List of sporting scandals

This is a list of major sports scandals.

American football scandals

Association football scandals

Baseball scandals

A cartoon ran by various newspapers in 1920 after the breaking of the Black Sox Scandal

Boxing scandals

College sporting scandals

Cricket scandals

  • Underarm bowling incident of 1981 - Australia's Trevor Chappell became very infamous when Australia played New Zealand at the MCG on February 1, 1981, Australian captain Greg Chappell instructed the bowler (and younger brother Trevor) to bowl the last ball underarm to New Zealand batsmen Brian McKechnie to prevent him from hitting a six. After the bowl, McKechnie threw his bat onto the ground in disgust and Australia won the match. Negative post reactions then occurred after the match. Trevor Chappell was best remembered for the incident.
  • John the bookmaker controversy – a scandal in which Australia's Mark Waugh and Shane Warne were paid in 1994–95 to provide information on pitch and weather conditions to an Indian bookmaker. The scandal came to light in 1998.
  • South Africa cricket match fixing in 2000 which resulted in the banning from cricket of Hansie Cronje
  • Ball tampering controversy in August 2006 - On August 20, 2006, when Pakistan toured England in the fourth test, the umpires Darrell Hair and Billy Doctrove ruled that the Pakistani team had been ball tampering and gave five penalty runs to England then offered them a new ball. After the tea break, Pakistan refused to take the field in protest at the decision. Thus, England won the match by forfeit. After the incident, the whole Pakistan team were busted of the scandal and umpire Darrell Hair was banned from umpiring in cricket.
  • Pakistan cricket spot-fixing scandal – in 2010, three Pakistan players—team captain Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir—were accused of involvement in a spot-fixing scheme in which they allegedly accepted large sums of money to influence specific events within a match, as opposed to an actual match result. After an investigation, the ICC banned all three from the sport for periods from 5 to 10 years. Later, Butt and Asif were tried in a London court and found guilty of charges related to the scheme, whilst Amir pleaded guilty to similar charges in the same court. All received prison sentences ranging from 6 to 30 months.
  • 2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case
  • 2018 Australian ball-tampering scandal - In 2018, When Australia toured South Africa, Australia's Cameron Bancroft was seen on camera rubbing the ball with a small yellow object then hid the object in his underwear. The umpires then ruled he was ball tampering. It was then found that Australian captain Steve Smith and vice captain David Warner were also found to have been involved in the incident. Smith and Warner were then banned for 12 months from international and domestic cricket while Bancroft was banned for 9 months. Smith was also temporarily banned from captaining Australia while Warner received a life ban from captaining.
  • 2018 Sri Lankan cricket pitch fixing and betting scandal

Doping scandals

Skating scandals

Figure skating scandals

Short track speed skating scandals

Gliding scandals

During the 2020 Women's World Gliding Championships at Lake Keepit, Australia, the home team captain Terry Cubley was charged with unsporting behaviour by accessing the official tracking system to bypass the mandatory 15 minute delay and forward real time competitors' positions to his team, potentially granting a tactical advantage.

Investigation revealed that Matt Gage had been closely involved with the developers of the tracking system, and was aware of an undocumented back door that allowed the team captain (Terry Cubley) to bypass the 15 minute delay. This real-time information was relayed by the team captain over the radio to the Australian pilots. In the past real-time information has been available only through the OGN (Open Glider Network). This was the first time in the sport's history that an entire team had been penalised for unsporting behaviour, with the Competition Director applying a penalty of 25 points per pilot per day. Controversially the pilots involved were spared disqualification only receiving a relatively trivial points reduction (compared to a competing pilot who was disqualified for infringing airspace earlier in the competition). Following a subsequent GFA investigation two of the Australian Team admitted to cheating and the GFA made a formal apology to the FAI and the wider gliding community.

Golf scandals

  • Jane Blalock cheating controversy – one of the LPGA Tour's top players, Jane Blalock, was accused of illegally marking her golf ball on the green. She was suspended and fined by the tour, but Blalock in turn filed suit and won an injunction that allowed her to continue playing. Blalock eventually won her lawsuit and she and the LPGA reached an out-of-court settlement.
  • Vijay Singh, a former number one golfer in the world, was suspended from the PGA Tour for using deer antler spray, which violated the PGA Tour Anti-Doping Policy. Likewise in 1985, Vijay Singh was caught erasing his score on a hole and replacing it with a lower score after the scorecard had been signed. Once the rules officials confirmed the allegations, Singh was banned from the Asian Tour. To this day, Singh has not acknowledged that he cheated.[16]

Gymnastics scandals

Horse racing scandals

  • Horse murders – from 1975 to 1995, wealthy owners and trainers of show jumping horses conspired to electrocute and otherwise kill over-valued as well as under-performing animals in a 20-year-long scheme to defraud insurance companies. Crimes also committed during this equestrian sports scandal include extortion, mail fraud, animal cruelty and the murder of at least one human being.
  • Fine Cotton/Bold Personality ring-in – a 1984 betting scam in which the conspirators, which included some elite figures in Australian Thoroughbred racing, substituted the far more talented Bold Personality for Fine Cotton in a low-class race. The scheme was discovered immediately after the race and the investigation led to lifetime bans for six individuals and bans of more than a decade for at least two more.

Ice hockey scandals

Match-fixing scandals

  • Ten of the twelve members of the gold medal-winning Spanish basketball team at the 2000 Summer Paralympics were revealed to have no disability.[17]
  • Fresno Case scandal (2004) – an attempt to rig a vote to prevent the Catalan rink hockey team from being accepted into international competition.
  • Melbourne Football Club tanking scandal (2009) – allegations arose that the club deliberately lost matches in 2009 so that it would put itself into a position whereby they would secure a priority draft pick at that year's draft.[18]
  • In 2011, snooker player John Higgins was accused of accepting bribery in order to lose frames purposefully. Higgins denied any accusations of match-fixing and bribery, however, he was found guilty of accepting bribery while there was no evidence for him match-fixing. "World number one John Higgins has been suspended from all future tournaments after reportedly agreeing to take a £261,000 bribe to lose frames."[19]

Motorsport and Racing scandals

Olympic Games scandals

  • 2002 Winter Olympics figure skating scandal – dual gold medals were awarded in pairs figure skating to Canadian pair Jamie Salé and David Pelletier and to Russian pair Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze. Initially, the Russian pair won, but it was uncovered that Russian officials had bribed the judges to inflate the scores of the Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze, so a second set of gold medals was awarder to original silver medalists Salé and Pelletier.
  • Russian doping scandal – Russia has the most (51) Olympic medals stripped for doping violations – four times the number of the second country (Belarus). From 2011 to 2015, more than a thousand Russian competitors in various sports, including summer, winter, and Paralympic sports, benefited from a cover-up[20] with no indication that the program has ceased since then.

Paralympic Games

  • Cheating at the Paralympic Games – in the 2000 Summer Paralympics, athletes from Spain competed and won the gold medal in the Basketball ID event despite the majority of players not having an intellectual disability. The fallout from this scandal saw all events for athletes with intellectual disabilities removed from the next two Summer Paralympics.[21]

Rugby league scandals

  • Melbourne Storm salary cap breach – in 2010, the Melbourne Storm were punished for breaching the salary cap and were stripped of the ability to accumulate points, had their name stripped from the premierships and minor premierships they had gained over the previous four years and forced to pay back millions of dollars of prize money.[22] It is the toughest punishment for a salary cap breach in NRL history.
  • Cronulla Sharks supplements doping scandal – following an extensive investigation by ASADA, players from the Cronulla Sharks were found guilty of having used the banned peptide CJC-1295, resulting in the suspensions of fourteen players. A number of senior staff were dismissed or resigned and several senior club members received penalties and suspensions.[23]
  • Matthew Johns sexual assault allegations – in 2002, while on a trip to New Zealand, Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks player Matthew Johns took part in degrading group sex with a young woman while up to 11 of his teammates joined in. The scandal was reported by the ABC's Four Corners TV series.[24] Johns admitted having consensual sex with the girl and made a public apology on Channel Nine's The Footy Show. Johns was suspended from The Footy Show and was released by the Melbourne Storm as their assistant coach.[25]

Rugby union scandals

Sumo wrestling scandals

Tennis scandals

Russian doping scandal

Volleyball scandals

References

  1. "11 of the 12 footballs deflated". ESPN. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  2. "NFL suspends Brady 4 games; Pats lose picks". Retrieved 26 August 2016.
  3. "Новости NEWSru.com :: Скандал на Кубке Содружества: чемпионы Армении отказались играть с азербайджанцами". newsru.com.
  4. "Turkish court charges 15 more in Fenerbahce match-fixing scandal". the Guardian.
  5. "Şike Davası'nda yeniden yargılama kararı". Sabah. 23 June 2014.
  6. "Ex-Churchill player implicated in Lebanon match-fixing". NewsReporter.in. 28 February 2013. Archived from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
  7. Πόρισμα εισαγγελέα Αριστείδη Κορρέα για την ύπαρξη εγκληματικής οργάνωσης στο ποδόσφαιρο (in Greek). Public Prosecutor's Office of District Court Judges. 3 December 2014. p. 12. Retrieved 6 April 2015.
  8. Πόρισμα εισαγγελέα Αριστείδη Κορρέα για την ύπαρξη εγκληματικής οργάνωσης στο ποδόσφαιρο (in Greek). Public Prosecutor's Office of District Court Judges. 3 December 2014. p. 159. Retrieved 6 April 2015.
  9. "HMRC wins Rangers 'big tax case' ruling". BBC News. 2017-07-05. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  10. http://www.spiegel.de/international/topic/football_leaks/archiv.html
  11. SPIEGEL, Christoph Winterbach, DER. "Warum die Uefa Manchester City bestrafen muss - DER SPIEGEL - Sport". www.spiegel.de (in German). Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  12. "2016 Summer Olympics: The U.S. dominates Rio Games with 121 medals". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  13. Mackenzie, George. "Loaded gloves: the dark story of Luis Resto and his illegal fists". The Versed. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  14. Walter, Brad (25 August 2014). "Who 'duped' Cronulla Sharks players and how did they do it?". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  15. "Golf Spelled Backwards*." : The Vijay Singh Cheating Incident. Golf Spelled Backwards, 30 Jan. 2013. Web. 8 May 2015.
  16. "Spain in Paralympics scandal". 2000-11-24. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  17. Ralph, Jon (3 August 2011), "How Melbourne tanked in 2009", Herald Sun, Melbourne, VIC, retrieved 10 November 2011
  18. "John Higgins suspended in snooker bribe probe". BBC.
  19. Ruiz, Rebecca R. (9 December 2016). "Russia's Doping Program Laid Bare by Extensive Evidence in Report". The New York Times.
  20. "Intellectual disability ban ends". BBC News. 21 November 2009. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  21. Barrett, Chris (2010-04-22). "Melbourne Storm stripped of premierships for salary cap breaches". The Age. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  22. Walter, Brad (2014-08-25). "Who 'duped' Cronulla Sharks players and how did they do it?". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  23. http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/content/2009/s2567972.htm
  24. "Matthew Johns stood down by Melbourne Storm and Channel 9 | Herald Sun". web.archive.org. 2009-05-16. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  25. Benammar, Emily (2009-08-18). "Dean Richards ban: how 'Bloodgate' saga unfolded". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 2009-08-18.
  26. "Davydenko faces betting inquiry". 2007-08-27. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
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