Turn in the case of Jannik Sinner. The Italian tennis player has reached an agreement with the World Anti -Doping Agency (AMA) and has agreed He has retired his appeal before the TAS.
This suspension began to count on February 9 and will end on May 4. In parallel, you can return to official training on April 13. This will cause world tennis number one to miss the appointments in Doha, Indian Wells, Miami, Montecarlo and Madrid, among others. The sanction will not prevent you from being in Roland Garros, which will start on May 19. Of course, the only preparatory contest of whipped earth that could be played before the French Grand Slam would be the 1000 Masters of Rome.
In September, the AMA had filed an appeal before the Deportivo Arbitration Court (TAS) against an independent court that had determined that the transalpine had not committed any infraction by positive in this prohibited substance.
The view had to be held in April, but the agency that has reached an agreement with SINNER defends that it was willing to formalize a “conciliation pact to guarantee a fair and appropriate result.” The AMA exposes in a statement that accepts the explanations that Jannik Sinner provided at the time about the infraction and highlights that the Italian tennis player “had no intention of cheating and that his exposure to clostebol did not provide him with any benefit to improve performance.” “It occurred without their knowledge as a result of the negligence of members of their environment,” they add.
Despite this, they emphasize that the transalpine is “responsible for the negligence of its surroundings.” Both the International Tennis Federation and the International Tennis Integrity Agency have accepted this covenant between Sinner and it.
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