Maria Sharapova |
Maria Sharapova had her two-year tennis
ban for doping reduced to 15 months by the Lausanne-based Court of
Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on Tuesday.
The 29-year-old Russian tested positive
for the banned medication meldonium during January’s Australian Open,
but the world’s top sports court cut the initial two-year ban by nine
months.
In its verdict the CAS “found that Ms
Sharapova committed an anti-doping rule violation and that while it was
with ‘no significant fault’, she bore some degree of fault, for which a
sanction of fifteen months is appropriate”.
Sharapova openly admitted she had been
taking meldonium for 10 years to help treat illnesses, a heart issue and
a magnesium deficiency.
She also claimed it had entirely escaped
her attention that the product had been added to the banned substance
list published by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) on January 1, just
before the Australian Open.
The initial ban was imposed by an
independent tribunal appointed by the International Tennis Federation
and the reduced ban following her appeal means the Russian, who has
spent most of her life in the United States, will be free to resume
competition at the end of April 2017.
AFP
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