as, representatives of law enforcement agencies from several European countries affected by match fixing. These meetings involved discussion on issues and areas of mutual cooperation against organised crime activities, particularly match fixing. The team will be examining the information gathered from the trip before deciding on the next course of action.

Singapore remains highly committed in the fight against match-fixing and will continue to work closely with the various countries and international agencies on possible actions that could be taken against the syndicates and individuals involved.
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Contrite Hungarian admits to match-fixing ahead of trial

Former defender Gabor Horvath has lifted the lid on the extent of match-fixing in Hungary, which has been a focus for investigators looking at global corruption in soccer.
The 29-year-old, who played for Hungarian top-flight teams Siofok and Diosgyor, now works in Dubai as a personal trainer but will return to his home country to go on trial with 45 other suspects.
“I could not avoid the match-fixing. I did bet on our games that were fixed, yes, I earned lots of money out of it but also spent it easily,” he told Hungarian media on Tuesday.
Horvath rowed back from previous comments that there were 500 players fixing matches in Hungary but still said the practice had been widespread.
“It is a pity that I was at the peak of my career when this disease flourished in Hungary, and I caught it too like so many others,” he added.
Last week Hungarian investigators finished a four-year probe into match-fixing in the country with the Nemzeti Sport newspaper saying 33 matches were involved in the trial.
Horvath, who was released from custody pending the trial, has already given written testimony.
“After the police arrested me, I spent an awful night in a jail where I thought over the whole story. I can only be angry with myself, only then I realised what I had done,” he said.
“I have no fear but I am not calm either. Not a day passes without thinking of the others who are still in jail. I have regrets, I lost almost all of my friends, but I told the truth to the investigators.”
No date has yet been fixed for the trial.
European anti-crime agency Europol caused consternation in football when it announced on Feb. 4 that some 680 matches were suspected to have been fixed in a global betting scam run from Singapore, although critics said many of the games were already known about.More
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Match-Fixing Boss Interviewed, Spills Beans

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During our stay in Singapore we got in touch with a member of the match-fixing syndicate that prefers to remain anonymous.  He told us that Wilson Raj Perumal, currently detained in Hungary after spending a year in Finnish prison, was interested in speaking to us.  We gave the person our address.

From Hungarian prison, Wilson began a daily correspondence with us in which he stated his reasons for speaking to the press and in which he explained the workings of the Singaporean match-fixing syndicate of which he is a self-proclaimed shareholder.

“I am Wilson Raj Perumal”, he wrote, “I am presently in custody in Hungary”.

“I believe you are aware I am now at ‘war’ with Tan Seet Eng (the most wanted man in Italy) at the moment”.

Wilson stated that it was the boss of the match-fixing syndicate and his former superior, a Singaporean called Tan Seet Eng (aka Dan Tan), that set him up to be arrested by Finnish police while he was traveling to Helsinki on a false passport.  Wilson added:  “The Finnish police had passed a passport copy of Joseph Xie Tan to Mr. Chis Eaton of FIFA.  Mr. Eaton then did his investigation and noted Xie Tan was present together with Anthony in Anatolia.  Mr. Eaton then relayed this information to Zaihan Yussof, a Singapore reporter.  That was how the cat was out of the bag”.

Joseph Xie Tan and Anthony Santia Raj are two other former associates of Wilson and alleged members of the match-fixing syndicate headed by Dan Tan.  They were responsible for organizing international friendly matches in Anatolia, Turkey, between Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia and Bolivia.  These friendly matches were the object of a probe into match-fixing by FIFA’s investigator Chris Eaton.  Wilson claimed that Dan Tan, with the help of Joseph Tan and Santia Raj, fingered him to the Finnish police.

“I am sure you are aware of the circumstances on which I was arrested in Finland”, Wilson wrote, “Dan Tan and Anthony Santia Raj had worked together to have me arrested in Finland.  They had engaged the services of Joseph Xie Tan to execute this plan”.

He also added:  “All I want to do is to get even with Dan Tan.  My circumstances are such that the only tool I can use to even the score with Dan Tan is to go to the media and expose his criminal activity … I can assure you that what I am about to tell you is all facts and none of these are made up or exaggerated”.

We asked Wilson to explain the structure of the match-fixing syndicate and to reveal  the names of other individuals and companies involved in match-fixing.  Although Wilson refused to identify the financiers of the syndicate, he did agree to disclose information about his arch-rival Dan Tan:

TAN SEET ENG (AKA DAN TAN)

“I have known Tan by name since 1992″, he wrote, “and I wish to shed light on Tan’s history and how he came about to work with Italian players”.

“Tan started as an illegal horse racing and football bookie in the early 90′s”. 

“Dan Tan was an ex convict in Singapore.  In 1994 he fled from Singapore to save himself from being killed because he was not able to pay up a 1.5 million bet placed during a world up match in 1994″, Wilson wrote.  Then he added:  “He then agreed with the bookies to settle the outstanding by installment and returned to Singapore”.

Then Wilson explained that Dan Tan had taken over for the former head of the syndicate in 2008.  Wilson claimed that Dan Tan’s mentor is an indian businessman from Singapore named Eswaramoorthy Pillay, although he prefers to call him Mr. X.

“After the end of the Malaysia Cup in 1994 the syndicates began to venture into Europe”, wrote Wilson, “Dan Tan was a right hand man of the person you mentioned in your mail.  I shall call him Mr. X”.  Wilson then continued:  “Mr. X incurred in huge debts from his European partners and left Europe for good.  This is when Dan Tan took over for Mr. X.  He approached Mr. X’s friends in Europe and rekindled the business”.

ESWARAMOORTHY PILLAY

We did our own investigations on Eswaramoorthy Pillay and found out some interesting facts.  Pillay is presently charged with accounting fraud in Malaysia through his company Linear.  He is also an executive of a group called Stanton Technologies, based in Penang, Malaysia.  We were told that he had been involved in financing the Swiss teams FC Sion and FC Chiasso, where other members of the match-fixing syndicate (such as Almir Gegic) had played.  To verify the allegation we went to Chiasso FC’s offices in Switzerland hoping to speak to someone from the club.  There was nobody around so we took a look inside the building.  That’s when we made an interesting discovery.  One of the sponsors for FC Chiasso in the season 2007/2008 (when Almir Gegic was playing there) was Stanton, Pillay’s Penang company, their logo appears on the official team picture.  We were not able to reach Eswaramoorthy Pillay to ask him about Wilson’s allegations and about the company Stanton.

Next we decided to call the then-president of FC Chiasso, Marco Grassi, to ask him whether he had known Pillay.  Grassi was evasive but he did admit that a man named Eswaramoorthy Pillay had offered to finance the FC Chiasso club.  According to Grassi, Pillay never actually put any money in the club, yet the name of his Penang company appeared clearly on the official team photo…

We thus asked Wilson to tell us more about Mr. X, and he did:

“Tan was a right hand man of Mr. X who invested in the Swiss Club you mentioned (i.e. FC Chiasso).  During this time Singaporeans were only keen on fixing Malaysia Cup matches.  Match fixing was already rife in South East Asia in the early 80′s.  Rajendran Kurusamy (another alleged Singaporean match fixer) also known as Pal came into the picture and he was dictating the entire Malaysian league till 1994 when Singapore decided to pull out from the competition”.

Wilson continued:  “This is when Mr. X decided to venture abroad.  He started a bogus company and built relationships with people in Europe who were related to soccer.  During these trips Tan acted as his book keeper.  During one meeting in 1995 I suggested to Pal that we switch off the floodlights in EPL (English Premier League) matches in order to win the bets we places (The Asian betting allowed payments for matches that ended during the second half).  No one took it seriously at that time.  In 1997 Mr. X sold this idea to a Malaysian syndicate and the plan was executed.  There were matches in the EPL namely West Ham V Crystal Palace and Wimbledon V Arsenal where the floodlights were switched off to suit the result”.

Since Wilson was speaking of the floodlight scam, we asked him to explain the procedure better:  “I am surprised you are not aware of the floodlight incidents”, he said, “You will need the assistance of the technician in the stadium plus some other techniques to ensure that the lights are not turned back on.  More like a power failure”. 

Wilson also mentions that Dan Tan was responsible for the floodlights being switched off during a match between Fenerbache and Barcelona.

“Tan had placed bets on Fenerbache to win the match.  But the score-line read 0-4 in favor of Barcelona during the half time.  If the lights were to go off before the second half kick-off then the betting would be cancelled.  Tan switched the lights off but the stadium officials used a generator to re-activate the floodlights and this match backfired”.

Wilson then proceeded to explain how Dan Tan had taken over for Eswaramoorthy Pillay:

“Mr. X was a high roller in Casinos”, he wrote, “He became indebted to his European friends and gradually drifted away from the scene.  This is when Tan took over and went in search of Mr. X’s friends.  This syndicate began to grow bigger and bigger as they began to venture into more countries.  In this business you can’t sit and wait for the apple to drop.  You have to dig deeper and deeper to achieve results.  If you take a look at my mobile I can call people in all of the continents”.

Regarding Pillay’s relationship with FC Chiasso, Wilson concluded:  “Mr. X was funding and fixing by placing the players of his choice”, and, “yes.  Almir Gegic was a player in Chiasso”.

DAN TAN IN ITALY

Wilson decided to go into more detail on Dan Tan’s Italian feats:  “Some time in 2009 Dan Tan fixed the first of many Italian matches”, he wrote, “It was a Serie B Albinoleffe match.  Subsequently he also became a shareholder of this team”.

We attempted to check the Italian company register for the club Albinoleffe but were not able to find any tangible trace of Dan Tan’s involvement in the club.   Yet Wilson was unshakable:  “I can assure you Tan had a share in the Italian Serie B club”, he insisted.

Wilson then went on to say:  “In 2010 Dan Tan’s popularity grew and many Italians began to look for his services to place bets on Serie A and B matches.  The Italians were not aware that they were being used by Dan Tan.  The total amount of bets for a Serie B match can fetch up to 4 to 6 million Euros.  (If the players agree to go for both Handicap and total).  For a Serie A match the total bet can fetch up to 10 to 15 million euros for a single match if bets are placed on both handicap and total goals”.

Wilson then explained:  “This is where the Italians are made to look like fools.  Dan Tan only offers them between 600.000 and 800.000 for a match.  Dan Tan makes more money than the players who manipulate the matches.  The Italians are ignorant of this fact and being used.  In fact there are betting agents in Singapore who are able to provide 3 to 4 times more than what Tan Seet Eng can offer to these Italians who had manipulated the matches”. 

Wilson said that the syndicate would place their bets on Chinese betting sites:  “The bets were placed in China where the betting is a lot more different than Europe.  The Chinese have betting patterns where you make a single click on your mouse assuming 1000 dollars, they can have it multiplied by 20 which means your single bet can be multiplied 20 times.  Tan has access to this group of people who can offer him this exceptional betting facility.  The betting company survives by riding on your information.  Basically this is how the syndicate works”.

We asked Wilson how Dan Tan came in contact with these alleged Chinese accomplices:  “The Chinese came in contact with Tan through middlemen.  The Chinese came to know of Tan’s ability to fix matches and offered him a service to place bets for him on the matches he fixed.  Then gradually the volume became bigger and bigger”.

We insisted with Wilson so that he name more members of the syndicate and its mysterious financiers – if there were any aside from Dan Tan – but he said that he was afraid for his family’s safety in Singapore.

Wilson also suggested that the members of the syndicate are still meeting in Singapore:  “I hear all the syndicate members are hiding in Singapore.  They regularly play 5 aside soccer.  You can snap pictures of them if you go under cover and arrange a 5 aside match through Gaye Allasan who has a soccer academy.  Try your luck. Good day.  Wilson Raj”.

Unfortunately we had already left Singapore.  Yet we checked for football academies in Singapore and for the name Gaye Allasan.  We came up with a football academy called Football 4 U, located on 120 Lower Delta Road #07-08 Cendex Centre Singapore.  Football 4 U is also the name of a company used by Wilson Raj Perumal to organized fixed friendly matches between national teams.  The academy Football 4 U appears on the website of the FAS (Football Association of Singapore) and its director is a man called Gaye Alassane.  Our colleagues in Singapore, whom we asked to check the address, say that there is nothing there.

Wilson Raj Perumal claims that Dan Tan is still in business:  “He is actively fixing matches.  Venezuela V Moldova and El Salvador V Moldova lately.  Puerto Rico V Nicaragua.  What can FIFA do?”.More
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Champions League Betting – Real Madrid v Manchester United

Cristiano RonaldoThe toughest test in European football happens tonight in the Champions League round of 16 tie between Real Madrid and Manchester United. Dubbed two of the best football teams in the world, with two of the best managers, and probably more than two of the best players, the whole world will be watching how this pans out.

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Player regrets getting entangled with match-fixing

Soccer player Mario Cizmek thought it would just be one match. Ease up and let the other team win, he told himself, then collect the payoff and start paying off your debts.
But the broke and desperate athlete soon learned that one match wouldn’t do it. He would have to throw another game, then another, then another.
And so it went until, in what he described as his “worst moment,” he was arrested at his home in front of his two daughters on charges of match-fixing, frantically dialing his wife to take the children because police were hauling him off to jail.
“Twenty years of hard work I destroyed in just one month,” he said.
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EDITOR’S NOTE: This story is part of a six-month, multiformat AP examination of how organized crime is corrupting soccer through match-fixing.
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The Croatian midfielder was the perfect target for fixers: He was nearing the end of his career, his financially unstable club hadn’t paid him a regular salary for 14 months, and he owed money on back taxes and his pension.
Cizmek’s story is typical of how the world’s most popular sport is increasingly becoming a dirty game — sullied by criminal gangs like the one that bribed Cizmek, and by corrupt officials or others cashing in on the billion-dollar web of match-fixing.
An examination of Cizmek’s case turns up contrasting portraits of the 36-year-old with quick feet and an engaging smile.
One is of a victim — a player forced into match-fixing by an unscrupulous club and preyed upon by a shadowy former coach convicted of bribery, fraud and conspiracy in a Croatian match-fixing case and banned for life from soccer by FIFA, the world soccer body. That’s the picture painted by FIFPro, the global players’ union, which has used Cizmek’s story to warn players.
Croatian prosecutors, armed with reams of phone calls and text messages from police wiretaps, have a different take. At a match-fixing trial at the County Court of Zagreb, they portrayed Cizmek as the ringleader who got several FC Croatia Sesvete players to throw six games and tried to fix a seventh in spring 2010. The authorities said he organized the players, handed out sealed blue envelopes of euros, and promised that they could stop whenever they wanted.
Cizmek readily admits he delivered the payments but says it was only because his apartment was closest to the fixer. Looking back, he says, he realizes he was manipulated.
“Now I see that he didn’t want to be seen handing over the money,” he said in an interview with The Associated Press.
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Cizmek joined FC Zagreb on a junior scholarship, signed at 18, and played there for eight years.
“Those were the best years. All my dreams came true,” he said. “I signed a professional contract and was among the better players. They thought highly of me. I was even a captain of this club.”
After stints in Israel and Iceland, he returned home to play for FC Croatia Sesvete in the country’s second league. In 2008, Cizmek scored the goal that sent his team into the top division. That goal benefited every player on the team and lined the pockets of the club’s owner, Zvonko Zubak.
But the team fell on hard times, especially with the European economic downturn.
The entire FC Croatia Sesvete locker room was in an uproar for months, with players trying to make ends meet, Cizmek said. A study by the FIFPro union reported that more than 60 percent of Croatian players do not get paid on time.
“We had no money, and we no longer spoke about training or football, but only about how we were going to survive,” Cizmek said.
“Every other day we would ask whether we would be paid, and they would say ‘Yes, on Monday.’ Then we say, ‘OK, on Monday,’” he said. But there would be no pay on Monday — only a promise to be paid Wednesday — and then no money that day either.
“It would go on for weeks,” Cizmek said, shaking his head.
One man who hung around the players offering advice and sympathy — and loans to those short on cash — was Vinko Saka, a former assistant coach for Dinamo Zagreb, the soccer powerhouse that has won Croatia’s national title every year since 2006.
Saka was always somewhere around the field or at the bars where the players gathered, Cizmek said.
A flashy figure in his 50s who drove a BMW X6, he promised to introduce young players to the dozens of foreign coaches and clubs he said he knew.
“He was always offering presents,” Cizmek said. “I had known Vinko for years. We were kind of friends. He was someone who was related to sports, whom I was seeing at the matches. He coached junior teams.”
Midfielder Dario Susak, then 22, testified that Saka suggested he could help him get a contract with a foreign club, then loaned him $2,550 at a high interest rate. Once he owed the money, Susak testified, Saka told him he would have to lose matches.
Unbeknownst to any of them, Croatian police were already running a wiretap on Saka after being tipped off by German investigators.
Croatian prosecutors said Saka bribed up to 10 people on Cizmek’s team, and another five tied to either FC Varteks or FC Medimurje.
Saka ended up being convicted of fraud, bribery and conspiracy and going to jail. His lawyer confirmed the plea bargain but wouldn’t discuss the case.
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The deal involving Cizmek came together at Fort Apache, a steakhouse on the truck route between Zagreb, the Croatian capital, and Slovenia. Cizmek and his goalkeeper met there with Saka and two associates on March 25, 2010, to fix a game with FC Zadar two days later, according to players’ testimony and police transcripts.
Six players would get $24,220, although the money was not divided equally. One of the unwritten rules of match-fixing is that the goalkeeper gets the biggest share because his statistics suffer the worst blow; defenders get the next-biggest, midfielders get less and strikers often are not even included in the fix.
The result: Zadar won 2-1 as Cizmek, one of the best players, stayed on the bench. After the game, he said, he collected $2,550, bought his kids a bunk bed and stashed the rest away, saving up to pay an overdue tax bill.
Cizmek saw himself as a Robin Hood-sort of figure: stealing money from crooks to put food on the table for his teammates and their families who were being crushed by an unjust system.
The match-fixing train had begun rolling, and it would prove difficult to stop.
The stakes were raised for an April 3 match against FC Slaven Belupo, according to players’ testimony. This time it was $51,000 for eight players. They not only had to lose, but to do so by at least three goals. That enabled those in on the deal to win two bets in one match.
Cizmek’s team lost 4-0. Saka, however, delivered only $43,300, eight Croatia Sesvete players testified in court. Cizmek said Saka did not explain why.
The demands for an April 14 game against FC Rijeka were even greater: $51,000 to trail at halftime, a final score that included more than three goals, with the team losing by at least two goals, Cizmek testified.
Player Ante Pokrajcic testified that he was happy to have scored a goal until the team’s owner stormed into the locker room, cursing about the 1-1 halftime score. Only then did Pokrajcic realize the game had been fixed.
The team lost 4-2, but Saka delivered only about half of what was promised, according to players’ testimony.
The players were furious. In the next game, they won 3-1 against Inter Zapresic.
But another unwritten rule of match-fixing soon became clear to Cizmek: Once a player has fixed a game, he is trapped forever.
The criminal gang usually has enough evidence to get a player thrown out of the sport for life. Plus, the shame alone will keep him silent, and the fixer’s demands will keep escalating until the player quits, retires or gets caught. Some implicated in match-fixing have even committed suicide.
When Cizmek approached the goalkeeper and a midfielder about fixing an April 17 game against FC Lokomotiva, they refused. He handed the money back to Saka two hours before the game, he said.
“If I was really the ringleader, I could have made them do it,” he told the AP. “But I couldn’t do it. … We told them, ‘No more.’”
Saka exploded in anger but made sure not to bet, Cizmek said. FC Lokomotiva won 2-1 anyway, and Cizmek said he scored a goal “just for pride” in the second half.
For the last three games of the season, Saka went above the players’ heads to fix the game, according to players’ testimony. Those involved now included the coach and one of the owner’s sons — both of whom were convicted in the case.
“Saka came to me and said, ‘I have arranged everything higher up. If you want you can check with the son,’” Cizmek said.
Cizmek said he refused to deliver that message to the other players, making the son talk individually with each athlete. Other players confirmed his account in court. Cizmek said the fixer made sure not to involve the owner’s other son, a young player on the team.
With substantial bribes now going to the coach, the payouts for the players grew meager: $22,300 for seven players in the last game, according to testimony.
Overall, Cizmek earned $26,130 from match-fixing, not as much as goalkeeper Ivan Banovic ($37,600), defender Jasmin Agic ($35,000) or coach Goran Jerkovic ($33,000), according to the findings of the court in its sentencing document.
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The season ended in early May but police did not come knocking until June 8.
Cizmek was arrested at his home and taken to Zagreb’s Remetinec jail, where he stayed until July 15. His wife handed police the $20,000 he had been saving for his tax bill. The bunk beds were all he had to show for his money.
He went on trial for match-fixing with 14 others.
With the wiretaps, prosecutors had a very strong case. Cizmek made a full confession, pleaded guilty and gave testimony to the players’ union against match-fixing. But he and the coach still got the longest sentence — 10 months.
The goalkeeper, the owner’s son and three others were given nine months; two players got eight months; and the youngest member of the team, a 20-year-old midfielder, got a seven-month suspended sentence.
They are now free, awaiting the result of their appeal.
Saka cut a plea bargain with prosecutors in which he was convicted of fraud, bribery and conspiracy to commit a crime against the public order and sentenced to one year in prison. The Zagreb court ordered him to pay back $58,800 of the $844,000 it estimated his fixing operation made in Croatia.
Saka served his time in jail and then went to Italy to be questioned in a match-fixing investigation there. His lawyer in Italy, Kresimir Krsnik, said prosecutors have six months to decide whether to press charges.
“Saka will answer any call from the court. He has given his statement there and returned home,” Krsnik told the AP.
Saka is back living in an affluent Zagreb neighborhood, driving around in his BMW.
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Cizmek is trying hard not to be bitter.
Chain-smoking Marlboros at a Zagreb coffee bar, he dreads going back to jail.
“I was in there already, with murderers and rapists and drug addicts,” he said. “It was a scary place.”
He is angry that Saka got a much better plea deal than the players and doesn’t hold out hope for his appeal, which is pending.
He says his club still owes him salary but went bankrupt in 2012 and dissolved.
He works on his family’s organic farm, peddling jams and berry tea at farmers’ markets, but is just scraping by. In one of his last interviews with the AP, Cizmek mentioned his recent divorce, and worry lines around his eyes seemed deeper.
He mourns for his lost soccer career and doesn’t know what he will do with the rest of his life.
“I should have just taken my football shoes and hung them on the wall and said: ‘Thank you, guys’ and gone on to do something else,” Cizmek said.More
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