Chinese Basketball Association Suspends Shanghai Sharks & Jiangsu Dragons For Match Fixing
The Jiangsu Dragons and Shanghai Sharks received the toughest penalty in league history from the Chinese Basketball Association on Monday as a result of the two clubs’ unsportsmanlike behaviour.
Chinese Basketball Association Suspends Shanghai Sharks & Jiangsu Dragons For Match Fixing
Following a contentious best-of-three playoff series between the two teams last week, the CBA announced on Monday that both clubs have been banned from the current 2022–23 CBA season, would each be fined 5 million yuan ($727,000), and their league standings have been cancelled.
Li Chunjiang, the head coach of the Sharks and a former mentor of the 11-time league champion Guangdong Southern Tigers, and Li Nan, the head coach of Jiangsu and a former coach of the Chinese national basketball team, will each be prohibited from registering as a coach for five and three years, respectively, starting on Monday, the association announced.
Eric Bledsoe’s Shanghai Sharks and the Jiangsu Dragons have been disqualified from the playoffs in China and fined 5M yuan for alleged match-fixing during the playoffs
Bledsoe was serving a suspension during the games in question
(via @SCMPNews Mike Chan) pic.twitter.com/D6HigrsjSK
— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) April 17, 2023
The general managers of Jiangsu and Shanghai, Shi Linjie and Jiang Yusheng, will be barred from working in any basketball-related positions for five and three years, respectively.
The severe punishment was handed following a league inquiry of the playoff series, which revealed that both sides had been “intentionally engaging in throw games.”
In the CBA playoffs play-in tournament, Shanghai Sharks defeated Jiangsu Dragons 108:104 to win a playoffs berth (aggregate 2:1). Shanghai mounted a comeback to go from trailing by 4 pts within few secs. It appears Jiangsu threw the game – CBA is investigating it. pic.twitter.com/h358tcfZXz
— China Sports Vision 2050 (@CSV2050) April 14, 2023
Shanghai unexpectedly rested the majority of its starters and foreign players in the pivotal Game 2, losing to Jiangsu 97-90 on April 11 before the contentious Game 3, which has sparked raging anger from fans and criticism from the media for what appear to be match-fixing plays during the game’s final stretch.
With 96 seconds left in the fourth quarter with a 100-96 lead, Jiangsu players committed five consecutive turnovers, allowing the Sharks to score 10 straight baskets without taking a timeout to modify their defensive strategy. While observing the odd performances of Jiangsu players, head coach Li and general manager Shi both appeared imposed on the bench.
The Chinese Basketball Association on Monday announced that the Shanghai Sharks and the Jiangsu Dragons are disqualified from the playoffs for "fixing" games. https://t.co/yhBe1VptMU
— Complex Sports (@ComplexSports) April 17, 2023
President of the Chinese Basketball Association and NBA Hall of Famer Yao Ming described the news as “quite saddening” during a news conference on Monday. Before being selected first overall by the Houston Rockets in 2002, Ming spent seven seasons with the Sharks.
The Shanghai Sharks and the Jiangsu Dragons in the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA) have both been thrown out of the ongoing playoffs for match-fixing. More details below 👇 pic.twitter.com/FbTMLs7nEb
— Mark Dreyer (@DreyerChina) April 17, 2023
“We conducted a very prudent investigation to help us make the decision based on precise matters,” Ming said, per ChinaDaily.com. “We believe that everybody feels quite distressed about this.
“For sports games, the most important thing is reputation, rather than ability. Credit is what everybody, every team, the league, and the association is based on. We need to draw a profound lesson from this and change some things in the future to make what we have paid for valuable.”
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