2006 Serie A scandal
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The 2006 Serie A scandal (Italian more common names: Calciopoli or Moggiopoli, sometimes referred to as
Calciocaos[1]) involved alleged
History
Teams had been found guilty of match fixing before in Italian football history. The most recent case in Serie A occurred in
1980 when A.C. Milan and S.S. Lazio were relegated to the
division below the top division,
Origins
The scandal first came to light as a consequence of investigations of Naples prosecutors on the Italian football agency
GEA world. Transcripts of recorded telephone conversations published in Italian newspapers
suggested that during the
Club punishments
On
In the case against
| Team | Relegation | Points deductions (2006-07 season) |
Other punishments | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Original punishment [6][4] | Appeal result | Final punishment [7] | Original punishment | Appeal result | Final punishment | Original punishment | Final punishment | |
| A.C. Milan | No relegation | None | None | Deducted 15 points | Deducted 8 points | Deducted 8 points | • Deducted 44 points 2005/06 season • Out of 2006-07 UEFA Champions League [8] |
• Deducted 30 points 2005/06 season • One home game behind closed doors |
| ACF Fiorentina | Relegated to |
None | None | Deducted 12 points (Serie B) |
Deducted 19 points (Serie A) |
Deducted 15 points (Serie A) |
• Out of 2006-07 UEFA Champions League [8] | • Out of 2006-07 UEFA Champions League [8] • Two home games behind closed doors |
| Juventus F.C. | Relegated to |
Relegated to |
Relegated to |
Deducted 30 points | Deducted 17 points | Deducted 9 points | • Stripped of 2005 and 2006 titles • Out of 2006-07 UEFA Champions League [8] |
• Stripped of 2005 and 2006 titles • Out of 2006-07 UEFA Champions League [8] • Three home games behind closed doors |
| Lazio | Relegated to |
None | None | Deducted 7 points (Serie B) | Deducted 11 points (Serie A) | Deducted 3 points (Serie A) | • Out of 2006-07 UEFA Cup [8] | • Out of 2006-07 UEFA Cup [8] • Two home games behind closed doors |
| (No original punishment) | None | None | Deducted 15 points (Serie A) | (No appeal result) | Deducted 11 points (Serie A) | (No original punishment) | • £68,000 (equivalent) fine • Club president Pasquale Foti fined £20,000 (equivalent) and banned from football for 2½ years |
|
The sentence was long disputed because of the largely different severity of punishment between Juventus and other involved teams. According to the court the conduct of team managers, considered in all the cases not a real match-fixing but a mere violation of sport loyalty principles, seemed to have, in case of Juventus, the effect to influence match results; whilst in the case of other teams the same effect was not considered so much evident. Juventus representatives considered this assumption totally arbitrary and never proved.
Consequences of the punishments
In Italy, like most national football leagues, clubs earn 3 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. The club with the most points at the end of the season is the league champion, while the last few teams (the number depending on the league rules) are relegated to a lower division - in Serie A's case, the last three teams.
The clubs sent down to Serie B were initially slated to have a difficult road back to the top flight. They would have had to finish in the top two of Serie B to be assured of promotion, but at the same time had to avoid finishing in the bottom four to keep from being relegated to Serie C1. Juventus, for example, was initially docked 30 points--the equivalent of having 10 wins count for nothing. This made it very likely that they would not return to Serie A until 2008 at the earliest. However, the point penalty was reduced to nine points, giving Juve a fighting chance at promotion. They in fact won the Serie B championship for 2006-07, having clinched a spot in Serie A in May 2007.
The three clubs who remained in Serie A also were slated to have a difficult 2006-2007
season, especially Fiorentina, who were docked 15 points--the equivalent of having five
games count for nothing. With this large deduction, it was thought likely that Fiorentina would fail to finish high enough in
Serie A to achieve a place in European competitions for the 2007-2008 season, and there was an outside chance that it would
finish in the bottom three and be relegated to Serie B. However, Fiorentina finished the
Effect on Serie A
Initially, with Juventus, Fiorentina and Lazio all relegated, Messina,
Based on their final league positions, Juventus and Milan would have earned a direct entry into the UEFA Champions League, Inter and Fiorentina would have entered the third qualifying round of the
Champions League, and A.S. Roma, Lazio, and Chievo
would have been eligible for the UEFA Cup. The list of Italian participants in next season's
competitions was due to be given to UEFA by 5 June.[9] On
On
Juventus announced that they planned to appeal the punishment to the Italian civil courts, an action that would have brought further punishment to the clubs and the FIGC by FIFA. FIFA has historically taken a dim view to government involvement in football administration. Earlier in 2006, FIFA briefly suspended the Hellenic Football Federation due to draft Greek legislation that would have allowed for government supervision of football. FIFA has announced that it has the option to suspend the FIGC -- thus barring all Italian clubs from international play -- if Juventus had gone to court [11]. The hearing was scheduled for September 1. However, Juventus dropped its appeal before the Lazio Regional Administrative Court (TAR in Italian) on August 31, the day before it was to be heard. Juve officials cited the "willingness shown by the Italian Soccer Federation (FIGC) and the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI) to review its case during (CONI's) arbitration". [12]
On
Other allegations
Massimo De Santis was to be Italy's referee representative in the
The eruption of the scandal has also drawn attention to many potential
In addition to allegations of corruption and sports fraud by owners, managers, players, referees, and league officials, "the host of Italy's most popular soccer show, Aldo Biscardi, has resigned amid allegations that he collaborated with Juventus general manager Luciano Moggi to boost the club's image on television".[14]
In all, magistrates in
After the first penalties were handed out, more teams are being looked at for possible links to the scandal. Charges were laid
against
Resignations and appointments
Franco Carraro resigned from the presidency of the Italian Football Federation (FIGC), the body responsible for selecting Italy's
FIFA World Cup national team, on 8 May. Juventus' entire
board of directors resigned on 11 May, Moggi resigned shortly after Juventus won the 2006 Serie A
championship on
Sentences
The following punishments were given to individuals [6]:
- Franko Musolini: Given a warning.
- Franco Carraro: £35,000 equivalent fine.
- Massimo De Santis: 4 year ban from football.
- Paolo Dondarini: acquitted.
- Pasquale Foti: 2½ year ban from football, and £20,000 equivalent fine [5].
- Adriano Galliani: 9 month ban from football.
- Antonio Giraudo: €20,000 fine and 5 year ban from football, with a further recommendation to the FIGC president that he be banned for life from membership of the FIGC at any level.
- Pietro Ingargiola: Given a warning.
- Tullio Lanese: 2½ year ban from football.
- Claudio Lotito: 2½ year ban from football.
- Gennaro Mazzei: 1 year ban from football.
- Innocenzo Mazzini: 5 year ban from football.
- Leonardo Meani: 2½ year ban from football.
Luciano Moggi : 5 year ban from football, with a further recommendation to the FIGC president that he be banned for life from membership of the FIGC at any level.Pierluigi Pairetto : 3½ year ban from football.- Gianluca Paparesta: 3 month ban from football.
Claudio Puglisi : 3 month ban from football.- Fabrizio Babini: 1 year ban from football.
- Andrea Della Valle: 3 year ban from football.
- Diego Della Valle: 3 year 9 month ban from football.
Player movements from the affected clubs since the ruling
Some of Italy's top players moved clubs as a result of the scandal. Of the 23 players selected for the Italy national squad that won the
Juventus
Patrick Vieira to Internazionale for €9.5m [19]Gianluca Zambrotta toBarcelona for €14m [20]Lilian Thuram toBarcelona for €5m [20]Fabio Cannavaro to Real Madrid for €7m[21]- Emerson to Real Madrid for €16m[21]
Zlatan Ibrahimović to Internazionale for €24.8m [22]- Andrea Masiello co-ownership to
Siena - Giovanni Bartolucci co-ownership to
Siena Landry Bonnefoi to Metz on loan- Ruben Olivera to
Sampdoria on loan - Olivier Kapo to
Levante on loan Giuseppe Sculli toGenoa on loan- Abdoulay Konko co-ownership to
A.C. Siena - Antonio Nocerino co-ownership to
Piacenza Calcio Viktor Boudianski co-ownership to Ascoli Calcio 1898- Simone Bentivoglio co-ownership to A.C. ChievoVerona, to Modena F.C. on loan
Packer Douglas Ricardo toA.C. Siena on loan- Nicola Petrilli to F.C. Crotone
- Pasquale Izzo to
S.S.C. Napoli
Fiorentina
- Enrico Fantini to Bologna F.C. 1909
Vlada Avramov toTreviso F.B.C. 1993 on loan
Lazio
- Paolo Di Canio to Cisco Roma (transfer unrelated to Calciopoli)
A.C. Milan
- Christian Abbiati to
Torino on loan
Rossi Telecom Italia takeover controversy
Since the trial, some further controversy has emerged especially among the Juventus fanbase[citation needed]. This is due to perceived bias in
favour of Inter Milan who were the main beneficiary from the 2006 Serie A scandal; they were awarded as champions as the outcome
although they only finished 3rd and they have also brought in top players;
The company who caught the infamous Moggi phone tap, Telecom Italia, has since been
taken over by Commissioner of the FIGC Guido
Rossi from
Telecom Italia interception scandal
In September 2006 Italian football was shaken again by a new investigation. The head of security department of Telecom Italia (Italy's biggest fixed network operator company) was arrested for having organised a trade of interceptions to public personalities' private calls. Inter FC was involved in the process from the beginning when Carlo Buora, Chief Operating Officer of Telecom Italia and vice-president of Inter, being the boss of Tavaroli, was accused to be involved. During questioning, Tavaroli admitted that the president of Inter Massimo Moratti was one of the customers of this trade, having requested interceptions of many football personalities among referees, footballers and officers[24][25].
Inter was involved only slightly in Calciopoli scandal though Paolo Bergamo (referee appointing official) claimed, during questioning, that all major teams have the same level of relations with him and, during public interviews, wondered why not all the relevant calls that he received from team managers went out during the investigation [26] claiming that other teams, including Inter, should’ve been punished too. [27]
Italian Football Federation (now under the lead of Luca Pancalli) has started a new enquiry about this charges. Anyway, it is unlikely that Inter will be given some sanctions since the supposed illegal facts ascribed to Inter are dated 2002 and in Italy, as per the Sporting Justice Code of FIGC, illegal facts ascribed to teams are invalidated by prescription after two seasons. It is true that, if the illegal facts will be proved, the responsible persons still risk sanctions since for single persons illegal facts are invalidated by prescription after four seasons: in this case it would be at the end of the 2006/07 season.
Latest developments
In April
Investigating on those SIM cards, the prosecutors discovered some worrying details. During the 24 hours preceding the match
Juventus-A.C. Milan, one of the most important matches
of that championship, played on
Moreover, recently another wiretapping was unveiled by the Italian daily La Stampa. It's
nothing really compromising, anyway in that wiretapping Moggi and Marcello Lippi (former
trainer of Juventus and trainer of the Italian national team at the time)
clearly insult Inter's president (Massimo Moratti) and trainer (
On
A.C. Milan, originally ejected from the
On
See also
Serie A 2005-06 Serie A 2006-07 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal 2005 Bundesliga scandal - Gianluca Pessotto - Juventus team manager who may have attempted to commit suicide.
References
- ^ Simon Kuper. "Azzurri’s quest consoles nation rocked by scandals", Financial Times, 2006-07-07. Retrieved on 2006-07-30.
- ^ "Relegation call for Italian four", BBC, 4 July 2006.
- ^ "Italy prosecutor wants Reggina relegated", The Guardian, 13 August 2006.
- ^ a b c "Reggina to stay in Serie A", The World Game, 18 August 2006.
- ^ a b c "Reggina suffer 15-point deduction", BBC News, 2006-08-17. Retrieved on 2006-08-19.
- ^ a b "Calciopoli: The sentences in full", channel4.com, 2006-07-14. Retrieved on 2006-07-30.
- ^ a b "Punishments cut for Italian clubs", BBC, 2006-07-25. Retrieved on 2006-07-30.
- ^ a b c d e f g As a
consequence of the FIGC punishment. This does not include other possible sactions for European competition that could be handed
out by
UEFA . - ^ "Tax police search Juventus offices as probe goes on", ESPNsoccernet, 18 May 2006.
- ^ "Inter assigned the 2005/2006 league season title", FIGC official site, 26 July 2006.
- ^ "Juventus to appeal sentence despite FIFA threats", ESPNSoccernet, 24 August 2006
- ^ "Juve formally withdraws TAR appeal" ANSA.it, 1 September 2006
- ^ James Eve, "Italy's elite prepare defences ahead of tribunal", Reuters, 27 June 2006.
- ^ Jesper Kock and Kirsten Sparre, "TV host felled for his part in Juventus scandal", PlayTheGame.org, 26 May 2006.
- ^ "Serie A quartet will stand trial",
BBC , 23 June 2006. - ^
- ^ "Minnows face Calciopoli probe" channel4.com, 20 July 2006.
- ^ "Lippi meets magistrates as Juve's shares tumble", ESPNsoccernet, 19 May 2006.
- ^ "Vieira transferred", juventus.com, 2006-08-02. Retrieved on 2006-08-02. (English)
- ^ a b "Thuram and Zambrotta transferred", juventus.com, 2006-07-21. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (English)
- ^ a b "Cannavaro and Emerson transferred", juventus.com, 2006-07-27. Retrieved on 2006-07-27. (English)
- ^ "Ibrahimovic transferred", juventus.com, 2006-08-10. Retrieved on 2006-08-10. (English)
- ^ Rossi Telecom takeover at Reuters.com
- ^ New revelation rocks Inter, Channel 4, 2 October 2006
- ^ Juventus, FIGC and Gea in the web of spies, La Repubblica (Italian language), 27 September 2006
- ^ "Football scandal: Bergamo poisonously "All managers called, not only Moggi"", La Repubblica (Italian language), 12 September 2006
- ^ Bergamo: Inter worse than Juve, Channel 4, 3 December 2006
- ^ Moggi and the secret SIM cards on 107 matches, Il Giornale (Italian language), 16 April 2007
- ^ Juventus-A.C. Milan: Bertini calls Moggi, 42 calls to fix the challenge, La Repubblica (Italian language), 15 April 2007
- ^ Mancini needs a lesson, Goal.com (Italian language), 20 April 2007
- ^ Calciopoli's wiretappings, La Repubblica (Italian language), 26th April 2007
External links
- Report from the Guardian
- Former Juventus manager quizzed about involvement
- BBC Sport article
- BBC Sport article on the history of similar scandals
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