Hoyzer begins jail-term
Afp, Berlin
A former referee convicted for a match-fixing scandal that shook football in Germany before the 2006 World Cup will begin serving his jail sentence on Friday, he told a German magazine. Robert Hoyzer, 27, was jailed for two years and five months by a Berlin court in 2005 after he admitted fixing matches in a two-million-euro (2.7-million-dollar) betting scam. The severity of his sentence surprised many observers because prosecutors had only called for a suspended jail term, but Hoyzer failed in an appeal in December last year. Hoyzer told Sport-Bild magazine that he was not scared of serving his sentence in a prison in Berlin. "I am not anxious, it is more like concern and respect. I would compare it with starting a new job," Hoyzer said. Most of the matches he admitted fixing were in the German second and third division, although a German Cup match between first division SV Hamburg and third division Paderborn and a Turkish first division match between Ankaragucu and Galatasaray were also affected. In the most controversial match, Hoyzer awarded amateurs Paderborn two penalties and sent off a Hamburg player to help the minnows recover from two goals down and win the Cup match. Hoyzer admitted receiving 70,000 euros and a flat-screen television set for fixing matches.
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