FIFA - Zurich |
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said on Wednesday he was embarrassed and
disgusted by the latest match-fixing scandal to hit Italian soccer and called
for sweeping changes to clean up the game and attract families to stadiums.
Renzi had already promised to make
radical changes to professional soccer a year ago after a supporter was shot
dead by a rival fan at the Italian Cup final, but these reforms never materialized.
Police on Tuesday detained around 50
people including team managers, players and a suspected Calabrian mobster
accused of fixing dozens of soccer matches in the country's third division and
its top semi-professional league.
Reuters report continues:
"I am disgusted by what is
happening in our soccer. In the last few years there have been repeated scandals
that leave you speechless," Renzi said in a radio interview ahead of this
year's Italian Cup final later on Wednesday.
He said Italy should follow the
example of Britain, Germany and Spain, which have largely rooted out fan
violence and invested in high quality stadiums to make them more attractive to
families. In Italy, violence is rife and its stadiums are often half empty,
even in the top tier Serie A.
Match-fixing allegations have
blighted the lower leagues of Italian soccer in recent years as criminal groups
increasingly use the sport as a focus of the country's legal gambling industry,
Europe's largest, as a way to earn and launder money.
"The episodes in our third
division are embarrassing," said Renzi, who is an ardent supporter of
Serie A team Fiorentina, which represents Florence where he used to be mayor.
Investigators suspect 28 matches
from the third division Lega Pro and semi-professional Serie D from the 2014-15
season were rigged. Among those sought by police for bribing players and coaches
were Serbs, Albanians and Maltese nationals.
Without naming names, Renzi said
Italian soccer had to get rid of "characters with a questionable approach
that govern our soccer at all levels."
Despite the scandals, after years in the
doldrums Italy's top teams have fared better in international competitions this
season. Juventus faces Barcelona in the final of the showcase Champions League
next month, and Fiorentina and Napoli both reached the semi-final of the less
prestigious Europa League.
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