Maria Sharapova will be eligible to play professional tennis again in April 2017, in time for the French Open and Wimbledon. Toby Melville / Reuters
Maria Sharapova will be eligible to play professional tennis again in April 2017, in time for the French Open and Wimbledon. Toby Melville / Reuters
Maria Sharapova will be eligible to play professional tennis again in April 2017, in time for the French Open and Wimbledon. Toby Melville / Reuters
Maria Sharapova will be eligible to play professional tennis again in April 2017, in time for the French Open and Wimbledon. Toby Melville / Reuters

Maria Sharapova revels in ‘one of my happiest days’ as doping ban is reduced to 15 months


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Maria Sharapova said she could not wait to return to tennis next April after the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) reduced the former world No 1’s two-year doping ban by nine months on Tuesday.

Hailing “one of the happiest days” of her career, the Russian said she had learnt a lesson from the “tough months” behind her and hoped the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and anti-doping authorities had also.

“In so many ways, I feel like something I love was taken away from me and it will feel really good to have it back,” Sharapova, 29, said in a message to fans on her Facebook page.

“Tennis is my passion and I have missed it. I am counting the days until I can return to the court.”

Sharapova was handed the original ban, backdated to start on January 26, 2016, by the ITF following her positive test for the drug meldonium.

See also:

• Ahmed Rizvi: In light of Sharapova scandal, tennis should deploy a 'quality over quantity' system

• Osman Samiuddin: Maria Sharapova, Lance Armstrong and how to reconsider how we think of doping

• Jon Turner: Maria Sharapova, perpetrator of a small crime, learning superstar status cuts both ways

The arbitration panel ruled on Tuesday that she had committed an anti-doping rule violation for which “she bore some degree of fault”.

It added that the decision to reduce the ban concerned solely “the degree of fault that can be imputed to the player for her failure to make sure that the substance contained in a product that she had been taking over a long period remained in compliance with the anti-doping rules.”

Sharapova had called the ITF’s original ruling “unfairly harsh” as an independent tribunal had found that she had not intentionally violated anti-doping rules.

She admitted taking meldonium during the season’s opening grand slam in Melbourne but said she had been unaware that it had been banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada).

Meldonium was added to Wada’s list of banned substances at the start of the year after mounting evidence that it boosted blood flow and enhanced athletic performance.

“I have learnt from this, and I hope the ITF has as well,” Sharapova said, adding that she had always taken responsibility for not knowing the over-the-counter supplement she had taken for 10 years was no longer allowed.

The five-time grand slam champion said other federations had been much better at notifying their athletes of the rule change, especially in Eastern Europe where meldonium, or mildronate, was taken by millions of people.

“Now that this process is over, I hope the ITF and other relevant tennis anti-doping authorities will study what these other Federations did, so that no other tennis player will have to go through what I went through,” she said.

Shamil Tarpishev, president of the Russian tennis federation, welcomed the reduced ban.

“It’s good, they reduced the ban”, he told Russia’s TASS news agency. “We want her to play for the national team and win the next Olympics for us.”

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