Sharapova feels vindicated and empowered after doping ban
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[March 29, 2017]
By Larry Fine
RANCHO MIRAGE, California (Reuters) -
Tennis star Maria Sharapova said on Tuesday she is excited about her
return to competition next month, feeling vindicated by the
reduction of her doping suspension and empowered by her time away.
Russia's former world number one was initially barred for two years
after testing positive at the 2016 Australian Open for meldonium, a
medication she had been taking for 10 years within the rules, but
that was reclassified as a banned drug.
Sharapova vigorously fought to overturn the ban, saying she had not
been properly advised of the official change, and the Court of
Arbitration for Sport cut the ban to 15 months and said in its
ruling it did not believe she was "an intentional doper".
"Although I'm at a stage or age in my career where you're closer to
the end than your beginning, you always want to end a chapter in
your life on your own terms, in your own voice," Sharapova told the
ANA Inspiring Women in Sports conference at Mission Hills.
"That's why I fought so hard for the truth to be out," the
five-times grand slam winner said at the program that included
tennis and women's sports pioneer Billie Jean King, Olympic champion
gymnast Aly Raisman and 2014 ANA Inspiration champion golfer Lexi
Thompson.
Sharapova's ban will end two days after the Stuttgart grand prix
starts on April 24. She has been given a wild card by organizers,
who scheduled her first match on the Wednesday in her competitive
return.
Some players have bristled at what they feel is preferential
treatment for draw card Sharapova, who reigned as the highest
earning female athlete in the world for 11 years in a row, according
to Forbes.
"For me it's not OK and I spoke to some other players and nobody is
OK with it, but it's not up to us," world number four Dominika
Cibulkova of Slovakia told reporters.
"It's not about her, but everyone who was doping should start from
zero."
Sharapova said she does not worry about the reception
she will receive and is confident in her integrity.
"When you love what you do, and do it with passion and integrity and
you work hard, and you work on court number 28 when no one is
watching ... then you know what you stand for and you know who you
are.
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Russian tennis player Maria Sharapova speaks to the media announcing
a failed drug test after the Australian Open during a news
conference in Los Angeles, California, in this March 7, 2016 file
photo. REUTERS/Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports/Files Picture
Supplied by Action Images
"When I'm out on court 28 and there's no one watching, that's when a
lot of my trophies are being won," she said.
Sharapova, who turns 30 on April 19, kept herself busy during her
tennis absence.
She took a class at Harvard Business School in global strategic
management, spent another 10 days in London studying leadership,
interned at an advertising agency, spent a week shadowing NBA
commissioner Adam Silver, and a week with Nike designers besides
attending to her Sugarpova candy brand.
"I learned that life can be OK without tennis," said Sharapova, who
also just finished an autobiography scheduled to be published in
September. "It was empowering."
Yet Sharapova is eager to get back on the court.
"I've been training quite hard for the past four months," she said,
adding it would likely take some time to pay off. "Practice is never
the same as match play.
"(But) I know that my mind and my body still have the motivation to
be the best tennis player I can be."
(Editing by Andrew Both) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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