Germany In Germany, at least 32 games from the
2. Bundesliga to the junior leagues were manipulated. Including four games from the 2. Bundesliga, three games from the
3. Liga, 18 games in the
Regionalliga,
Oberliga games and two games from the U-19 division. In September 2010, the public-law TV magazine Fakt reported that thirteen second tier and five third tier league games, twenty regional league games, five league games, as well as two games in the
DFB-Pokal, five U-19 games and other individual friendly games, were under suspicion of manipulation. A DFB referee was also accused of having been bribed by the alleged fraudulent betters in a regional league game in May 2009. In course of the investigation, basketball player of the
Brose Baskets from
Bamberg, Ivan Pavić, and the Würzburger landes league player,
Kristian Sprećaković, were also arrested on 19 November 2009. Four games of
SSV Ulm 1846 in the final phase of the Regionalliga season 2008–09 were under suspicion of manipulation. On 27 November 2009, the club announced the denunciation of the Croatian players Davor Kraljević, Marijo Marinović and Dinko Radojević in association with the match-fixing scandal. On 24 November 2009,
Regionalliga club
SC Verl suspended midfielders Patrick Neumann and Tim Hagedorn from games and training. The club received indications of attempted tampering for the game against Borussia Mönchengladbach II (4–3 win) and 1. FC Köln II (1–0 loss) in the 2008–09 season. On 28 November 2009, Neumann admitted to Bochum prosecutor's office that he received 500€, making him the first professional to sign a confession in the match-fixing scandal. However, he continued to deny any activity in the manipulations.
Marcel Schuon confirmed to the Bochum prosecutor's office that during his time at
VfL Osnabrück, manipulation took place in a 3–0 defeat to
FC Augsburg on 17 April 2009 in the 2. Bundesliga. He refused to inform anyone until after the game. Schuon was issued a five-figure fine. At the beginning of the 2009–10 season, Schuon switched to 3. Liga team
SV Sandhausen, where he was removed at the end of November 2009 due to his involvement in the match-fixing scandal.
Austria In Austria, eleven matches of the
Bundesliga and the
First League were affected. At the beginning of March 2011, betting allegations about the Austrian Bundesliga club
Kapfenberger SV were announced, where, according to various media reports, players of the club had been handed large sums of money, and accused of having perilously lost the
2009–10 season games against
FC Red Bull Salzburg (4–0 loss), Rapid Wien (1–0 loss) and
Austria Wien (1–0 loss). Also at this time, a defensive player from
Kapfenberg, among others, was reported to have received €200,000 through a middleman.
Switzerland In Switzerland, 22 matches of the
Challenge League and six test games were affected. Since a striker, from his playing position, can hardly be responsible for five goals against, other players were suspected of having received several 10,000 euros.
Suspicions towards games of FC Gossau FC Gossau suffered a striking series of defeats at the end of the 2008/09 season. The federal prosecutor suspected specifically players of FC Gossau of having manipulated the games against
FC Locarno on 24 May 2009 and against
Servette FC. FC Gossau was expected to lose the game against Locarno with at least four goals difference and the game actually ended 0-4. The then goalkeeper of Gossau,
Darko Damjanović, was said have been taken into custody by police, but went undercover. Gossau’s midfielder,
Mario Bigoni, publicly stated that a previous season's game was "not clean" and that he had received a bid from a fellow player. Although it was not known if Bigoni had accepted the offer, he was suspended by his club. Also supposedly Gossau received tens of thousands of euros, 20,000 alone for the game against Locarno. On 26 October 2011, the police confirmed that Bigoni had been found dead three days earlier in the
Alter Rhein near
Rheineck.
Test game The Bosnian club,
NK Travnik, completed a training camp in Switzerland in the summer of 2009, with test matches against the clubs
Neuchâtel Xamax (2-3), Servette FC Genève (1-3) and
FC Sion (1-4). It became known that a betting syndicate from Asia was financially involved in the costs of the training camp. The president of FC Sion,
Christian Constantin, publicly voiced the suspicions that the Bosnians let win FC Sion.
China The Chinese police arrested a total of sixteen people, including twelve club members and four high-ranking football officials, including the former vice president of the
Chinese Football Association, Yang Xu, on 25 November 2009, in the wake of the international inquiries of the betting scandal.
Matches investigated by UEFA All matches under investigation were played in 2009.
UEFA detailed on 7 manipulated games 2nd qualifying round for the Champions League • Stabaek IF – KF Tirana (4-0 on 21 July 2009) 2nd qualifying round for the Europa League • SK Rapid Wien - KS Vllaznia (5-0 on 16 July 2009) • Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv F.C. - FC Dinaburg (4-0 on 16 July 2009) • KS Vllaznia - SK Rapid Wien (0-3 on 23 July 2009) • FC Dinaburg - Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv F.C. (0-1 on 23 July 2009) 3rd qualifying round for the Europa League • Fenerbahce Istanbul - Budapest Honvéd (5-1 on 30 July 2009) • NK IB Ljubljana - Metalurg Donetsk (0-3 on 6 August 2009) ==Betting Scandal in Italy==