Post a Free Blog

Submit A Press Release

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
Action
Animation
ATP Tour (ATP)
Auto Racing
Baseball
Basketball
Boxing
Breaking News
Business
Business
Business Newsletter
Call of Duty (CALLOFDUTY)
Canadian Football League (CFL)
Car
Celebrity
Champions Tour (CHAMP)
Comedy
CONCACAF
Counter Strike Global Offensive (CSGO)
Crime
Dark Comedy
Defense of the Ancients (DOTA)
Documentary and Foreign
Drama
eSports
European Tour (EPGA)
Fashion
FIFA
FIFA Women’s World Cup (WWC)
FIFA World Cup (FIFA)
Fighting
Football
Formula 1 (F1)
Fortnite
Golf
Health
Hockey
Horror
IndyCar Series (INDY)
International Friendly (FRIENDLY)
Kids & Family
League of Legends (LOL)
LPGA
Madden
Major League Baseball (MLB)
Mixed Martial Arts (MMA)
MLS
Movie and Music
Movie Trailers
Music
Mystery
NASCAR Cup Series (NAS)
National Basketball Association (NBA)
National Football League (NFL)
National Hockey League (NHL)
National Women's Soccer (NWSL)
NBA Development League (NBAGL)
NBA2K
NCAA Baseball (NCAABBL)
NCAA Basketball (NCAAB)
NCAA Football (NCAAF)
NCAA Hockey (NCAAH)
Olympic Mens (OLYHKYM)
Other
Other Sports
Overwatch
PGA
Politics
Premier League (PREM)
Romance
Sci-Fi
Science
Soccer
Sports
Sports
Technology
Tennis
Thriller
Truck Series (TRUCK)
True Crime
Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC)
US
Valorant
Western
Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA)
Women’s NCAA Basketball (WNCAAB)
World
World Cup Qualifier (WORLDCUP)
WTA Tour (WTA)
Xfinity (XFT)
XFL
0
-- Advertisement --spot_img
HomeTennisATP Tour (ATP)ATP News: World No. 1 Jannik Sinner agrees to 3-month doping ban

ATP News: World No. 1 Jannik Sinner agrees to 3-month doping ban

Add to Favorite
Added to Favorite


World No. 1 Jannik Sinner has agreed to a three-month ban from tennis for violating anti-doping rules, effectively immediately.

Sinner, who won the Australian Open last month, was sanctioned in August with minimal penalty after two positive tests for clostebol, a banned anabolic steroid. At the time, the International Tennis Integrity Agency said the 23-year-oid Italian was not at fault.

However, the World Anti-Doping Agency appealed the ITIA ruling the following month, and a hearing before the Court of Arbitration for Sport was set for April. The agreement between the Sinner camp and the agency cancels the hearing.

Sinner’s will not be allowed to return to competition until May 4 and may begin training on April 13.

The samples the Italian submitted at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Indian Wells on March 10 and March 18 contained low levels of the prohibited substance clostebol, violating anti-doping rules, according to an independent tribunal appointed by Sport Resolutions.

However, it was found that clostebol entered Sinner’s system through a third party. A support team member who had been using an over-the-counter spray that contained the substance to treat his own wound passed it on to Sinner through therapy performed without gloves.

In a statement issued Saturday morning, Sinner said he is glad the settlement puts an end to the issue.

“This case had been hanging over me now for nearly a year and the process still had a long time to run with a decision maybe only at the end of the year,” he said. “I have always accepted that I am responsible for my team and realise WADA’s strict rules are an important protection for the sport I love. On that basis I have accepted WADA’s offer to resolve these proceedings on the basis of a 3-month sanction.”

The timing of the ban means Sinner will miss back-to-back ATP Masters 1000 events in Indian Wells and Miami in March, and in Monte Carlo and Madrid in April. But he will be eligible to return to the Masters 1000 tournament in Rome in his home country, which begins May 7.

Two more clay-court events follow before the French Open begins May 25, meaning he won’t miss any of the Grand Slam tournaments this season.

“WADA accepts that Mr. Sinner did not intend to cheat, and that his exposure to clostebol did not provide any performance-enhancing benefit and took place without his knowledge as the result of negligence of members of his entourage,” the organization said in a statement.

“However, under the Code and by virtue of CAS precedent, an athlete bears responsibility for the entourage’s negligence. Based on the unique set of facts of this case, a three-month suspension is deemed to be an appropriate outcome.”

At the time of the ITIA ruling, Sinner lost the ranking points and the $325,000 he earned for his semifinal finish at Indian Wells last spring but was not banned from competition — a decision that did not sit well with some at the time.

Or on Saturday.

Australian Nick Kyrgios, a harsh critic last summer, wrote on social media Saturday that Sinner’s team had done “everything in their power to just go ahead and take a 3 month ban, no titles lost.”

“Guilty or not? Sad day for tennis. Fairness in tennis does not exist,” Kyrgios posted to X.

“So wada come out and say it would be a 1-2 year ban. Obviously sinners team have done everything in their power to just go ahead and take a 3 month ban, no titles lost, no prize money lost. Guilty or not? Sad day for tennis. Fairness in tennis does not exist.”

Sinner is 7-0 this season and was 73-6 in 2024, winning eight of his 19 career titles, including the Australian Open, the U.S. Open and the Nitto ATP Finals.

–Field Level Media

Subscribe to get Latest News Updates

Latest News

You may like more
more

Oregon rides momentum into matchup with ailing Iowa

The Oregon Ducks will look for their third straight...

MLB News: Reports: Cubs, Justin Turner agree to deal

Justin Turner agreed to a one-year, $6 million deal...

NHL News: Team USA D Charlie McAvoy hospitalized, out for Thursday’s game

Team USA defenseman Charlie McAvoy was ruled out for...