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Sinner twice tested positive for a banned substance in March but was not suspended because he was not at fault, the International Tennis Integrity Agency announced on Aug. 20.
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 ...
Sinner’s accepted explanation was that the banned performance-enhancer entered his system unintentionally through a massage from his physiotherapist, who had used a spray containing the steroid ...
Sinner tested positive again eight days later in an out-of-competition sample. He was provisionally suspended twice by the tennis integrity body because of those test results, but he successfully appealed twice to an independent tribunal judge and was allowed to keep competing on tour.
WADA is challenging a decision last year by the International Tennis Integrity Agency not to suspend Sinner for what it judged was accidental contamination by a banned anabolic steroid last March. Sinner's explanation — that trace amounts of Clostebol in his doping sample was due to a massage from a trainer who used the substance after ...
The announcement was made while Sinner was on court against Roman Safiullin at the China Open in Beijing. Sinner tested positive twice for an anabolic steroid in March but was not banned in a decision by an independent tribunal announced by the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) on Aug. 20 because the ITIA determined he was not to blame.
The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) says it’s lodging an appeal with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) after an independent tribunal found world No. 1 tennis player Jannik Sinner wasn’t ...
Jannik Sinner, the No. 1 ranked men's tennis player in the world, will head into the U.S. Open with his steroid scandal behind him. Sinner, who tested positive twice for a banned anabolic steroid ...