KFUM Oslo is embroiled in a serious match-fixing scandal that is shaking Norwegian top football. Two KFUM players are charged with gross corruption and fraud related to betting on football matches. KFUM Oslo's daily manager, Thor-Erik Stenberg, confirms that two of the club's players are among those charged in the case. Stenberg says that the club is taking the case very seriously and is cooperating with the police and the Norwegian Top Football organization. Seven people are charged in the case, including two KFUM players. The police are investigating the case with high priority. On Friday evening, VG received information that KFUM players were among those charged in a match-fixing case. They are charged with gross corruption and fraud related to betting on football matches. VG has been informed by sources familiar with the case that among the seven charged are several people with connections to Norwegian top football. Thor-Erik Stenberg says that the club is now working to facilitate the police investigation. The news of match-fixing related to KFUM came as a shock to the club's supporter club. – We in «Profetene» have no knowledge of what is now coming to light, and this is just as shocking for us as for everyone else. Match-fixing is completely unacceptable, writes Julie Fehn Eikeseth, chairman of KFUM Oslo's supporter club «Profetene» to VG. NRK's sports commentator Jan Petter Saltvedt describes the case as «the sports world's worst nightmare». – Match-fixing is extremely serious for Norwegian football, both in terms of the sport itself and the credibility of Norwegian football. It's the sports world's worst nightmare that such cases come to light. Often you have suspicions, but rarely does it come to light, he says to VG. The secretary general of the Norwegian Football Association, Karl-Petter Løken, views the case with great seriousness. – There is zero tolerance for betting on matches you are involved in. It's especially serious when players are allegedly involved in direct manipulation of matches – even if there's no doubt that this is a very serious case, says Løken.