Three professional footballers were among nine people banned from involvement in British horse racing for a combined total of 70 years on Friday after an investigation into an elaborate fixing scandal.
The case centred on allegations that jockey Andrew Heffernan, who has recently been riding in Australia, fixed races in Britain between November 1, 2010, and March 31, 2011.
Heffernan was banned for 15 years after being found guilty of receiving bribes, giving inside information and preventing three horses - Wanchai Whisper, Gallantry and Silver Guest - from running at their best.
Ipswich striker Michael Chopra and former Manchester United midfielder Mark Wilson were each disqualified for 10 years for offering bribes to Heffernan and placing bets based on information provided by the jockey that his horse would lose. Doncaster midfielder James Coppinger was given a three-year ban for the latter charge.
Five other unlicenced individuals - Paul Garner, Yogesh Joshee, Douglas Shelley, Kelly Inglis and Pravin Shingardia - were also found in breach of racing rules after a four-day hearing.
"The findings of the disciplinary panel confirm that an elaborate network of corruption has been identified and successfully prosecuted," said Adam Brickell, the director of integrity, legal and risk of the British Horseracing Authority. "Investigations of this scale are extremely complex, especially when we are faced with a lack of cooperation, evasion, and untruthful accounts from many of those being investigated."
The 29-year-old Chopra, who used to play for Newcastle and Cardiff, now plays for Ipswich in the second tier.
He did not give evidence in the hearing but has admitted to having a gambling addiction.