'Tsunami' of match-fixing and corruption in tennis' lower ranks


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Professional tennis has created an environment ripe for corruption at the sport’s lowest levels and needs reform to combat the problem, an independent task force reported on Thursday, after a two-year investigation.


The review panel, made up of three prominent lawyers, found that there was a “tsunami” of fixed matches at the lower levels of the game, but that there was no conspiracy or collusion among the sport’s governing bodies to cover it up.



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Scarred by reports of match-fixing, tennis leaders created the panel in January 2016 and announced they would implement all of its recommendations.


The panel interviewed more than 200 tennis stakeholders and surveyed more than 3200 players for its interim report, which cost more than $US20 million to compile. The final report will be released in spring after the panel receives feedback from tennis officials.


“The first finding is that the nature and extent of the integrity problem facing tennis is serious and substantial, in particular in the lower levels of the sport,” Adam Lewis, the head of the panel, said at a news conference in London.


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