In the summer of 1994, the World Cup brought record crowds and global attention to matches played across the United States.
By the final week, Bulgaria had already exceeded expectations, eliminating Germany and becoming one of the most talked-about teams in the tournament.
Then came the third-place match against Sweden.
The result—four to zero—was not unusual on its own.
But the way it unfolded raised questions that were never fully addressed.
At the center of those questions was Igor Ivanov, a defender known for discipline, precision, and consistency. Throughout the tournament, his performance had been steady and controlled.
Until that match.
Nothing about the game appeared overtly wrong. There were no clear mistakes, no obvious breakdowns, and no single moment that explained the result.
Instead, there were smaller decisions. Subtle shifts. Brief hesitations.
Individually, they meant nothing.
Together, they suggested a pattern.
In the months that followed, Ivanov relocated to Los Angeles, where his name began to appear alongside individuals connected to betting networks and layered financial structures.
Among them was Daniel Kovacs.
No formal connection was ever established.
No charges were filed.
And no explanation was confirmed.
This is Case 002.
A story built from moments that don’t align—and a result no one has been able to fully explain.
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