Chievo Verona and Atalanta of the Serie A are among 18 clubs named on suspicion of match-fixing, the Italian football federation FIGC said on Tuesday.
Twenty-six players and officials, including former Italy player Giuseppe Signori and Atalanta captain Cristiano Doni, have also been mentioned in a report by FIGC prosecutor Stefano Palazzi.
Three Serie B teams - Ascoli, Hellas Verona and Sassuolo - 11 Pro League teams - Alexandria, Cremonese, Benevento, Ravenna, Virtus Entella, Piacenza, Esperia Viareggio, Portogruaro, Taranto, Spezia and Reggiana - and two amateur sides - Cus Chieti and Pino Di Matteo - will also be called before the prosecutor at the hearings starting early next month.
The FIGC probe is related to a criminal investigation into match-fixing/betting which at first centred on the lower leagues but now concerns 60 games in the top three divisions.
Sixteen people, including Signori, who protests in innocence, were arrested two months ago. They are suspected to have formed an organised system featuring former and current players, sports betting operators and others which manipulated games to rake in large sums from betting on the games.
The Italian authorities are so far believed to have identified 18 suspicious matches, including one Serie A encounter between Inter Milan and Lecce, and made a total of 16 arrests.
Last season's Serie B clash between Piacenza and Atalanta - who subsequently secured promotion to the top flight - has also come under scrutiny following reports of irregular betting patterns.
According to the Italian news agency ANSA, Atalanta risks demotion and club captain Doni faces a three-year ban if the allegations are proven.
Signori, 43, was among those arrested on June 1 amid claims by prosecutors that the 16 had been involved in manipulating results of matches in Serie B and lower leagues.
Italian football was last gripped by match-fixing allegations in 2006, when the Calciopoli affair saw Juventus stripped of two Scudettos and relegated to Serie B after being found guilty of trying to influence referee selection.
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