Half Time Full Time Fixed Matches for 06.12.2025
Poland Ekstraklasa
1. Match: Zaglebie – Widzew Lodz
Tip: 2/1 (HT/FT)
Odds: 27.00 Result: HT 0:1 FT: 2:1 WIN
2. Match: England Championship
Portsmouth – Blackburn
Tip: 2/1 (HT/FT)
Odds: 26.00 Result: HT 0:1 FT: 2:1 WIN
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Archive Fixed Matches for 29.11.2025
Total Odds: 860.00
| DATE | MATCH | PICK | ODD | HT/FT |
| 29.11.2025 | Walsall – Bromley | 2/1 | 27.00 | 0:1 / 3:1 |
| 29.11.2025 | Cottbus – Viktoria Koln | 2/1 | 23.00 | 0:1 / 3:2 |
Fixed Matches for 15.11.2025
Total Odds: 621.00
| DATE | MATCH | PICK | ODD | HT/FT |
| 15.11.2025 | Leyton Orient – Exeter | 2/1 | 21.00 | 0:1 / 2:1 |
| 15.11.2025 | Tarazona – Villarreal B | 2/1 | 41.00 | 0:1 / 2:1 |
Half Time Full Time Fixed Matches for 08.11.2025
Total Odds: 621.00
| DATE | MATCH | PICK | ODD | RESULT |
| 08.11.2025 | Eibar – Albacete | 2-1 | 21.00 | HT 0:1 FT 3:2 |
| 08.11.2025 | Vasteras SK – Varbergs | 2-1 | 19.00 | HT 0:1 FT 4:1 |
Halftime Fulltime Fixed Matches
Criminals and syndicates fix matches through bribing, blackmailing, or intimidating players, referees, and club officials to manipulate the outcome.
Match-fixing can be done to guarantee a financial payout from betting or to achieve a sporting advantage, like avoiding relegation.
Methods for fixing matches
Bribery
Organized crime groups often bribe individuals to ensure a desired outcome for a match. The targets can include:
- Players: They are paid to deliberately underperform by missing shots, conceding penalties, or committing fouls at prearranged moments. Players in lower-tier leagues with lower salaries are particularly vulnerable to this type of bribery.
- Coaches and club owners: A club owner may conspire to intentionally lose specific matches to earn more money through gambling against their own team than they would by winning. In other cases, they may withhold players’ salaries to pressure them into fixing a game.
- Referees: Officials can be bribed to make biased calls, award wrongful penalties, or give out cards at specific times to influence the course of a game.
Match-fixers may use threats or blackmail to force athletes and officials to cooperate.
- Targeting vulnerable individuals: Fixers often target players, referees, or officials with financial issues or those who have engaged in illicit activities. By leveraging these vulnerabilities, fixers can compel participation in match manipulation under threat of exposure or violence.
- Threats of violence: Fixers have been known to threaten physical harm to players and their families to ensure compliance. In some documented cases in Russia, individuals who acted against bribery in sports were either murdered or disappeared.
Factors that facilitate fixing
- Organized crime networks: International crime groups run match-fixing schemes to profit from illegal betting, often using the dark web and cryptocurrencies to operate discreetly.
- Vulnerable leagues: Lower-tier leagues are common targets for fixers because players have lower salaries and matches receive less scrutiny.
- Unregulated markets: Betting syndicates exploit countries with fewer gambling regulations and exploit vulnerabilities in smaller competitions

