Maria Sharapova Handed Two-Year Doping Ban, Will Appeal Ruling
Maria Sharapova was provisionally suspended by the ITF in early March, when she announced at a news conference in Los Angeles that she failed a doping test in January
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: June 09, 2016 01:49 pm IST
Highlights
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Maria Sharapova banned for two years
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Sharapova tested positive for meldonium at the Australian Open
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Sharapova said she will appeal the ruling
Maria Sharapova was on Wednesday banned for two years after failing a drugs test but insisted she will appeal the ruling, which could effectively end her career.
Russian star Sharapova, 29, tested positive for the controversial banned medication meldonium during January's Australian Open.
A statement on the International Tennis Federation (ITF) website said "an Independent Tribunal" had "found that Maria Sharapova committed an Anti-Doping Rule Violation" and consequently had "disqualified the affected results and imposed a period of ineligibility of two years, commencing on 26 January 2016".
Sharapova blasted the ban as "unfairly harsh" in a statement on her Facebook fan page.
"While the tribunal concluded correctly that I did not intentionally violate the anti-doping rules, I cannot accept an unfairly harsh two-year suspension," fumed Sharapova.
"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."
Sharapova slammed the ITF for spending "tremendous amounts of time and resources trying to prove I intentionally violated the anti-doping rules" before adding that "the tribunal concluded I did not".
The US-based Russian failed a test on January 26 and was charged with an anti-doping violation on March 2.
In a press conference a few days later, she admitted to taking meldonium but said she hadn't realised it was on the banned substance list.
Meldonium was added to the WADA list on January 1. Sharapova said she'd been taking it for 10 years.
Her ban is backdated to January 26 and due to end on January 25, 2018.
She has had her results from the Australian Open annulled and has forfeited her tournament prize money and ranking points.