Turkey arrests 8, probes 1,024 players in betting scandal

Turkish authorities have formally arrested eight individuals, including the chairman of a top-flight football club, as part of a widening investigation into alleged match-betting activities within the country’s professional football system.
In a parallel move, the Turkish Football Federation (TFF) has suspended 1,024 players across all divisions pending disciplinary review.
These developments follow the TFF’s earlier suspension of 149 referees and assistant referees earlier this month, after internal investigations uncovered widespread betting activity among match officials.
According to state-run Anadolu Agency, a court has ordered the detention of Eyüpspor President Murat Özkaya along with seven others as part of the probe. The club has yet to issue a statement on the matter.
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In its official announcement, the TFF confirmed that the 1,024 players referred to the Professional Football Disciplinary Council (PFDK) include 27 players from the Super Lig—among them individuals from reigning champions Galatasaray and rivals Beşiktaş. All have been immediately suspended from competition.
The federation has requested that FIFA approve an additional 15-day domestic-only transfer and registration window to allow clubs to rebuild depleted squads before the winter transfer period officially begins.
Meanwhile, fixtures in Turkey's second-tier and third-tier leagues have been halted for two weeks.
Local reports indicate that the TFF Board will convene an emergency meeting on Tuesday at 14:00 GMT to discuss further measures.
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TFF President İbrahim Hacıosmanoğlu described the unfolding scandal as a “moral crisis” within Turkish football.
Internal findings revealed that 371 of the country’s 571 active referees held betting accounts, with 152 of them actively wagering. One referee reportedly placed more than 18,000 bets, while 42 officials are said to have wagered on over 1,000 matches each.
The scale of the violations ranges from single bets to systematic betting patterns over extended periods.
FIFA has yet to comment on the ongoing investigation or the TFF’s request for a temporary transfer window adjustment.


