In the wee hours of Friday morning, on a street just north of the
Akropolis in Athens's Colonus neighborhood, two men on a motorcycle
armed with clubs attacked a 45-year-old named Christoforos Zografos.
Once a top referee, Zografos officiated FIFA matches for several years
in the mid-2000s. Today, he works as the assistant director for Greece's
Central Referee Committee. Reports of the extent of Zografos's injuries
are sketchy, but the beating was bad enough to send him to the
hospital.
The Zografos assault was also enough to scare the shit
out of the people in charge at the Hellenic Football Federation (EPO),
the governing body of Greek soccer. On November 14, in an emergency
meeting, the EPO took extraordinary action, voting to indefinitely suspend professional soccer at all levels, "to ensure immediate action to protect those involved, in any capacity, in Greek football."
In September, after a 46-year-old fan was assaulted
at a 3rd division match and later died, the government suspended soccer
for a week, but an indefinite suspension marks a new low-point in Greek
soccer, which has long been plagued by fan violence and corruption.
In
June 2011, following a UEFA-led investigation, ten people were arrested
and 68 were named as suspects in the fixing of as many as 40 matches in
Greece. Later that summer, Greek daily Kathimerini reported
the list of suspects had grown to 83 but could include more than 800
and involved staggering amounts of money: "Around 13 million euros was
made from betting on a single match currently being investigated by
authorities..."
More evidence of the scale of corruption in Greek soccer emerged last May, when FIFPro, FIFA's players union, published an anti-match fixing report
titled "Don't Fix It." The report contains the findings of a broad
study into the extent of match fixing in European soccer. As a snapshot
of continental corruption, "Don't Fix It" is fascinating. In Greece's
case, it's also damning: 12.8 percent of the players surveyed indicated
they had been approached in the previous 12 months by someone "who asked
you to fix a match."
In the aftermath of the 2011 scandal, two
clubs were relegated from the Greek Super League and several officials
were banned, but investigations into other suspects remain ongoing. In
July, Greek courts gave investigators permission to use some
secretly-recorded telephone conversations in their ongoing
investigations. The evidence demonstrates how "the president of a Super
League club and close associates approached and tried to to use
policemen, judges, politicians and other powerful figures for their own
ends as part of the planning and organization of their team," said
prosecutor Aristidis Koreas, as quoted by Kathimerini. The Kathimerini story
continues: "According to the prosecutor there is evidence that those
accused have been involved in bribery and influencing the results of
soccer matches."
The club president in question is thought to be Evangelos Marinakis, president and owner of Olympiacos, Greece's winningest soccer team.
This
is where things get weird: Koreas indicated that Christos Savvas—the
injured Christoforos Zografos' predecessor at the Central Referee
Committee—had raised specific concerns about the process by which
referees were nominated for Greek league games. In early October, Koreas
and another investigator were suddenly removed from the case.
In
the wake of Zografos' assault, accusations are flying. Olympiacos owner
Marinakis has suggested Dimitris Melissanidis, owner of Olympiakos
rival AEK Athens, asked the EPO and Zografos to appoint a specific
referee to a recent match, and when that didn't happen, ordered the
assault. Melissanidis, of course, denies any such thing. He accuses
Marinakis of straight up fixing matches. The new government investigator
later summoned both owners to a meeting.
The
events indicate just how difficult it is to fight corruption and
entrenched interests, a lesson that reaches far beyond the game of
soccer. Sadly, Zografos appears to have been assaulted for doing his job
and trying to maintain the integrity of the referee selection process.
His boss, Hugh Dallas, a Scot, was brought in over the summer to head
Greece's refs after Greek clubs begged for foreign leadership in the
hopes of putting an end to the practice of cherry picking referees. Over
the weekend, after revealing he had been threatened as well, Dallas stepped down
from his position overseeing referee selection in Greece. In other
words, the message sent by Zografos' assailants, whoever they were, was
received.
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