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Top-ranked tennis player Jannik Sinner said he was “very disappointed and also surprised” after a decision to clear him of wrongdoing following two positive drug tests was appealed by the ...
Top-ranked Jannik Sinner rallied to beat Roman Safiullin 3-6, 6-2, 6-3 in the second round of the China Open on Saturday and learned afterward that his steroid case is far from over. While Sinner ...
Jannik Sinner has reached the final of the Australian Open but the case over his failed two doping tests rumble on. BBC Sport examines the key questions at hand.
No doubts for Sinner's coffee-making sponsor Lavazza. Marco Lavazza, the vice chairman of coffee maker Lavazza, indicated the company plans to stand by Sinner as one of his main sponsors. “The (doping case) shocked us. Then, like everyone else, we realized that it was a mishap,” Lavazza told Italian daily Il Giornale.
Top-ranked tennis player Jannik Sinner will go to sport's highest court in April for the World Anti-Doping Agency's appeal that seeks to ban him from the sport for at least one year. The Court of ...
Top-ranked tennis player Jannik Sinner is “very confident” he will avoid a doping ban after the World Anti-Doping Agency appealed a decision to clear him of wrongdoing following two positive ...
Sinner’s explanation was that the banned performance-enhancer entered his system unintentionally through a massage from his physiotherapist, who used a spray containing the steroid to treat his own cut finger. WADA is seeking a ban of one to two years for Sinner. “We are completely external and it’s (an) independent process,” Gaudenzi said.
Sinner was cleared of any wrongdoing by an independent panel after testing positive for banned substance clostebol in April. The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) appealed against the decision and ...