LOS ANGELES --
Tennis star
Maria Sharapova admitted Monday she failed a drug test.
"I take full responsibility for it," she said. "I made a huge mistake. I let my fans down. I let my sport down.
"I don't want to end my career this way
. ... I know many of you thought I was retiring. But if I was ever going to announce my retirement it would not be in this downtown
Los Angeles hotel with this fairly ugly carpet."
She said the drug's name is Meldonium and had been prescribed by a doctor. She said she has a magnesium deficiency and a family history of diabetes. She said the drug was not on the banned list for the last 10 years but as of Jan. 1 the rules changed. She said she does not know yet how long she will be held out of competition. The test was done at the
Australian Open in January.
Meldonium is used therapeutically as an anti-ischemic drug to treat patients with angina and myocardial infarction.
A statement from the
World Anti-Doping Agency confirmed the drug was added to the banned list this year "because of evidence of its use by athletes with the intention of enhancing performance."
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See reaction to Maria Sharapova's shocking announcement that she failed a drug test
After the press conference, her attorney,
John Haggerty, said "a positive drug test could result in a ban of up to four years" from the
International Tennis Federation. But he added that "mitigating circumstances can lead to the elimination of a ban altogether. ... We're still determining what we are going to request of them.
I've asked them to have a cooperative process."
The
ITF posted a statement on its website from the Tennis Anti-Doping
Program that included background on the failed test:
"On
26 January 2016, Ms
Sharapova provided an anti-doping sample to the TADP in association with her participation in the
2016 Australian Open.
"That sample was analysed by a World Anti-Doping Agency (
WADA) accredited laboratory, which returned a positive for meldonium, which is a prohibited substance under the WADA
Code and, therefore also the TADP.
"In accordance with
Article 8.1.1 of the TADP, Ms Sharapova was charged on 2 March with an Anti-Doping
Rule Violation.
"Ms Sharapova has accepted the finding of meldonium in her sample collected on 26 January.
"As meldonium is a non-specified substance under the WADA (and, therefore, TADP) list of Prohibited Substances and Prohibited Methods, Ms Sharapova will be provisionally suspended with effect from 12 March, pending determination of the case."
Last week she announced she was pulling out of the
BNP Paribas Open at
Indian Wells because of a left forearm injury. She withdrew from the
2015 U.S. Open because of a right leg injury.
Sharapova, 28, has won five
Grand Slam titles, including
Wimbledon in 2004, her first
Slam title. She ascended to
No. 1 in the rankings in
2005 and later achieved a career Grand Slam by winning the U.S. Open in
2006, the Australian Open in 2008 and the
French Open in
2012 and 2014.
She has amassed earned almost $37 million in career earnings, second only to
Serena Williams, who has earned more than $75 million. But the 6-2, blond-haired
Russian has made far more off than court thanks to a slew of lucrative endorsement deals with companies such as Porsche,
Tiffany and Tag Heuer.
In
2010, she signed a deal with
Nike worth $70 million over eight years.
Sharapova, who also has modeled, has drawn attention for her personal life. She once dated
Maroon 5 singer
Adam Levine and her other boyfriends included
Grigor Dimitrov, the
Bulgarian tennis star who also dated Serena Williams, and
Sasha Vujačić, a
Slovenian basketball player now with the
New York Knicks.
Sharapova moved from
Russia to the
United States with her family age 7 and now lives in
Manhattan Beach, Calif.
- published: 08 Mar 2016
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