Italian trio relegated to Serie B

Clockwise: The badges of AC Milan, Fiorentina, Lazio and Juventus
AC Milan, Fiorentina, Juventus and Lazio were implicated
Serie A sides Juventus, Lazio and Fiorentina have been demoted to the
second division for their involvement in Italy's match-fixing scandal.

AC Milan will stay in Serie A but will lose 15 points and will be kicked
out of the Champions League.

Juventus were also stripped of their last two titles and had 30 points
deducted, meaning that they are almost certain to stay down for two
seasons.

Lazio were penalised seven points while Fiorentina suffered a 12-point
penalty.

The decision also means Juventus, AC Milan and Fiorentina are out of the
Champions League and Lazio the Uefa Cup.

The clubs have three days to appeal to the Federal Court.

But they may find they will run out of time to rescue their European
places regardless of the outcome of any appeal because the deadline for
entry is only 11 days away.

The FIGC (Italian football's governing body) must hand its European
counterpart Uefa the lists of teams that will be involved in its
competitions by 25 July.


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Inter, Roma, Chievo and Palermo, who finished third, fifth and seventh and
eighth are in line to take the places of the penalised clubs in next
season's Champions League.

Those directly involved with the scandal were also penalised, with former
Juventus general manager Luciano Moggi suspended from all football for
five years and Adriano Galliani, who was AC Milan vice-president,
suspended for one year.

The tribunal in Rome investigated charges that the clubs, their
management, football officials and referees tried to influence the outcome
of matches by interfering with the appointment of officials.

In May, transcripts were published of telephone conversations between
Moggi and Italian Football Association officials, discussing refereeing
appointments in the 2004-05 season.

FIGC prosecutor Stefano Palazzi also charged 26 individuals for sporting
fraud and violating fairness and probity.

All four clubs implicated denied the accusations.

Thirteen of Italy's World Cup-winning squad play for the clubs involved,
with five at Juventus, who also number Patrick Vieira, Lilian Thuram,
David Trezeguet, Pavel Nedved and Zlatan Ibrahimovic in their ranks.

Many of them are expected to seek transfers to other leading clubs in
Italy or Europe to limit the damage to their careers.




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Anthony P. D'Costa, Professor
Comparative International Development
University of Washington
1900 Commerce Street
Tacoma, WA 98402, USA
Phone: (253) 692-4462
Fax :  (253) 692-5718
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