The International Tennis Federation responded on Thursday at criticism on its handling of women’s tennis star Maria Sharapova’s drugs ban.
In a statement, the administrator of the Tennis Anti-Doping Program rejected insinuations by Sharapova that its independent tribunal was biased. He also denied it had requested a four-year ban for the five-time grand slam winner.
The ITF also stressed that before meldonium was put on the banned list this year, it was unaware that eastern European athletes regularly used the drug.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport has cleared the former world number one to return to action in April. This decision came after Sharapova’s two-year suspension was cut to 15 months on Tuesday.
The Russian said then that the ITF should be more effective at communicating with athletes as other sports federations had been.
“The ITF did not try to ban Ms. Sharapova for four years, as has been suggested,” the tennis ruling body said. It stated that it was the responsibility of the Independent Tribunal to decide what the suitable penalty should be.
Allegations that tribunal was biased
On suggestions that the Independent Tribunal was “not neutral,” the ITF said that Ms. Sharapova’s legal team was provided the option to oppose to the appointment of any member of that Tribunal before the hearing. They also said, “and they agreed in writing that they had no such objection.”
Further, the ITF deemed that it had taken proper steps to announce changes to the banned list. It was also not true to say that the ITF knew of extensive use of meldonium in Eastern Europe. Additionally, it should have afforded specific notice, it said.
The ITF added that Sharapova accepted in the hearing before CAS that the tennis ruling body was unaware before 2016 about the degree to which meldonium was used by athletes form any region. They also did not know that the Russian herself used the drug.
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