Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Sports gambling can lead to large sums of money being won or lost
Sports gambling can lead to large sums of money being won or lost - Credit: JSchott1 / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Crime
Sports
matchfixing
Tom Beugelsdijk
Lelystad
Italy
Germany
Finland
KNVB
Wednesday, 18 June 2025 - 20:20

Share this article:

Dutch authorities to stop actively detecting match fixing

The Public Prosecution Service (OM) is going to stop actively detecting match-fixing. The OM is going to end its collaboration with sports unions in the Strategisch Beraad Matchfixing and wants to use its limited investigating capacity for other means, a spokesperson for the National Public Prosecutor's Office for Financial, Economic and Environmental Offences (FP) confirmed to De Telegraaf.

According to De Telegraaf, the project to stop match-fixing only led to two cases since 2013, when a report from the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport was published about the subject. This then led to a national platform to combat the crime.

Match-fixing is a form of game manipulation. A match-fixing case is when a player or team loses on purpose or cheats and uses that to decide the result of the game. Athletes are often given financial compensation for this. They and others who are aware of an agreement made may also gamble with inside information.

Countries like Italy, Germany, and Finland have seen severe cases of match-fixing in the past. This involved situations in which organized groups crime-bribed and threatened players and officials to fix matches.

Two underage men from Lelystad were sentenced to 70 hours of community service in January 2024. They were found guilty of approaching footballers in the Tweede Divisie to lose or draw games in exchange for compensation.

The Dutch football association, the KNVB, found out about the approaches via social media. Players were given 12,500 euros in exchange for losing a game 0-3 or 7,000 euros for a 4-4 draw. The teenagers would then bet on the games via betting sites.

The other case in the Netherlands during this time was the case of Tom Beugelsdijk, the defender who gambled on games in the Dutch top flight at the Eredivisie and the cup competition while playing for ADO Den Haag and Sparta Rotterdam between 2013 and 2021. However, he was never found guilty of match-fixing. But he was suspended for five games because he was gambling on his own games, which is not allowed.

Reporting by ANP

More like this

Image
An asylum shelter in Zeewolde
Netherlands classified as "at risk" for migration pressure under new EU report
Image
The entrance to the stock exchange at Beursplein 5, home of Euronext Amsterdam. 19 March 2021
Half of top Dutch listed companies now led by foreign CEOs
Image
The Derbystar Globall was picked as the official Eredivisie competition football for the 2025-2026 season
Eredivisie hits 95% stadium fill rate, highest in the Netherlands in 15 years
Image
Netherlands Defence Chief Onno Eichelsheim and his British counterpart, Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton, discussing the Strait of Hormuz and the conflict between the U.S., Iran, and Israel. 1 Apr. 2026
Netherlands, several allies agree to protect Strait of Hormuz after ceasefire
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Incoming Heineken chief receives 25 million euro share package
  • New Utrecht Council to push home construction, low-cost housing; Property tax up 15%
  • Wildfire risk rises as heat drives up drought pressure across the Netherlands
  • Man held for armed robbery of bound sex workers near The Hague facing 7 years in prison
  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide

Top stories

  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide
  • Dutch official joins EU talks with Taliban on return of rejected asylum seekers
  • NS cancelling trains on key routes this week due to heat; Passengers will need water
  • Heineken board taps JDE Peet’s exec. Rafa Oliveira as new CEO
  • More Dutch households can't make ends meet; Over half of young adults struggling

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content