Twist in the doping affair of the world number 1 player, Jannik Sinner. The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) announced on Saturday that it had appealed and is demanding a suspension of one to two years from the Italian tennis player, who had nevertheless been cleared after two anti-doping tests came back positive for clostebol in March.
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Although he had been cleared by the International Agency for the Integrity of tennis (Itia) after testing positive twice for clostebol, an anabolic steroid, in March, Sinner was caught up in an affair likely to shake up the hierarchy at the top of world tennis. It is now the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) which must decide in this case involving the winner of the Australian Open and the US Open, because the World Anti-Doping Agency has appealed the decision of the Itia.
Sinner said to himself “ very disappointed and also surprised », by this call, Saturday after his victory over the Russian Roman Safiullin in the round of 16 of the Beijing tournament. “ There were three hearings and all three ended very positively for me “, he told the press. At first instance, an independent court concluded that the 23-year-old Italian player had not committed “ no fault or negligencece”, a decision “not correct with regard to the applicable rules” according to WADA. Consequently, the anti-doping body based in Montreal “ requests a suspension period of one to two years » against Jannick Sinner.
He had already had his ATP points withdrawn as well as the winnings obtained during the Masters 1000 in Indian Wells, the tournament during which he tested positive and where he reached the semi-finals. Jannik Sinner embodies with the Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz, the next generation of the ATP circuit. This season, the two players shared the four Grand Slam tournaments. Three weeks ago, Sinner became the first Italian player to win at Flushing Meadows.
A story about over-the-counter spray
As a reminder, Sinner had undergone two positive doping tests in March 2024 eight days apart: on March 10 during the Indian Wells tournament and on March 18 out of competition, but just before the Miami tournament. Trace amounts of clostebol were found in his urine. Both times, the player appealed, which allowed him to reduce his automatic suspensions (from April 4 to 5 for the first, from April 17 to 20 for the second).
The Italian defended himself by explaining that he had suffered “ contamination by a member of his staff, who had applied an over-the-counter spray containing clostebol to his own hand to treat a small injury », According to the International Agency for Tennis Integrity (Itia) which accepted his defense and officially cleared him at the end of August.
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Please note that as clostebol is not naturally produced by the body, no concept of threshold is taken into account: it is enough to detect its presence for an anti-doping test to be considered positive. The AMA classifies it in the “ anabolic androgenic steroids “, a long list of testosterone derivatives capable of stimulating muscle growth, without however explaining what quantity would have a significant effect on performance.