Italy judge acquits future Chelsea coach Conte in match-fixing case
CREMONA, Italy (Reuters) - An Italian judge on Monday acquitted Antonio Conte, the future coach of English Premier League club Chelsea, for allegedly doing nothing to halt a 2011 match-fixing scandal while he was in charge of the Siena soccer team.
Conte, who will coach Italy's national squad during this year's European Championship before taking up his new post at Chelsea, was acquitted because the accusations of sporting fraud were baseless, Judge Pierpaolo Beluzzi said.
The 46-year-old Conte, who has already served a four-month match ban imposed by the Italian soccer federation (FIGC) in connection with the same case, has always denied any wrongdoing.
"It was a full acquittal... What matters is that for him, this story is over," Francesco Arata, one of Conte's lawyers, told reporters after the ruling was read out. "We talked to Conte on the phone and he was very happy."
Conte played more than 400 games for Juventus and went on to manage the club to three successive Serie A titles from 2012 to 2014 before taking over Italy's national squad.
The inquiry followed alleged attempts to manipulate matches in Serie B, the Italian second division, and the third-tier Lega Pro during the 2010-11 season, with some Coppa Italia matches also involved.
Also on Monday, the Cremona court ordered some 90 others to stand trial in the same match-fixing case, setting Dec. 6 as the start date for the hearings. Conte and five others had chosen to stand in a so-called "abbreviated" trial process.
The FIGC has already conducted its own investigation into the case, with more than 50 players banned for up to five years and a number of clubs, including Atalanta and Siena, having points deducted.
(Reporting by Valentina Accardo, writing by Steve Scherer; Editing by Crispian Balmer)