snooker players investigated for match-fixing
seen corruption allegations since its inception as a professional sport. Professional player and commentator Willie Thorne considered match-fixing endemic to snooker, noting that he himself was offered a bribe to throw a match.[1] The earliest known case of corruption in the game involved Joe Davis, pioneer of the professional sport and winner of the first 15 world championships, who is believed to have “carried” weaker opponents in multi-session matches to maximise gate revenue.[2] In 1968, The Sunday Times published an article titled “Great TV Snooker Frame-up”, which exposed the fixing of non-tournament televised matches for “the artificial production of climaxes”. Players Ray Edmonds, John Spencer, Gary Owen and Fred Davis recounted how there had been an understanding that if they were playing a televised match, end with a deciding frame, and that they would play in a way to ensure dramatic tension. Davis said that he regarded these matches as “five frames of comedy: I hate taking part in something that’s not genuine”.[3]
A Chinese man sat down holding a snooker cue
A Chinese man sat down holding a snooker cue
Liang Wenbo (left) and Li Hang (right) received lifetime bans for match-fixing
Players have sometimes been coerced into fixing results. Thai players in particular have been targeted by cartels. James Wattana once received a death threat as part of a match-fixing attempt,[4] while Thanawat Thirapongpaiboon was the victim of a firebomb attack on his Rotherham home after the governing body opened an investigation into him and fellow Thai player Passakorn Suwannawat.[5]
Match-fixing is difficult to prove. Only four arrests have taken place in the sport’s history—Silvino Francisco, Stephen Lee and Scottish practice partners Stephen Maguire and Jamie Burnett—but no criminal prosecution has ever been brought.
In 2022, the sport was rocked by the biggest scandal in its history when a match-fixing ring was unmasked, which led to ten Chinese players—Liang Wenbo, Li Hang,
Lu Ning, Yan Bingtao, Zhao Xintong, Zhao Jianbo, Chang Bingyu, Bai Langning, Chen Zifan and Zhang Jiankang—being banned for match-fixing offences.
Ringleaders Liang and Li both received lifetime bans—the first ever handed out—from the sport.
The only other players the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) have successfully prosecuted for match-fixing are Stephen.
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