Lol. Spanish league Football coach arrested by police after losing 12-0 to Barcelona
Filippo di Pierro, the coach of Spanish third
division club, Eldense, has been arrested by police and taken in for
questioning after his side lost 12-0 to Barcelona B last weekend.
Pierro's
club was smashed to smithereens by a Barcelona B side that had players
like Alex Carbonell, Gerard Gumbau, Alberto Perea, Kaptoum, Marc Cardona
and Nacho Abeledo but Eldense president David Aguilar after the match
denounced the result and asked for help from the Spanish police and La
Liga- which ultimately led to Pierro's arrest.
Pierro's
arrival at the club coincided with when an Italian investment group
that has been accused of corruption took over the club, and it is
believed the coach and the Italian investment group were involved in
match fixing, hence his arrest on Monday night.
According
to reports, bets were reportedly placed on being 8-0 down at half-time
and to lose by 11+ goals. They were 8-0 down at HT and lost 12-0.
Following
the shameful loss, Eldense announced they had ended ties with the group
of Italian investors and would not be playing their six remaining
fixtures of the season.
Meanwhile, Eldense player Cheikh Saad spoke to Spanish radio station RAC1, and confirmed that the game had been fixed.
Saad,
who did not play in the 12-0 defeat, said: “There are four players
involved in match fixing. I don’t care what happens, but when I can, I
will give the names of these players. Half an hour before playing the
game against Barcelona B I was starting, but then I was out of the line
up. They told a teammate this game was fixed and if he wanted to play he
should not score goals. They didn’t ask me as they knew what my answer
would be. The coach knew something, I’m sure, and the players too.”
“The
coach told me to come on and I told him I did not want to. I also told
my teammates on the bench that they shouldn’t go out on to the pitch if
they didn’t want their names to be stained.”
On
Barcelona B, Saad added: “They are not involved in any way. They did
what they had to do, score goals. If it had been me I would have done
the same.”
La Liga president Javier Tebas said:
“We’re going to investigate because there are certain collateral issues
with an Italian investment group that bear the hallmarks of the
possible involvement of an international betting ring with a view to
match-fixing.”
It's a crime for footballers, football administrators, coaches or football employees to engage in football betting.
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