Revealed: Maria Sharapova Failed Drugs Test At Australian Open

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Maria Sharapova

Former world number one Maria Sharapova announced she failed a drugs test at the 2016 Australian Open, saying a change in the World-Anti-Doping Agency banned list led to the violation.

Sharapova, a five-time Grand Slam champion, said in Los Angeles on Monday she tested positive for Meldonium, a substance she had been taking since 2006 but one that was added to the banned list on January 1 this year.

I failed the test and take full responsibility for that,” said Sharapova, who is currently ranked seventh in the world.”

The 28-year-old Russian, the highest-earning woman in all of sport, will be provisionally suspended from March 12, the International Tennis Federation (ITF) has confirmed.

“Ms Sharapova will be provisionally suspended with effect from 12 March, pending determination of the case,” said an ITF statement.

Sharapova has not competed since she lost to Serena Williams in the quarter-finals of the Australian Open in January and has struggled with a series of injuries in recent years.

She withdrew last week from the Indian Wells Masters starting this week, an event she won in 2006 and 2013.

“I was first given the substance back in 2006. I had several health issues going on at the time. I was getting sick very often  and I had a deficiency in magnesium and a family history of diabetes, and there were signs of diabetes. That is one of the medications, along with others, that I received.

“I had been taking this medicine for the past 10 years, but on 1 January this became a prohibited substance which I did not know.”

Sharapova burst onto the WTA by winning Wimbledon in 2004 at age 17, becoming the third youngest Wimbledon winner. She won the US Open in 2006, the Australian Open in 2008 and finished off her career title sweep of all four majors in 2012 with a trophy at Roland Garros, adding a second French honours in 2014.

Meldonium, also known as mildronate, is a Latvian-manufactured drug popular for fighting heart disease in former Soviet Union countries.

Several athletes have tested positive for the drug since it became illegal in January, including two Ukrainian biathletes and Russian cyclist Eduard Vorganov.

On Monday, Russia’s Ekaterina Bobrova, a European champion ice dancer, told local media she had tested positive for meldonium.

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