Greeks are furious over the crisis rocking their country. Disbelief has given way to anger, one minister describing it as 'the darkest page in [our] history.'
No, not that crisis. This one:
"Nearly 70 people have been named in Greece in connection with an alleged football match-fixing scandal. They include two Super League club presidents, club owners, players, referees and a chief of police. They are charged with a variety of offences including illegal gambling, fraud, extortion and money laundering.
The investigation began after European football's governing body Uefa published a list of 41 match results from 2009-10 which they believe to be suspicious.
Among the 68 suspects named by judicial authorities on Friday were Vangelis Marinakis, Greece's top football league official and chairman of champion club Olympiakos Piraeus, and Avraam Papadopoulos, national team and Olympiakos defender. Late on Friday, a court order banned all 68 from leaving the country."
But really, sports cheating scandals are hardly anything new. And they happen all over the world. What's so special about this one?
