Sharapova Admits Failed Drug Test

Tue, Mar 8, 2016
By publisher
2 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Sports

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MARIA Sharapova, world tennis number seven and richest female athlete, will be suspended from tennis after she admitted to failing a drug test at the Australian Open in January.

A sombre looking Sharapova, speaking at a press conference in Los Angeles Monday, March 7, said she had been taking meldonium, the suspected drug, since 2006 and didn’t realise it was declared a banned substance by the World Anti-Doping Agency, WADA, at the start of 2016.

The International Tennis Federation, ITF, about an hour after her admission, then said on its website that Sharapova would be provisionally banned from March 12 “pending determination of the case.” The usual penalty for first-time offenders is two years.

The failed drug test came on January 26, the 28-year-old Russian lost to Serena Williams, world number tennis player, in the quarterfinals. She was charged with an anti-doping violation on March 2, the ITF said.

There was much speculation that Sharapova’s Monday briefing with reporters centred on retirement plans following an increasing number of injuries, but the failed test was a bigger bombshell. And it came in the wake of match-fixing allegations that rocked tennis in Melbourne.

“A few days ago I received a letter from the (International Tennis Federation) that I failed a drug test at the Australian Open,” the five-time grand slam winner said in the press conference that was streamed live on Sharapova’s website. “I did fail the test and take full responsibility for it.

“For the past 10 years I have been given a medicine called mildronate by my doctor, my family doctor, and a few days ago after I received the ITF letter I found out that it also has another name, meldonium, which I did not know.

“It’s very important for you to understand for 10 years this medicine was not on the WADA’s banned list and I had been legally taking the medicine for the past 10 years. But on January 1 the rules had changed and meldonium became a prohibited substance, which I had not known,” she said.

Sharapova said she began to take the medication to treat heart issues. She also disclosed that her family has a history of diabetes.

Her revelation came on the same day that Ekaterina Bobrova, Russia’s Olympic ice dance gold medallist, said she failed a doping test for the same drug.

— Mar 8, 2016 @ 15:45 GMT

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