CAS clears Halep for immediate
return after doping ban cut
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[March 06, 2024]
By Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber
GENEVA (Reuters) -Former Wimbledon and French Open champion Simona
Halep had her four-year doping ban cut to nine months by the top
court for global sport on Tuesday, making the former world number
one eligible to return to competition immediately.
Halep was initially banned for four years for two separate
anti-doping rule violations. But the Lausanne-based Court of
Arbitration for Sport (CAS) ruled that her suspension should be
reduced to nine months, a period she has already served.
"The CAS Panel has unanimously determined that the four-year period
of ineligibility... is to be reduced to a period of ineligibility of
nine (9) months starting on 7 October 2022, which period expired on
6 July 2023," CAS said.
Now that the 32-year-old Romanian is eligible to compete, she could
be granted a wild card to this year's French Open or Wimbledon.
"Throughout this long and difficult process, I have maintained my
belief that the truth would eventually come out, and that a just
decision would be reached, because I am and always have been a clean
athlete," Halep said in a statement.
"I cannot wait to return to the tour."
Halep was suspended in October 2022 after she tested positive for
roxadustat - a banned drug that stimulates the production of red
blood cells - at the U.S. Open that year.
She was also charged with another doping offence last year due to
irregularities in her athlete biological passport (ABP), a method
designed to monitor different blood parameters over time to reveal
potential doping.
Halep, who vigorously denied the charges against her, has said that
she would most likely be compelled to retire if the initial
four-year ban was maintained.
Halep blamed contaminated supplements for her positive test at the
U.S. Open and accused the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA)
of charging her with an ABP violation after the group of experts who
assessed her profile learned her identity.
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Tennis player Simona Halep of Romania speaks to the media after a
hearing for a doping case against her, at the Court of Arbitration
for Sport (CAS) in Lausanne, Switzerland February 9, 2024.
REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
In response to the ruling, ITIA Chief Executive
Officer, Karen Moorhouse, said: "An essential element of the
anti-doping process is a player’s ability to appeal, and the ITIA
respects both their right to do so, and the outcome."
An independent tribunal accepted Halep's argument that she had taken
contaminated supplements but said the volume she ingested could not
have resulted in the concentration of roxadustat found in her
positive sample.
However, the CAS Panel said that while Halep should have been more
careful when using the supplement, she did not bear significant
fault for the violation.
Also, the ABP charge was dismissed on the basis that it was
appropriate to consider that the sample given in late 2022 was
shortly before a surgery and that Halep had said she was not going
to compete for the rest of that year.
The Professional Tennis Players Association said the CAS decision
"underscores the need for sensible reform to an unjust system that
fails to protect (the players' rights)."
(Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber in Geneva; Additional
reporting by Martyn Herman in London, Shrivathsa Sridhar in
Bengaluru and Janina Nuno Rios; Editing by Alex Richardson,
Christian Radnedge and Toby Davis)
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