Match-fixing scandal: Seven Real Valladolid players paid to lose match, claims report

Valencia beat Valladolid 2-0 and qualified for the Champions League. Valladolid, owned since September by former Brazilian international Ronaldo, was already safe from relegation.

Published : Jun 04, 2019 20:15 IST

Borja Fernandez (L) is one of the seven Real Valladolid players that were reportedly paid by a match-fixing gang to deliberately lose their final match of the La Liga season against Valencia.
Borja Fernandez (L) is one of the seven Real Valladolid players that were reportedly paid by a match-fixing gang to deliberately lose their final match of the La Liga season against Valencia.
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Borja Fernandez (L) is one of the seven Real Valladolid players that were reportedly paid by a match-fixing gang to deliberately lose their final match of the La Liga season against Valencia.

Seven players of Spanish first division side Real Valladolid were paid by a recently dismantled match-fixing gang to deliberately lose their final match of the season against Valencia, daily newspaper El Mundo reported Tuesday.

Valencia beat Valladolid 2-0 and qualified for the Champions League. Valladolid, owned since September by former Brazilian international Ronaldo, was already safe from relegation.

READ | A Ronaldo in Valladolid!

The paper said police had intercepted telephone conversations involving retired footballer Carlos Aranda, who was arrested last week on suspicion of leading the ring, where he is heard saying “there were seven (Valladolid) players bought” in the match.

“Valencia wins the first half and the second, okay?” he is caught saying according to a transcript of another intercepted phone call obtained by the newspaper.

Valladolid captain Borja Fernandez, who also played for Indian outfit ATK, is among the players who were paid to lose the match, according to a judicial document obtained by El Mundo , which has broken several football-related legal stories.

Valladolid announced last week it had opened a disciplinary procedure against Fernandez amid reports that authorities were monitoring Valencia's final day win against the club.

“We hope that it is nothing. In any case, I think it is good that we investigate, because we would all fight against corruption,” Ronaldo said during an interview published last week in sports daily AS .

Contacted by AFP, judicial authorities in Aragon, the region in which the court investigating the case is located, refused to confirm the El Mundo report.

Aranda was one of several former Spanish footballers who were arrested on May 28 on suspicion of leading a match-fixing gang that operated in the country's first and second divisions.

The authorities launched their investigation in 2018 following a suspect match between Huesca and Tarragona in the second division.

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