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Football pair plead guilty to match-fixing over yellow cards

The players admitted to engaging in betting corruption after they were paid to earn yellow cards during games

Two players admitted to engaging in betting corruption
Two players admitted to engaging in betting corruption (AAP)

Two professional footballers have admitted in court to engaging in betting corruption after they were paid by criminals to earn yellow cards during games.

Ulises Davila, former captain of Australian A-League side Macarthur Bulls and midfielders Kearyn Baccus and Clayton Lewis were charged in May 2024 with manipulating yellow cards during games in 2023 and 2024.

Davila, 33, allegedly acted as the contact between the southwest Sydney club’s players and a criminal group in Colombia, organizing for the yellow cards to occur during particular games.

Baccus, 33, and Lewis, 27, were allegedly paid up to 10,000 Australian dollars ($6,550) by Davila to deliberately try to receive the referee-issued cautions for foul play.

Clayton Lewis arriving at court
Clayton Lewis arriving at court (AAP)

Baccus and Lewis pleaded guilty in a Sydney court to engaging in conduct that corrupts the betting outcome of an event. A second charge of participating in a criminal group was withdrawn.

Lewis had previously pleaded not guilty to both charges, but reversed his plea to one of the charges after negotiating with prosecutors. The pair will face sentencing in September.

Davila has not yet entered pleas to the nine charges he faces. He will return to court next month.

Police said the betting scheme led to hundreds of thousands of dollars being paid out in winnings.

All players were stood down by the league. Davila’s contract with Macarthur FC was terminated shortly after his arrest. Baccus was released by the Bulls during the 2024 offseason and Lewis remains suspended.

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