Tag: Aziz Yildirim

  • The Not-So-Beautiful Game

    The Not-So-Beautiful Game

    By ANDREW FINKEL

    ISTANBUL — “Welcome to hell!” was how Istanbul fans once greeted foreign soccer teams. But now it’s Turkey’s top team that finds itself in a small hell of its own making. Not only is a recent match-fixing scandal threatening the country’s premier league, but it has also forced the governing Justice and Development (AK) Party into scoring against itself. The party that was elected in 2002 as the new broom to sweep Turkey clean looks like it’s sweeping dirt under the carpet.

    The soccer team Fenerbahce’s chairman, Aziz YildirimAziz Uzun/Anatolian Agency, via European Pressphoto AgencyThe soccer team Fenerbahce’s chairman, Aziz Yildirim
    The soccer team Fenerbahce’s chairman, Aziz YildirimAziz Uzun/Anatolian Agency, via European Pressphoto AgencyThe soccer team Fenerbahce’s chairman, Aziz Yildirim

    The trouble began in May after the final whistle in the final game last season, when the Istanbul club Fenerbahce snatched the Turkish league championship. The club it so narrowly beat to first place, Trabzon, accused it of match fixing. Prosecutors uncovered evidence said to implicate Fenerbahce’s chairman, Aziz Yildirim, an influential defense contractor who helped bankroll the team’s way to the top of the league. But the accusations didn’t stop there, and there are now scores of people being charged, including players from other teams and officials from the Turkish Football Federation.

    This sits badly with Turkey’s die-hard soccer supporters, thousands of whom have taken to the streets supporting Fenerbahce “right or wrong.” The scandal is also a problem for the AK Party. Just as last soccer season was ending, it enacted tough new laws to tackle corruption in sports, apparently not imagining that the really popular big four soccer clubs might be affected. But with Yildirim in pretrial detention and facing a 12-year prison sentence, suddenly the whole league was in disarray. Fenerbahce is also Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s favorite club.

    Parliament has shown real mettle in supporting the prosecution of Turkey’s old establishment on charges of fomenting coups and in ignoring saber-rattling from the military. But it buckled under pressure from the football lobby. Earlier this month, it passed a bill slashing sentences for crimes like match-fixing to three years. But this was too much for the Turkish president, Abdullah Gul, Erdogan’s old political comrade. Encouraged by some senior AK Party members of Parliament who thought the new legislation was too blatantly motivated by the desire to save the necks of the powerful few, he refused to sign it into law.

    While recovering from major surgery, Erdogan took the time to insist that Parliament override the veto. Clearly he thought it wasn’t worth the political price to have his party jeered at, match after match, by irate fans. Though many AK Party MPs stayed away on principle, the measure received rare support from the opposition: if they showed clemency to soccer’s inner circle, perhaps the establishment old guard standing trial (including some opposition MPs) might receive some, too. Yildirim can comfort himself that he now faces a much reduced sentence and also that his team, despite the upheavals, is having a good season.

    Less pleased is the religiously conservative press, for which taming the military and the former pro-secular elite is the highest priority. A columnist in Zaman newspaper, Huseyin Gulerce, saw in Parliament’s turnabout a sign that the AK Party is taking the wrong fork in the road to democratization.

    The AK Party came to office out of nowhere in 2002, at a time when the Turkish public longed for an end to corruption — and Turkish soccer was on a roll. (The national team had just come third in the World Cup.) Turkey didn’t even qualify for 2010 World Cup or Euro 2012, and the AK Party is proving itself no less opportunistic than the parties it replaced.

    Andrew Finkel has been a foreign correspondent in Istanbul for over 20 years, as well as a columnist for Turkish-language newspapers. His latest book, “Turkey: What Everyone Needs to Know,” will be published next year.

    via The Not-So-Beautiful Game – NYTimes.com.

  • Turkey at crossroads

    Turkey at crossroads

    By Andy Brassell

    Sunday May 22, 2011 saw another gripping climax to the Turkish Super Lig season, with Fenerbahce winning 4-3 at Sivasspor to seal the title at the expense of Trabzonspor on the final day. For Fener, it was closure after the trauma of 12 months before, when fans celebrated the title on the Sukru Saracoglu pitch – only to find out that the tannoy announcement that rivals Bursaspor had faltered against Besiktas was wrong, and that Bursa were champions. Furious home fans began to tear out seats and start fires in the stands.

    Fenerbahce president Aziz Yildirim is under investigation

    If recent nail-biters have augmented the burgeoning reputation of domestic football in this most passionate of football nations, events in the last week threaten to decimate it at a stroke. A series of police raids last Sunday (July 3) saw some of the most influential clubs and figureheads of the Turkish game implicated in an investigation into match-fixing, with details emerging that authorities were looking into at least 20 matches from the 2010-11 season.

    Less than a week later in excess of 60 people have been arrested, but the most important detention remains that of Fenerbahce president Aziz Yildirim, with two of the key matches under scrutiny being Fener’s games against Eskisehirspor in April, and the last day title-clincher against Sivasspor. Sivas’ president Mecnun Odyakmaz, Eskisehirspor sporting director Umit Karan and Eskisehir coach Bulent Uygun are also among the arrests.

    Yildirim is currently on conditional release for treatment having been taken ill in custody, but public sympathy in Turkey is in short supply for a strongly divisive figure with an explosive temperament. “He always behaves very aggressively to journalists, cameramen and others,” says Istanbul-based journalist Yakir Mizrahi. “He is an idol to his own flock – he invested a lot of money to renovate the stadium, and (provide) new training facilities over the last 13 years, and Fenerbahce fans love him, because of his role in making a globally-known club,” says Mizrahi – but there is considerable schadenfreude for a man considered brash and unpleasant in many quarters.

    The immediate implications for the accused are serious. Some of the charges include “forming, directing and being a member of an armed criminal organisation,” and a statement released by Istanbul police on Wednesday said that eight unlicensed firearms had been seized during the raids. Turkey’s president Abdullah Gul and prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (a former semi-pro player himself and a Fener supporter) have been careful to remain neutral while the investigation continues, but the feeling is that the arrests are the latest move in a long-awaited initiative to clean up the game, after laws to combat football-related violence were passed in April, which included severe penalties for match-fixing.

    The Turkish Football Federation’s (TFF) Professional Football Discipline Board (PFDK) banned 11 former players and coaches for life at the beginning of June after concluding a probe into match-fixing and illegal betting in matches between 2008 and 2010. Indeed, 23 more were punished, including former Galatasaray and Fener defender Fatih Akyel, who was banned for three years for his role in fixing a league game in 2008. After years in which authorities were powerless to act, former sports minister Mehmet Ali Sahin told the newspaper Hurriyet this week, the law finally has the teeth to change things.

    The consequences of a guilty verdict would be crushing for Yildirim and Fener. The TFF would strip the club of its title – its 18th, which put it one ahead of bitter rivals Galatasaray – and relegation would almost certainly follow, in a mirror of the punishments dished out to Juventus post-Calciopoli. Fener would incur an immediate loss in excess of £30 million – £10.8 million from TV rights, £8 million in bonuses and £5.7 million in prize money – losing around £10 million more that would come with Champions League qualification. The player exodus that would follow relegation would be an administrative as well as a financial necessity; league rules limit second-tier teams to three foreign players in their squad, and Fener currently have ten.

    Yet even if only Fener were punished, the shockwaves would be felt all over the country. “Other Super Lig clubs would automatically be affected economically,” says Mizrahi. “US$321 million is paid annually by the broadcaster to the clubs which is a record for Turkey, but a new bid can happen if Fenerbahce is relegated, so other clubs’ income may decrease.”

    He also believes Fener’s exclusion from the Champions League would set back Turkey’s progress in Europe. “In my opinion, (runners-up) Trabzonspor’s squad is not adequate for the Champions League,” he said. ”And points which the teams gather from the Champions League are very important for Turkish football’s future.”

    Pressure to act quickly is considerable. The Super Lig restarts on August 7, but the Super Cup showpiece between Fener and cup winners Besiktas is scheduled for July 31. Before both those dates, on July 15 (next Friday), UEFA requires confirmation from the TFF of the Turkish clubs that will be involved in the Champions League. “It might take a very long time for the (criminal) investigation to conclude. Therefore we have to act upon the evidence at hand,” TFF chairman Mehmet Ali Aydinlar told NTV this week.

    GettyImages Michel Platini and Fener vice-president Murat Ozaydinli speak in 2009

    Yet in its eagerness for justice, the TFF could be all set to repeat the horrible botch that the Portuguese authorities made of the Apito Final process. They too acted before the legal process was concluded, and Portugal’s Central Administrative Court ruled in May that the six-point deduction from Porto in 2008 (which initially prompted UEFA to throw the club out of the 2008-09 Champions League in June 2008, before the decision was repealed twelve days later) was unfounded. Both Porto and neighbours Boavista (also punished in the same probe) are set to pursue the authorities for hefty damages.

    Turkish football’s aim to bring an end to years of unfettered, opaque financial dealings is laudable, and could be the next step on its route to becoming a world-renowned championship. Whether the authorities can hold fire long enough to make sure they are thorough remains to be seen. If the TFF reacts with haste, it may well have to repent at leisure.

    ESPN

    Türkçe : https://www.turkishnews.com/tr/content/tag/fenerbahce/

  • Fenerbahce at center of Turkish match-fixing probe

    Fenerbahce at center of Turkish match-fixing probe

    (CNN) — The president of Turkish football champions Fenerbahce has been arrested as part of a nationwide investigation into match-fixing.

    Fenerbahce's Alex De Souza celebrates after scoring against the club's Istanbul rivals Besiktas in February
    Fenerbahce's Alex De Souza celebrates after scoring against the club's Istanbul rivals Besiktas in February

    Aziz Yildirim was among three club presidents to be detained during a raid on 12 provinces which began on Sunday and concluded on Monday, according to the Anatolia News Agency.

    Fenerbahce vice-president Sekip Mosturoglu and the club’s new signings Sezer Ozturk and Emmanuel Emenike were also taken into custody, along with more than 50 others including former player and current staff member Cemil Turan.

    “Club president Aziz Yildirim was detained in a probe into match-fixing allegations in the Turkish football league,” read a statement on the Fenerbahce website.

    Fenerbahce Sports Club has never been and will never be engaged in any unlawful and illegal activity

    –Fenerbahce club statement

    “We would like to stress our trust in our legal system once again, wishing that the truth will come on as soon as possible. Everyone should know that Fenerbahce Sports Club has never been and will never be engaged in any unlawful and illegal activity. We are proud of our clean and victorious past.”

    FIFA to meet with Interpol in match-fixing investigation

    Yildirim, who suffers from diabetes and high blood pressure, was taken to hospital for tests after falling ill on Monday before being returned to police custody, the Hurriyet Daily News website reported.

    Turkey’s ruling party, the AKP, said the arrests were part of its battle against criminal organizations.

    “This shows that Turkey is quickly moving toward becoming a real state of law,” Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc said.

    Also detained in the operation were Sivasspor’s president Mecnun Odyakmaz, Giresunspor president Omer Ulku and former president Olgun Peker, Diyarbakirspor’s former president Abdurrahman Yakut and Mersin Idmanyurdu vice-president Besir Acar.

    Fenerbahce won a record 18th league championship last season on goal difference from Trabzonspor after both teams finished on 82 points.

    The club’s win over Sivasspor in the final week is among the matches being investigated, as well as the game against Eskisehirspor.

    Last month the Turkish football federation handed out lifetime bans to 11 people after finding that 17 domestic games were manipulated between 2008 and 2010, while another 23 were suspended for between six months and three years.

    via Fenerbahce at center of Turkish match-fixing probe – CNN.com.