How mom’s conversations in a Rio hair salon led to soccer star’s unsubstantiated betting charges
By Canadian Press on September 3, 2025.
Conversations in the hairdressing salon owned by the mother of Brazilian soccer player Lucas Paqueta were key to the West Ham forward being
accused of spot fixing bets in the Premier League.
Paqueta was
ultimately cleared of the charges and on Wednesday a 314-page document was published outlining the details of the case.
A commission found charges by the English Football Association to be unproven after the governing body claimed he had deliberately received yellow cards in four separate matches to affect betting markets.
A central point of the case were conversations held in the salon in Rio owned by Paqueta’s mother, Christiane Tolentino, which may have led to a flurry of bets.
âI donât know if anyone I have spoken to might have interpreted my normal conversations about Lucas as indicating that he was more likely to get a yellow card in a given match,â she said in a witness statement.
The FA’s allegations
The FA claimed 542 bets had been placed by 253 different bettors, alleging at least 27 could be connected to Paqueta from his homeland. It said bets amounting to 46,759 pounds ($62,920) had been placed, resulting in winnings of 213,704 pounds ($287,585) and a profit of 166,945 pounds ($224,660).
The FA said there was an âirresistible inferenceâ that people had been told âdirectly or indirectlyâ that Paqueta âindicated he would deliberately seek a caution.â
Tolentino bought the salon with money gifted by her son after he joined Italian club AC Milan from Brazilian team Flamengo, the commission said.
She said she would discuss her son in the salon, including his emotional state on occasion.
âIt is possible that I might have said something to someone about Lucasâ mood being low, or that he was struggling with something as part of these daily conversations. I donât know for sure and I donât remember anything specific, but I would consider that a normal conversation and nothing to do with gambling. It never crossed my mind that this kind of information might have been relied upon by people wanting to bet on my son,â she said.
The FA had claimed the 28-year-old Paqueta intentionally sought to be booked in games against Leicester, Aston Villa, Leeds and Bournemouth between November 2022 and August 2023 âin order for one or more persons to profit from betting.â
He was cleared in July.
Spot fixing is when elements in a game are deliberately fixed to manipulate betting markets.
Commission says data âinconsistent with a spot-fixâ
In its written reasons, the commission said betting data was not âillustrative of a spot-fixâ and âin many respects inconsistent with a spot-fix, but consistent with alternative explanations.â
The commission said the FA, itself, accepts its âcase relies entirely on circumstantial evidence.â
During the hearing, the FA’s own legal representative disagreed with the governing body’s key witness.
It was not disputed that Paqueta, described as a religious person, âhas no interest in bettingâ and had previously declined the offer of sponsorship from a betting company.
Given his character and the relatively small sums placed on the bets involving him, the commission cast further doubt on the FA’s allegations.
âIt simply makes no sense for a well-paid individual, who has amply demonstrated his generosity and who appears to have no interest in betting, to âgive his family members or friendsâ an advantage over bookmakers for comparatively modest sums,” it wrote.
The commission said, rather than a spot-fixing operation, a more likely explanation for the betting patterns was the ârandom passing of âhot tipsâ or perceived âinside informationâ within Brazil.â
It said it found no support for the FA’s case regarding Paqueta’s on-field conduct when he received yellow cards â and preferred the evidence of witnesses such as former West Ham manager David Moyes.
The FA said it would not appeal the decision.
âThe FA is committed to ensuring that the integrity of football is maintained, and full and thorough investigations will always be conducted into serious allegations of rule breaches,â it said in a statement.
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James Robson is at
https://twitter.com/jamesalanrobson
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AP soccer:
https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
James Robson, The Associated Press
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