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Court of Arbitration for Sport cuts sanctions on Malaysia players to official-match bans

CAS says the seven footballers who played for Malaysia using falsified documents can resume training with their clubs during the 12-month ban

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The Malaysia team including the naturalised players before the start of their Asian Cup qualifier against Vietnam in Kuala Lumpur on June 10 last year. Photo: AFP
Reuters

The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) ⁠on Thursday ⁠eased sanctions on seven ⁠footballers who played for Malaysia using falsified naturalisation documents, ruling they will serve a 12-month suspension from official matches only.

Deportivo Alaves’ Facundo Garces ‌was among seven players banned for a year by Fifa in September, after football’s governing body found that doctored documentation had been used so that they could play in an Asian Cup qualifier for ⁠Malaysia against Vietnam.

The other players were Gabriel Arrocha (Unionistas de Salamanca), ‌Rodrigo Holgado (America de Cali), Imanol Machuca (Velez Sarsfield), Joao Figueiredo, Jon Irazabal and Hector Hevel (all Johor ‌Darul Ta’zim).

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At the time, the group was handed a ⁠12-month suspension ⁠from all football-related activities.

“After considering the evidence, the CAS Panel found that ‌the infraction of falsifying eligibility documents was established and that the 12-month ban ‌from ‌playing matches was a reasonable and proportionate sanction for ‌the players, given their complicit responsibility in this fraud,” CAS ⁠said in a statement.

CAS upheld Fifa’s US$450,000 fine on the Football Association of Malaysia. Photo: Reuters
CAS upheld Fifa’s US$450,000 fine on the Football Association of Malaysia. Photo: Reuters

“However, in accordance with Article 22 FDC, ⁠the Panel decided that the ban should only apply to matches and not to all football-related activities.

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