Ajax coach Erik ten Hag studiously avoided questions about hisimpending move to Manchester Unitedbefore the Dutch Cup final last weekend, but that was not the only controversial topic he swerved in the build-up to the showpiece game.
Ajax players Davy Klaassen and Daley Blind, both Holland internationals, stand accused of trying to financially profit from dressing-room information and revealing their teamâs line-ups via the trading of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) in a fantasy football game, buying up NFTs they knew would soon inflate in price.
âI donât know anything,â Ten Hag said. âI will not announce the line-up until Sunday morning. Can the players earn money with this?â
The answer to that question, as first raised by Dutch news site BNR, is yes.
The online game, Sorare, has generated huge investment and has sponsorship deals with many of Europeâs biggest clubs, allowing its users to buy, win and manage a virtual team of digital player cards (NFTs). These are volatile in price and can generate cash prizes depending on real-world outcomes, meaning potential rewards for savvy traders.
Before Sundayâs final in Rotterdam, Klaassen and Blind appeared to accidentally tell the world who Ten Hag would likely choose to play in goal for Ajax in what turned out to be a disappointing 2-1 loss against PSV Eindhoven.
In almost any other sphere, trading confidential sporting information for financial gain would carry big penalties, but in the virtually unregulated world of NFTs, things are less clear-cut.
A spokesperson for Sorare toldThe Athleticit is reviewing these reports, and will âtake actionâ to ensure the game is fair.
What is Sorare?
Sorare recently attracted more than $600 million (ÂŁ460 million) in investment from Softbank, valuing it at over $4 billion (ÂŁ3.1 billion). Current and former football stars including Gerard Pique, Rio Ferdinand and Antoine Griezmann are involved in the company.
The game is like normal fantasy football but its virtual cards are made artificially scarce using blockchain technology, a decentralised computer network that underpins cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum. Users can make money by buying cards at low prices and selling them at high ones, and cards can generate cash prizes depending on on-field success.
Some cards change hands for huge sums. For example, an Erling Haaland NFT was sold for $614,000 (ÂŁ472,000) in January.
Last year,The Athleticreportedon how a secretive âquantitative hedge fundâ run by a small group of players hoovers up millions of dollars in cash rewards from a platform that is marketed as âinvestingâ by many paid affiliates, although the company insists it is just a game.
Although footballers gambling on their own teamâs games is strictly prohibited, Sorare, which maintains it is not a gambling platform, has no such prohibitions â the platform is virtually unregulated.
But the weekendâs events in the Netherlands reveal that playing the game can have consequences. It raises serious questions about sporting integrity.
What did the Ajax players do?
Andre Onana was expected to start in goal for Ajax in Sundayâs final but a journalist at Vandaag Inside, a Dutch television programme, noticed unusual activity on Sorare before kick-off.
Klaassen and Blind had both bought the card of team-mate Maarten Stekelenburg, their clubâs 39-year-old back-up goalkeeper, who had not played since August because of a serious hip injury and only returned to the bench in their most recent league game the previous weekend.
This activity by full-back Blind and midfielder Klaassen was seen as a sign that Stekelenburg would be picked rather than Onana â a suggestion that proved to be correct when the two starting XIs were named.
Sorare cards rise and fall in price depending on on-field activities.
Stekelenburg NFTs were very cheap on Thursday morning but shot up in value when Blind and Klaassen unexpectedly bought them â meaning big potential gains.
Blind then tried to resell his Onana card and 19-year-old team-mate Kenneth Taylor did the same.
The sums involved are fairly small relative to an elite footballerâs pay packet â in the hundreds of euros â so the players do not appear to have greatly enriched themselves.But it raises concerns about playersâ involvement in a game in which they feature.
Many other pros play the game, too, including Atletico Madrid and France forward Griezmann, who is also an investor in Sorare.
It has echoes of an incident last year involving Fantasy Premier League (FPL), the English top flightâs official online version of the game where fans select players and get points depending on how well they play.
A Norwegian FPL fan set up an online âbotâ to share the FPL activity of Premier League players, as well as non-playing staff at clubs, and inadvertently may have shifted global gambling odds as a result.
The account tweeted that several Aston Villa players and staff had removed the clubâs star man Jack Grealish from their FPL teams, suggesting he was injured for Villaâs next match against Leicester City.
Given Grealishâs importance to the team, this information led to the match betting odds changing in Leicesterâs favour.
There is no suggestion the players involved financially profited from the information. An FA spokesperson toldThe Athleticthat although inside information is taken seriously, there are no restrictions on free fantasy football games, andAston Villadeclined to comment.
Sorare fiercely disputes that it is a gambling platform but the UK Gambling Commission has announced an inquiry into whether it should be licensed and regulated.
In leagues around the world, footballers are strictly prohibited from gambling on matches they play in, for reasons involving conflicts of interest and sporting integrity â the most extreme example of which is outright match-fixing.
There is no suggestion Blind or Klaassen have broken any rules but that may simply be because the laws have not yet caught up with footballâs new age of cryptocurrency and NFTs.
What will happen next?
Football authorities are hot on prohibiting gambling, which has been a thorny issue in sport for decades, but Sorare is a new factor to consider.
âGambling is not allowed but this is a new phenomenon, there is nothing in our disciplinary law about this,â a spokesperson for the Dutch football association told local media. âWe follow such developments closely.Itâs something new, but itâs on our agenda.â
A spokesperson for Sorare toldThe Athleticthat the company is âreviewing recent reports of unfair behaviourâ by players, and will âtake action as necessary to ensure fair playâ.
âSorareâs priority is building a fun and fair platform for sports fans. We do not condone any unfair behaviour by any of our users and are actively adapting our game rules to ensure that our fantasy game is a level playing field for all.â
Ajax and the Dutch FA have been contacted for comment.
(Top photo: Geert van Erven/BSR Agency/Getty Images)