----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Firdauf Achmad Dhewata 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2007 2:04 PM
  Subject: [BolaML] Re: Yang mau Dengar Lagu Anti Juve: Let It B...


  kalo skandal pengaturan skor & degradasi thn 1979/1980 apa ga 
  melibatkan pemain ??? siapa lage neh kambing itemnya :)

  Alkaizer
  .
<UF>
Know Your History: Italian Scandal of 1980
By Ken Pendleton 
USSoccerPlayers (October 19, 2006) -- The last major Italian match-fixing 
scandal, which came to light in 1980, was far less subtle than the one that 
unfolded this past spring. More than 30 players accepted money from two Roman 
businessmen -- Massimo Cruciano, a 32-year-old fruit and vegetable trader, and 
Alvaro Trinca, a 45-year-old restaurant-owner -- to throw matches, and some of 
them wagered against their own team. 

Since 1946 there have been two ways to wager on soccer in Italy. Totocalcio, is 
a legal, state-run pool, where fans have to successfully predict the outcome of 
a dozen or so matches to win money. Until the late 1990s, fans who wanted to 
bet on a fewer number of matches, or on single matches or the outcomes of 
championships, such as which team would win Serie A, had to resort to Totonero, 
or black-betting, which involved going to illegal bookmakers. Totocalcio was 
virtually impossible to manipulate because of the large number of matches 
involved, but attempts to fix individual matches have been regular feature of 
the history of Italian soccer. 

This particular plot was hatched at Trinca's restaurant (the owner was famous 
for making frozen food taste fresh) where several Lazio players dined 
regularly. Some of Lazio's players, including some internationals, agreed to 
fix matches for a fee. One of the co-conspirators, Carlos Petrini, later 
admitted that the money, which had to be divided among many people, was less of 
a lure than the feeling of power that came with being above the law. 

The operation was not exactly a model of efficiency. The first attempt to fix a 
match, a friendly between Lazio and Palermo in late 1979, did not come off 
because the Lazio players missed their plane flight. The second attempt, an 
arranged draw between Palermo and Taranto, ended up an away win even though one 
player did everything he could to concede a penalty in the second half. 

The third attempt, which occurred during a match between Avellino and Perugia, 
netted Cruciano and Trinca £3,000, but the duo continued to have problems. Some 
bookmakers refused to accept their wagers, one Lazio player, Montesi, refused 
to participate, and they lost huge sums on some matches. After a Milan-Lazio 
match did not turn out as planned, the dishonest duo became convinced that the 
Lazio players were conning them. 

"From that moment on," Cruciano later confessed, "we stopped dealing with the 
Lazio players." 

Matters reached a crisis point in February of 1980 when one of Bologna's 
players, Guiseppe Savoldi, scored the winning goal in a match against Avellino 
that was supposed to end a draw. Cruciano and Trinca did not have enough money 
to fix any more matches and they owed a lot of money to bookmakers. 
Furthermore, they had left behind a lot of incriminating evidence, including 
cashed checks written to players. 

Rumors were rampant, and Montesi, the above-board Laziolo, gave an interview, 
where he alleged that "corruption exists everywhere" in Italy and specifically 
condemned the "generalized" system of illegal betting. He, however, did not 
give specifics and matters might very well have to come to a close if an 
anonymous bookmaker had not claimed that players regularly bet against their 
own team as a kind of "insurance policy." They would either get a bonus for 
winning or tax-free payout from their wager. 

The logic of taking advantage of black-betting, as John Foot explained in his 
recent book Calcio; A History of Italian Football, was simple: "Totonero 
offered far greater opportunity for fixers, and was especially appealing to 
seasoned professionals, eager to make their last tax-free sums before 
retirement. Totonero also meant that players could bet on matches that had 
already been fixed for footballing reasons." (When a team was instructed to 
throw a match because they had no stake in the outcome while their opponent was 
facing relegation.) 

Trinca and Cruciano's families began to receive threats because of the money 
they owed and Cruciano's father, Ferruccio, decided to go to the authorities 
after one of his vegetable trucks as set on fire. Meanwhile, Massimo Cruciano 
and Trinca hired an attorney who decided to publicize what was happening in a 
Roman newspaper and warned the head of the Italian FA, Artemio Franchi, that 
his clients would go to the police if something was not done about the fact 
that certain players had cost his clients more than a billion lire. 

The thinly-veiled attempt at blackmail failed and Cruciano and Trinca went 
public on the first day of March 1980. Fraud clearly had been perpetrated, but 
the courts were unlikely to have sympathy for the fact that the match-fixers 
themselves were conned. What's more, match fixing was not against the law in 
Italy at the time (such a law was finally enacted in 1989). Nonetheless, on the 
23rd of March, 11 players and clubs officials were arrested during halftime of 
matches all across Italy. The police used this coordinated tactic to prevent 
the suspects from collaborating on their alibis. The entrance to Milan's locker 
room was blocked, so that two players and the club president could be arrested. 
Palermo's injured captain Guido Margherini was handcuffed in the stands, but 
some players were allowed to turn themselves in more inconspicuously, and two 
players were even allowed to shower before being apprehended. 

The players were released after 11 days, but formal charges of aggravated fraud 
was eventually filed against 33 players and five others, including Cruciano, 
Trinca, and Milan's president Colombo. Everyone was acquitted in by December, 
in large part because there were no sporting fraud statues on the books, but 
the Italian sporting authorities meted some meaningful punishments. President 
Colombo was banned for life and Milan's goalkeeper, Ricky Albertosi, who 
starred for Italy in the 1970 World Cup, was kicked out for four years. Paolo 
Rossi, who at most played a minor role, received a three-year sentence, which 
was shortened to two in time to allow him to play in the 1982 World Cup. In 
addition, Milan and Lazio were relegated to Serie B and 25 points were deducted 
from various clubs. 

The one player who cried foul, Montesi, received a short suspension "for 
failing to inform the authorities of the match-fixing plan." His career never 
rebounded, and a good case can be made that he was punished precisely because 
he blew the whistle. That's not surprising. After the dust settled, many 
authorities expressed the conviction that nothing like this would ever happen 
again, but corruption is such an endemic part of Italian soccer, and culture, 
that there is still a tendency to punish the few people who have the courage to 
try to clean up the sport and lightly punish those like Luciano Moggi who 
continue to dirty it.



--Io Sono Interista-




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