Puneet Varma (Editor)

Masal Bugduv

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Masal Bugduv is a fictional Moldovan youth footballer who was the subject of a hoax.

History

With a fabricated backstory describing a teenage prodigy on a web of blog postings, evidently created by different people, reports of the youth talent were ultimately published in a The Times article titled "Football's top 50 rising stars", as well as in When Saturday Comes and Goal.com. As a means to establish credibility to the identity, the creators of the hoax planted text into Wikipedia articles and forged Associated Press reports. The erroneous information remained in Wikipedia from July 2008 to January 2009.

The entry in The Times read, "30. Masal Bugduv (FC Olimpia Bălţi): Moldova’s finest, the 16-year-old attacker has been strongly linked with a move to Arsenal, work permit permitting. And he’s been linked with plenty of other top clubs as well."

The Times later removed Masal from their list and published a clarification. Goal.com printed an apology for the mention of "phantom prodigy Masal Bugduv", stating the information had come from "a fake Associated Press report."

Masal Bugduv sounds very similar to the Irish pronunciation of M'asal Beag Dubh (My Little Black Donkey), a story by the Irish-language writer Pádraic Ó Conaire about a dishonest salesman who seeks an exaggerated price for a lazy donkey. John Burns of The Sunday Times suggested that the Ó Conaire story was indeed the inspiration for the entire hoax, and that the prank, which also included a fake Moldovan newspaper titled Diario Mo Thon (Diary My Ass), was in effect a satire on the football transfer market.

Brian Phillips, a blogger of Runofplay.com, described in an article for Slate the anatomy of the hoax, featuring a testimony email of "the alleged hoaxer's lengthy explanation of the Bugduv-creation process".

References

Masal Bugduv Wikipedia