The German referee at the centre of the football match-fixing scandal that has shocked Germany says he is about to name colleagues and players who also took bribes.
With tickets for next year's World Cup - which will be staged in Germany - due to go on sale on Wednesday, Theo Zwanziger, president of Deutscher Fussball-Bund, the German football association, said it was difficult to know how deeply the scandal had penetrated the sport.
Robert Hoyzer last week admitted that he awarded improbable penalties, sent off star players, ignored blatant fouls and allowed contentious goals, all to please a Croatian-run betting syndicate who profited from unlikely, even miraculous, scorelines.
It is the worst match-fixing scandal in Germany since 1971, when sanctions for corruption were imposed on 53 players, two coaches, six officials and the clubs Arminia Bielefeld and Kickers Offenbach.
"Many more people are involved," a tearful Mr Hoyzer, 25, told the German newspaper Bild last week.
Hoyzer, who says he made more than 50,000 ($132,000) from match-fixing, said he was present when other referees were bribed to fix matches, and told prosecutors he had heard of similar payments to players. Police made four arrests on Friday.
In August last year, Hoyzer, a rising talent in German refereeing circles, bet that third division Paderborn would beat the Bundesliga side SV Hamburg. The German Cup first-round game should have been a straightforward assignment for Hamburg, until Hoyzer sent off one of their strikers for "insulting behaviour".
Then, on a slim pretext, he awarded two match-winning penalties to Paderborn. Some reports said Hoyzer reassured the Paderborn players of their imminent victory.
"The Hamburgers can do what they want, they don't stand a chance," he allegedly told them at halftime.
Paderborn went on to win 4-2.
Hoyzer, who has quit as a referee, confessed to manipulating at least three games. German football officials are reviewing videos of all 27 senior matches he has handled.
The scandal could not have come at a worse time for Germany. With just under 500 days to go until it stages the 2006 World Cup, the country's plans for the tournament already seem to be unravelling.
There has been uproar that only a third of the 2.9 million tickets available will be sold to ordinary fans, while Berlin's Olympic Stadium, revamped at a cost of 242 million, has hit the headlines after the firm that fitted it with new seats threatened to remove some because it hadn't been fully paid.
To avoid any taint of this weekend's fixtures, referees for all matches were switched at the last minute.
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Soccer: Others accepted bribes to fix matches says shamed referee
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