China snooker hands lifetime bans to two players for match-fixing

Liang Wenbo (left) and Li Hang were issued lifetime bans earlier in June. SCREENSHOTS: YOUTUBE

BEIJING – China’s national snooker body on Wednesday issued lifetime bans to two players who were embroiled in a match-fixing scandal that has sent shockwaves through the sport.

Global snooker is reeling after revelations of widespread cheating and other misconduct, much of it involving top Chinese players.

The sport’s international governing body, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA), has already punished 10 players from China, including issuing lifetime bans earlier in June for Liang Wenbo and Li Hang.

The body’s national equivalent, the Chinese Billiards and Snooker Association (CBSA), echoed those lifetime sanctions in a statement on Wednesday.

Liang and Li are “prohibited from participating in all snooker matches and events on the Chinese mainland in any form and in any capacity”, the CBSA said.

In a bid to “rectify discipline and learn from past transgressions”, the organisation also handed domestic bans ranging from two to eight years to eight other players.

They are Lu Ning, Zhao Xintong, Yan Bingtao, Chen Zifan, Zhang Jiankang, Bai Langning, Zhao Jianbo and Chang Bingyu.

The 10 players’ offences included manipulating games, approaching players to cheat, betting on snooker and fixing the outcome of matches. Liang, who won the 2016 English Open, and Li must also pay £43,000 (S$73,500) in costs under the WPBSA sanctions.

The CBSA previously vowed to “hold cautionary education across the whole industry and... carry out anti-betting and anti-counterfeiting to the end”.

“The association has been redoubling efforts to eliminate match-fixing activities and safeguard the integrity of the game, consistent with the association’s zero-tolerance policy on match-fixing,” it said.

Some of the sanctions went further than the WPBSA’s.

Yan, the 2021 Masters champion, was banned from domestic matches for 7½ years, despite his international ban being reduced to five years following an appeal.

It was not immediately clear whether the affected players would also be able to appeal against the CBSA’s decisions.

The scandal has tarnished the reputation of snooker in China, a hotbed of high-calibre talent in recent years.

The international game will finally return to the lucrative Chinese market in 2023 for the first time since Beijing ended its isolationist zero-Covid policy.

The Asian nation will host three tournaments, including an invitational one in Shanghai and a world-ranking one in Wuhan. AFP

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