Tennis: Iga Swiatek banned for one month after a positive doping test

Tennis: Iga Swiatek banned for one month after a positive doping test

After world number one Jannik Sinner, five-time Grand Slam tournament winner Iga Swiatek has now also had a positive doping result. As the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) announced, the 23-year-old Pole tested positive for the banned substance trimetazidine (TMZ), a well-known heart drug. The positive result comes from a non-competition test on August 12th.

“Worst experience of my life”

Swiatek was then provisionally suspended, as has only now become known from the ITIA’s announcement. She then missed three tournaments. She justified her absence due to fatigue and personal problems. Swiatek described the ordeal of testing positive as the “worst experience of my life.” Skipping the tournaments also cost her the number 1 ranking. “Over the last 2.5 months I have been the subject of a rigorous ITIA process that has confirmed my innocence,” Swiatek said on Instagram.

The only positive doping test of her career showed “incredibly low levels of a banned substance that I had never heard of before” and called into question everything she had worked hard to achieve all her life. “Both I and my team have been dealing with enormous stress and anxiety. Now everything has been explained in detail and with a clean slate I can return to what I love most.”

Investigators classify Polin as credible

The subsequent investigation into the case revealed that Swiatek had purchased the drug in her home country and said she had taken it to combat the effects of jet lag. The investigators classified the Polish woman’s statements as credible and considered the violation to be a non-serious case. Swiatek has now agreed to a one-month suspension, almost all of which was served in late summer. The long-time number one can therefore start the new season as normal in Australia at the turn of the year. She also has to pay back part of the prize money she won.

The case still raises questions. Especially because of the ITIA’s approach. As with Sinner, the public was not informed about the incident immediately after the positive doping test, but only now after the investigation had been completed. Sinner tested positive twice for the banned anabolic steroid Clostebol in March. The 23-year-old did not receive a ban. The ITIA justified the acquittal by saying that it could not prove Sinner was guilty of intentional fault or negligence.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has lodged an objection and the case is now before the International Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). It is not yet known whether WADA will also lodge an objection in Swiatek’s case.

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