Catania demoted to third tier over match-fixing scandal

Police said the typical payoff to rival players to throw a match was €10,000

Supporters of Catania are seen during a Serie B match last season. Photograph: Maurizio Lagana/Getty Images
Supporters of Catania are seen during a Serie B match last season. Photograph: Maurizio Lagana/Getty Images

Catania have been demoted to the third tier of the Italian league over a match-fixing scandal in last season's Serie B, the Italian football federation (FIGC) said on Thursday.

The Sicilian side were also deducted 12 points this season and fined €150,000, the FIGC said, while club president Antonio Pulvirenti was banned for five years and fined 300,000 euros.

Catania finished 15th in Serie B last season, two points above the relegation places, after a run of five wins in a row in March and April.

The matches under investigation were the wins against Avellino, Varese, Trapani, Latina and Ternana and the draw against Livorno during that period, the FIGC said.

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Pulvirenti and six others were arrested last month on suspicion of fixing matches.

Pulvirenti, who also owns dozens of supermarkets and an airline, was accused of sporting fraud and match-fixing. Police said at the time that the typical payoff to rival players to throw a match was €10,000.

Catania had been relegated from Serie A in 2013/14 after eight seasons in the top flight.