Malaysian badminton player denies match-fixing, to appeal

AFP  |  Kuala Lumpur 

A Malaysian hit with a career-ending 20-year ban rejected allegations of match-fixing today and said he will appeal, claiming he was involved in a spot of casino gambling but not corruption.

Former world junior champion Zulfadli Zulkiffli, 25, was banned this week and fined $25,000 after the sport's world governing body ruled that he had engaged in corrupt practices dating back to 2013.

A second Malaysian player, Seang, 31, was barred for 15 years and fined $15,000. The bans came after the pair faced a World Federation (BWF) ethics hearing in in February.

But at a press conference in Kuala Lumpur, Zulfadli insisted he was innocent: "I have in no way spoken about, let alone been involved in, match-fixing."

He said he planned to appeal, and called for support from the Association of (BAM) and country's ministry in making his case.

"I will follow the appeal procedure step by step," he said.

A key part of the evidence against the pair were conversations extracted from their phones, which allegedly showed them conspiring to fix matches at tournaments around the world, the newspaper reported.

But Zulfadli claimed that some of their discussions were related to gambling in casinos -- rather than fixing the results of games.

"Tan could gamble and I asked his help to gamble. A lot of badminton players go to casinos when they play overseas to kill time before and after their matches," he said.

He also claimed many of their discussions were about sponsorship issues, and that there were problems with how some of their messages were translated into English.

"My conversations with Tan was mostly on sponsorship issues, as we are backed by the same sponsors," he said.

"Our conversations were also translated by the BWF from (Malay) to English, and it was incomplete."

Their bans began from January 12, the date on which both players were provisionally suspended by the BWF.

Neither was affiliated with the BAM and played independently but Tan was in Malaysia's squad for the prestigious in 2010.

He was banned by the BAM from competing in Asian tournaments for two years after quitting the national team in 2011.

In 2011 Zulfadli beat current world champion of to clinch the World Junior Championships.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, May 04 2018. 19:30 IST