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Blackburn’s Campbell arrested in fixing probe

English football has faced renewed concerns about match-fixing after Blackburn striker DJ Campbell was identified as one of six people arrested in the second police investigation into rigged games opened inside two weeks.

Campbell is one of two former Premier League players arrested after British newspaper The Sun uncovered alleged spot-fixing – where minor elements of a game are rigged – in the professional leagues. That follows another newspaper investigation by the Daily Telegraph, which led to non-league players being charged.

The latest probe is seemingly more serious, as it involves games as high up as the second-tier League Championship, and with claims by one player that he could even help rig Premier League matches.

“These allegations, if proven, unfortunately demonstrate the real issue football faces in terms of corruption and highlights the necessity of the work carried out by the PFA and other stakeholders in the game in educating players of these risks,” the Professional Footballers’ Association said. “We take the issue of integrity very seriously and will continue in our efforts to eradicate this evil from our game.”

Campbell has previously played in the top flight for Birmingham, Blackpool and Queens Park Rangers. He’s been playing for Blackburn in the League Championship season, and the club confirmed Campbell’s arrest on its website but said it was prevented from commenting further because it is an ongoing legal matter.

The main allegations don’t centre on players affecting the results of a game, but rather on things like deliberately earning yellow cards. Many bookmakers allow people to bet on whether a certain player will be booked.

The Sun reported that officers were likely to look at a yellow card Campbell received for a tackle committed in the first half of Blackburn’s game against Ipswich on Tuesday.

According to the newspaper, former Portsmouth and Nigeria defender Sam Sodje claimed he could fix Premier League games and was capable of rigging matches at next year’s World Cup.

Sodje, who played in the Premier League for Reading, also allegedly told an undercover reporter that a player deliberately sought to get booked in a recent League Championship match in return for a £30,000 ($A54,083) payout.

Sodje, who presented himself as a fixer, also told the reporter that he was once sent off on purpose for a fee of £70,000 ($A126,194).

The allegations alarmed his former club, with Portsmouth announcing it would be summoning its players to a meeting on Tuesday to warn them about the threat posed by fixers.

Britain’s National Crime Agency has not identified any of the people arrested, but said Monday that five were released on bail the previous evening until April, while a sixth was still being questioned.

“The NCA can confirm that The Sun on Sunday has passed material from its own investigation to the National Crime Agency,” the agency said in a statement. “An active NCA investigation is now underway and we are working closely with the Football Association and the Gambling Commission.”

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