Connect with us

Sports

Sharapova gets 2 Years ban for doping

Published

on

Sharapova gets 2 Years ban for doping

An independent tribunal has suspended Russian tennis star, Maria Sharapova from play for a period of two years after she failed a drug test, the International Tennis Federation says.

The five-time Grand Slam champion says she plans to appeal the decision.

Sharapova admitted in March that she tested positive for meldonium, a substance banned beginning early this year, during a drug test at the Australian Open.

The tribunal ruled that Sharapova’s two-year period of ineligibility should be backdated to Jan. 26, 2016 — the day she submitted the sample — due to her “prompt admission of her violation.”

It also disqualified her results from the Australian Open. That means she will forfeit “the ranking points and prize money that she won at the event,” according to the tribunal statement.

Sharapova, 29, has maintained that she had been taking meldonium for 10 years due to several health issues and that she was not aware of the ban.

Read also: Fans warned of terrorist risk at Euro 2016

The tribunal found that Sharapova’s violation “was not intentional” because she “did not appreciate that Mildronate contained a substance prohibited from 1 January 2016.”

Meldonium is the active ingredient in Mildronate.

However, the decision read:
“[S]he does bear sole responsibility for the contravention, and very significant fault, in failing to take any steps to check whether the continued use of this medicine was permissible. If she had not had not concealed her use of Mildronate from the anti-doping authorities, members of her own support team and the doctors whom she consulted, but had sought advice, then the contravention would have been avoided.”

It concluded: “She is the sole author of her own misfortune.”

In a Facebook post following the tribunal’s decision, Sharapova described the two-year suspension as “unfairly harsh.”

According to her, “While the tribunal concluded correctly that I did not intentionally violate the anti-doping rules, I cannot accept an unfairly harsh two-year suspension.

“The tribunal, whose members were selected by the ITF, agreed that I did not do anything intentionally wrong, yet they seek to keep me from playing tennis for two years. I will immediately appeal the suspension portion of this ruling to CAS, the Court of Arbitration for Sport.”

RipplesNigeria …without borders, without fears

Join the conversation

Opinions

Support Ripples Nigeria, hold up solutions journalism

Balanced, fearless journalism driven by data comes at huge financial costs.

As a media platform, we hold leadership accountable and will not trade the right to press freedom and free speech for a piece of cake.

If you like what we do, and are ready to uphold solutions journalism, kindly donate to the Ripples Nigeria cause.

Your support would help to ensure that citizens and institutions continue to have free access to credible and reliable information for societal development.

Donate Now