Novak Djokovic denies match-fixing allegations made in Italian newspaper Tuttosport

IANS
Novak Djokovic was bombarded with questions after his third-round match.

World No.1 Novak Djokovic has dismissed media allegations that he deliberately threw a match as a 19-year-old in 2007. Djokovic was bombarded with questions about the match he lost when he was World No.4 to the now retired Fabrice Santoro at the Paris Masters nine years ago.

Djokovic beat French promising talent Quentin Halys 6-1, 6-2, 7-6 (7-3) in straight-sets to enter the third round of the Australian Open.

The Serbian admitted at the time that he was struggling to perform at his best during the match in question because of dental surgery he had prior to the Paris Masters to remove two wisdom teeth. Djokovic denied that he intentionally threw the match after the allegation was made in Italian newspaper Tuttosport.

"It's not true. What it is to say? I've lost that match. I don't know if you're trying to create a story about that match or for that matter any of the matches of the top players losing in the early rounds, I think it's just absurd. Anybody can create a story about any match. That's my point," Djokovic was quoted as saying by the Sydney Morning Herald.

"There hasn't been too many matches where top players lost in last decade or so in early rounds. You can pick any match that you like that the top player lost and just create a story out of it. I think it's not supported by any kind of proof, any evidence, any facts. It's just speculation. So I don't think there is a story about it," he said.

16-top 50 players are suspected for match-fixing

The opening Grand Slam of the year has been thrown into turmoil following reports from the BBC and Buzzfeed suggesting that 16 top-50 players had been flagged to the Tennis Integrity Unit over match-fixing suspicions. According to the report, authorities have been repeatedly warned about a core group of 16 players, all of whom have been ranked in the top 50.

Djokovic himself admitted he was the subject of a non-direct proposition to throw a match in St Petersburg in 2006 for $200,000. But the five-time Australian Open champion said all he wanted to say about the match-fixing scandal in the sport after the first round on Monday, when he said there was "nothing happening at the top level, as far as I know".

"My response is that there's always going to be, especially these days when there is a lot of speculations, this is now the main story in tennis, in sports world, there's going to be a lot of allegations," Djokovic said.

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