"I did fail the test and take full responsibility for it," said Sharapova at a news conference in Los Angeles |
Maria Sharapova has been
provisionally banned from tennis after she revealed on Monday she tested
positive at the Australian Open for a recently banned drug that she has been
taking for 10 years for health reasons.
The
Guardian UK report continues:
The
drug is called meldonium, though Sharapova said she had been using it under the
name of mildronate and was unaware of both the different name and the fact it
is on the World Anti-Doping Agency’s banned list until she received a letter
notifying her of the positive test 10 days ago.
“I let my fans down, I let the sport down that
I have been playing since the age of four and I love so deeply. I know with this
I face consequences and I don’t want to end my career this way and I really
hope I will be given another chance to play this game.”
Sharapova
claimed she was prescribed meldonium by her doctor in 2006 to deal with health
issues such as an irregular heartbeat and a history of diabetes in her family.
But the substance was added to the banned list in January of this year because
Wada said there was “evidence of its use by athletes with the intention of
enhancing performance”.
Sharapova
added: “For the past 10 years I have been given a medicine called mildronate by
my family doctor and a few days ago after I received the ITF letter I found out
that it also has another name of meldonium which I did not know. It is very
important for you to understand that for 10 years this medicine was not on
Wada’s banned list and I had legally been taking the medicine for the past 10
years. But on 1 January the rules had changed and meldonium became a prohibited
substance which I had not known. I failed the test and I take full
responsibility for it. I made a huge mistake.”
The
ITF said Sharapova, who now faces a ban from the sport, had been informed of
the positive test on 2 March and she will be provisionally suspended from 12
March.
One
of Sharapova’s biggest sponsors, Nike, announced it had suspended its
relationship with her while the investigation continues. “We are saddened and
surprised by the news about Maria Sharapova,” a Nike statement read.
However,
Shamil Tarpishchev, president of the Russian Tennis Federation, told the
Russian news agency TASS he expected Sharapova to be available for this
summer’s Rio Olympics after describing the positive test as “nonsense”.
Sharapova’s
announcement is almost unprecedented for a top athlete. Most sports stars try
to hide positive tests for performance-enhancing drugs, hoping news will not
break until a suspension is revealed. But few athletes are like Sharapova who
has made herself into the highest-paid female in sport, earning more than US$20m
annually, through a series of high-end endorsement deals. The implication that
Sharapova has been cheating can be a devastating blow to those deals. By
revealing the test results herself she is attempting to take control of the
story, hoping that by being up front people will believe she is being honest
and really was taking mildronate for health purposes.
Meldonium
was developed years ago in Latvia to treat patients with heart conditions
brought on by a lack of oxygen in their blood. It has become popular with
athletes who use the oxygen-enhancers to improve endurance, especially when
working out. Last year WADA announced that it was carefully studying the drug,
allowing athletes to take it with the warning that it could soon be banned. A
few months into that study WADA said meldonium was being moved to 2016’s banned
list.
Maria
Sharapova shot to stardom in 2004 by winning Wimbledon as a teenager
|
Sharapova
has struggled with injuries through most of her career. Her meteoric rise as a
teenage sensation was slowed immediately after she reached the world No.1 ranking
in 2006 with what became a long series of shoulder issues. In recent years she
has battled forearm pain and leg ailments. A few days ago she announced she
would miss
the BNP Paribas tournament at Indian Wells in California because of a
forearm injury.
But
even with her injuries Sharapova has been a huge force in women’s tennis. Her
6ft 2in frame allows her to have one of the most powerful serves in the game.
She is also one of the hardest hitters on the tour and is one of the three best
women’s players when healthy. She has won each grand slam tournament once and
has also won
the French Open a second time, in 2014.
She
has long been praised for not letting the attention she receives for her
model-like looks distract from her game. Where players like her fellow Russian
Anna Kournikova seemed more interested in being celebrities than tennis
players, Sharapova has played with an intense dedication, which has added to
her popularity with fans and advertisers.
When
Sharapova’s publicist first
announced Monday’s press conference on Sunday afternoon, speculation turned
to the player’s possible retirement. The press release called it a “major
announcement” and, given that she has played in only three tournaments in eight
months, many thought she was ending her career at the age of 28.
She
acknowledged that belief at her press conference before saying in a sombre tone
that she would not retire in a downtown Los Angeles hotel. She then looked down
and added “with this ugly carpet”.
Sharapova’s
lawyer, John Haggerty, told reporters that, while athletes use meldonium for
performance-enhancing purposes, it is at higher levels than Sharapova was
taking. He did not say what that level was or reveal the name of her doctor.
The
punishment for a positive test can be up to a four-year ban, though is seems
unlikely that Sharapova would get anywhere near four years for a first
violation. Still, even a one- or two-year suspension might make it hard for her
to return to tennis given her injury history.
Steve
Simon, chief executive for the WTA, said: “I am very saddened to hear this news
about Maria. Maria is a leader and I have always known her to be a woman of
great integrity. Nevertheless, as Maria acknowledged, it is every player’s
responsibility to know what they put in their body and to know if it is
permissible.
“This
matter is now in the hands of the Tennis Anti-Doping Program and its standard
procedures. The WTA will support the decisions reached through this process.”
A
Wada spokesman said: “Wada is aware of the ongoing case. As is our normal
process, and in order to protect the integrity of the case, Wada will refrain
from commenting further until a decision has been issued by the ITF. Following
that, Wada will review the reasons for the decision and subsequently decide
whether or not to use its independent right of appeal to the Court of
Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
“We can confirm that
meldonium was added to the 2016 Prohibited List which took effect on 1 January
2016, having previously been on WADA’s monitoring program for the duration of
2015. Meldonium was added [to the Prohibited List] because of evidence of its
use by athletes with the intention of enhancing performance.”
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