Turkey’s football crisis broadened dramatically on Monday as an İstanbul court jailed eight suspects—including Eyüpspor president Murat Özkaya—while the Turkish Football Federation (TFF) simultaneously announced the provisional suspension of 1,024 professional players for betting, including 27 currently in the Süper Lig. The dual developments thrust the scandal from the referee ranks into top-flight dressing rooms and club boardrooms, elevating what officials have called a threat to the sport’s integrity into the most sweeping disciplinary and criminal probe Turkish football has faced in years.
Prosecutors said the criminal case—run by the İstanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office—targets alleged “abuse of office” by referees, who are treated as public officials under Turkish law, alongside “influencing the outcome of a match,” a crime defined by Law No. 6222. Police executed coordinated raids across a dozen provinces before bringing 19 detainees to court; judges remanded eight to jail pending trial and released 11 under judicial control. Investigators are examining betting volumes, stake sizes, sources of income and any overlap between wagering histories and matches worked.
While the courts moved ahead, the federation’s disciplinary machinery shifted into overdrive. The TFF said the 1,024 players are provisionally suspended and referred to the Professional Football Disciplinary Board under Article 57, which bans betting by anyone under federation jurisdiction. Because hundreds of squads were suddenly depleted, the TFF began talks with FIFA for an extra 15-day domestic transfer window to let clubs plug roster gaps. Second- and third-tier fixtures were postponed for two weeks, but the Süper Lig and First League calendars will continue as scheduled.
Names circulating on Monday underscored the scandal’s reach into elite football. Local reporting of the disciplinary referrals listed Beşiktaş duo Ersin Destanoğlu and Necip Uysal and Galatasaray players Eren Elmalı and Metehan Baltacı among the 27 Süper Lig footballers. The federation noted that 47 players who made only a single recorded bet would be reviewed later as additional evidence arrives from law-enforcement partners.
The disciplinary wave follows a two-week cascade of revelations about referees. On October 27, the TFF disclosed that a state-assisted audit found 371 of 571 active referees held betting accounts and 152 had placed wagers—data that federation officials described as a moral crisis rather than a financial one. Days later, the TFF issued 8- to 12-month suspensions to 149 referees and assistants after fast-tracked disciplinary hearings, saying three further cases remained open.
Under the sport-specific statute Law No. 6222, manipulating or attempting to manipulate a match result carries potential prison time and fines, with heavier penalties where organized schemes are proven. In parallel, Article 57 of the TFF’s disciplinary code typically brings three-month to one-year bans for betting violations, though case-by-case aggravating factors can push sanctions higher. Monday’s courtroom decisions signal that prosecutors see a criminal dimension in at least part of the alleged conduct, distinct from the federation’s sporting sanctions.