Tennis to review integrity unit to restore public confidence

Wimbledon Chairman Philip Brook (center) speaks, along with ATP Executive Chairman and President Chris Kermode (right) and International Tennis Federation President David Haggerty

Wimbledon Chairman Philip Brook (center) speaks, along with ATP Executive Chairman and President Chris Kermode (right) and International Tennis Federation President David Haggerty

Tennis leaders are taking steps at damage control as they grapple with allegations of match-­fixing in recent media reports, which have cast a shadow over the first Grand Slam of the year and shaken confidence in the integrity of the sport.
An independent review of tennis’ anti-corruption unit was announced yesterday at the Australian Open in the wake of allegations that officials had failed to properly investigate suspected cases of match-fixing.
ATP Chairman Chris Kermode said immediate action was needed to “restore public confidence in our sport” and that “nothing is off the table.”
“I think this is a very bold step. We need to address the perception, public confidence, hit it head on. We don’t have anything to hide at all.”
The creation of the review, which was earlier reported by The Associated Press, came 10 days after the BBC and BuzzFeed News published stories alleging that tennis authorities had suppressed evidence of match-fixing and failed to thoroughly investigate possible cases of corruption involving 16 players who have ranked in the top 50 over the past decade. No players were named in the reports.
The review will be funded by the Tennis Integrity Board, which oversees the anti-corruption unit set up by the sport in 2008 to combat match-­fixing. It will be led by Adam Smith, a London-­based lawyer who is an expert in sports law.
“The last thing anyone wants is another sports body investigating itself,” Kermode said.
Andy Murray agreed that having an outsider conduct the inquiry would give it added credibility.
“Yeah, that’s positive. Surely. I think in these situations I think people become skeptical when it’s sort of kept in-house a little bit,” he said after his quarterfinal win over David Ferrer.
Kermode said the review panel would have an open-­ended deadline and budget and that its findings would be made public. He also said tennis’ governing bodies were committed to acting on every recommendation of the panel.
Among the issues the panel is expected to examine is whether the Tennis Integrity Unit (TIU) needs additional resources to do its job, how it can improve transparency without compromising its investigations, and whether the sport needs to expand its integrity education programs. AP

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