Sharapova fails drug test

Sundaymorningguy

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As much as I am not a fan of Maria, she deserves to be thrown under the bus for this moment. Saying she was cheating for the past 10 years is not true. It was put on the banned substance list this year not 10 years ago. You can't cheat with using something that hasn't been banned until recently. Now I will say Maria and her team are absolute morons for not stopping use immediately when it came under the monitored substance list and even more so when they sent out multiple notices that it would be banned in 2016.
 

tossip

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just dont understand why she wants to appeal,she said she is responsible.....isnt that enough to get the full penalty....lots of contradictions here
 

GameSetAndMath

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Finally, an active WTA player has the courage to state her opinion despite WTAs talking points memo. Kristina Malendovic calls Maria a cheater. It remains to be seen as to how she will be punished by WTA for blasphemy.
 

Front242

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Meldonium if taken in certain dosages can be deadly. It turns you into an unpopular, screaming, stuck up b1tch. Would not recommend it.
 

kskate2

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Now her legal team says that her dosage was too low to have any real impact. Well why take it if it's not doing anything anyway?
 

GameSetAndMath

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kskate2 said:
Now her legal team says that her dosage was too low to have any real impact. Well why take it if it's not doing anything anyway?

The thing is there is no definition for low dosage. Besides WADA classifies it as a banned substance per se (meaning that there is no threshold up to which it is ok to be found in the system of an athlete).

Whenever she was taking, she was taking 500 mg tablet. The initial impression she gave was that she is taking one a day. But, now they are saying she was not taking it every day, but only as doctor recommended. But, we don't know what the doctor recommended to her.

According to drug manufacturer, it is supposed to be taken for a course of 4 to 6 weeks and such treatment courses may be repeated twice or thrice in an year.
 

Jelenafan

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Finally able to post, I'm the original Jelenafan. Uggh...couldn't get my password to be reset. I think what bothers me most about the Sharapova case is that we are led to believe that someone whose primary residence is the US (Florida and California) had a "family doctor" prescribing a drug that wasn't approved by the FDA. Seriously. Was she jetting out to Europe every few months for this family doctor?

In hindsight, Team Sharapova trying to create too much "spin" backfired big time. Giving 10 years "details", family doctor, medical conditions that don't fit what the drug is used for, email not opened, yada..yada..ya don't..while it gave her slight breathing space per media release didn't hold muster and now her legacy will always be shrouded.

People forget that in baseball, people like Barry Bonds and Roger Clemmons used "supplements" that were NOT illegal at the time either , and were tacitly approved by the PTB to boot, and they were tainted becaue whether legal or not, they were clearly chemical aids to try to have a competitive edge through performance enhancement.

So I don't buy that Sharapova is being unfairly vilified or the victim of "sexism".

The other premise I also don't agree with, namely that Maria wouldn't "risk" all the investment to have done something intentionally with the risk of getting caught (and whose not to say that someone thought a masking agent would work with a newly banned drug) belies humans with even far more at stake who through hubris and arrogance and subertuge have done exactly that. People CAN be that stupid and arrogant.
 

GameSetAndMath

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Despite the scandal, Sugarpova plans to sell Chocolate coated Meldonium tablets beginning May 2016. Previously she was only dealing with hard candies and now venturing into chocolate business too. :lolz:
 

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Quoted from The Sun:

A SPECIALIST who Maria Sharapova called “my doctor” when she started taking meldonium has denied prescribing it.

Russian Dr Anatoly Glebov also says the star had no health issues, as she has claimed.

He said: “When I worked with her ten years ago she had no problems with her heart or diabetes. She was a healthy girl.

“We always warned her about doping, we told her not to drink from other people’s bottles.”

Glebov, who now works for the Russian Tennis Federation, admitted providing Sharapova with medicines but not meldonium.
 

Front242

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^ That's pretty awesome. Was thinking she'd get corrupt "medical records" made up and still probably will but that's a nice kick in the teeth for her team and tells what we all knew anyway.
 

teddytennisfan

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HomeOp-Edge
Grand Slam: Russia's Maria Sharapova facing different sort of Western court

Robert Bridge is an American writer and journalist based in Moscow, Russia. His articles have been featured in many publications, including Russia in Global Affairs, The Moscow Times, Russia Insider and Rethinking Russia. Bridge is the author of the book on corporate power, “Midnight in the American Empire”, which was released in 2013.
Published time: 12 Mar, 2016 15:30Edited time: 12 Mar, 2016 15:40
56e3fae7c361887d5c8b4580.jpg

Maria Sharapova speaks to the media announcing a failed drug test after the Australian Open during a press conference today at The LA Hotel Downtown. © Jayne Kamin / Reuters
670
Maria Sharapova's dazzling tennis career is now in doubt after she tested positive for a drug that was only prohibited in January. Is this another case of Russian nationals being subjected to unfair treatment by Western-run organizations?
Addressing reporters in Los Angeles this week, Sharapova revealed with remarkable composure and candidness that according to the International Tennis Federation (ITF), she had failed a drug test at the Australian Open.

The five-time Grand Slam winner explained she began taking a Latvian-made drug in 2006 to treat a number of health problems, including persistent flu symptoms, low magnesium levels and irregular EKG results.

Yet much to Sharapova’s apparent surprise, the commercial name of the medicine, ‘meldronate,’ was listed under a different name by the Swiss-based World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) in its 2016 compilation of prohibited substances.

“For the past ten years, I have been given a medicine called ‘meldronate’ by my family doctor and a few days ago, after I received the ITF letter, I found out that it also has another name of ‘meldonium,’ which I did not know,” she told reporters.

Sharapova told the assembled paparazzi that “for 10 years this medicine was not on WADA’s ban list” and that she had been “legally taking the medicine” under doctor supervision.

No matter, because the rules of the game suddenly changed on January 1 as meldonium was deemed bad medicine. Now the ITF will ban Sharapova from play starting March 12.

It should be noted that Meldronate is easily available over the counter in many Eastern European countries where it was first developed.

Conflict of Interest?
Strangely, an article in USA TODAY attempted to portray Sharapova’s positive test results as the result of some sort of undercover sting operation.

“A tip from a confidential source to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) in March 2014 that Eastern European athletes were using the drug meldonium as a performance enhancer triggered the doping scandal that now has ensnared Maria Sharapova, a person with knowledge of the process told USA TODAY Sports.”

The report said that by October 2014, the drug was added to the World Anti-Doping Agency’s monitoring list. In other words, use of drug had not been outright banned, but rather it was being observed.

At this point, the US-based ‘Partnership for Clean Competition’ conducted an analysis of “8,300 random urine samples.” Of those, Eastern European athletes were the only ones who tested positive for meldonium, which should come as no surprise given that it was a popular and legal local medicine.

However, here is where the game gets a bit questionable.

According to Partnership for Clean Competition’s website, its ‘founding fathers’ are some of the most influential US sports foundations, including the National Football League (NFL), the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA), Major League Baseball (MLB) and the US Olympic Committee (USOC). Clearly, there is no small conflict of interest of the USOC participating in tests that will decide whether or not some Russian athletes will suffer a ban from competition.

At this point I would like to venture a painfully obvious question: What would the response be in the United States if a group of Russian-owned sports foundations (indirectly) participated in laboratory tests, which concluded that a particular Canadian-made drug was being used by American athletes, leading to their disqualification from competition? I think the outcry would be quite similar to the one now being observed in the Russian financial markets, where Western credit rating agencies are being roundly criticized for downgrading Russia.

The Russian Central Bank announced in December, after Standard & Poor's and Moody's moved to cut Russia's debt rating to "junk," that Russia needs to establish its own rating agency that would be "resistant to geopolitical risks".

In a similar vein, does Russia, as well as other Eastern European and Asian countries, need to set up its own counterbalance to the World Anti-Doping Agency?

After all, the WADA has itself come under criticism from watchdog groups that claim the organization’s methods are imprecise and non-transparent.

In a research paper published in Nature, Dr. Donald A. Barry concludes that “the processes used to charge athletes with cheating are often based on flawed statistics and flawed logic.”

An editorial in the same journal agreed with the findings of the paper, saying the methodology was flawed: “Detecting cheats is meant to promote fairness, but drug testing should not be exempt from the scientific principles and standards that apply to other biomedical sciences, such as disease diagnostics.

“The alternative could see the innocent being punished while the guilty escape on the grounds of reasonable doubt.”

At the same time, while some big name sponsors have distanced themselves from the Russian champion, including Nike and Porsche, one company, Head, has not only stood by her, it has questioned WADA's decision.

Read more
Sharapova backed by racket sponsor, thanks fans for support over failed drug test
A statement from Head, the racket maker, argued the drug should not be prohibited but instead come with a dosage limit: "We question WADA's decision to add meldonium to its banned substances list in the manner it did; we believe the correct action by WADA would have been to impose a dosage limitation only.

"In the circumstances we would encourage WADA to release scientific studies which validates their claim that meldonium should be a banned substance."

Separation of State & Sports
In light of such considerable skepticism, Moscow is demanding some straightforward answers, as opposed to tricky backhands.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Russia expects explanations from the World Anti-Doping Agency, or WADA, following the inclusion of meldonium drugs in the list of banned medicines.

"The WADA is a mechanism designed to make sure that doping isn't used in sports... The recent move by this organization has raised questions among professionals. The questions should be answered professionally and honestly," Lavrov said.

The Kremlin also weighed in on the matter, saying the situation is being politicized at the detriment of sports.

"Attempts to politicize sports, attempts to add character to sports of some kind of political instrument for achieving some aims, are destructive for sports, for international sports, and are unacceptable and inexcusable," presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

Personally, there was one more thing that really struck me about the charges leveled against Sharapova. Although it is too early to say with any certainty who is to blame in this case, I found the comments by Dick Pound, who led an investigation against the All-Russia Athletic Federation (ARAF), absolutely outrageous.

“How stupid can you be,” Pound asked. “What was she thinking of and her advisors? If you’re taking medicine, surely you or someone else around you checks if it’s on the list.”

Talk about diplomacy! I can’t imagine Pound having the gall to speak in such a profoundly rude and arrogant manner to a Western athlete with credentials equal to Sharapova's who suddenly fell afoul of the rules.

Sharapova, 28, the highest paid female athlete for 11 consecutive years, according to Forbes, is one the most recognizable Russian personalities in the world.

Although she has lived in the US since the age of 7, Sharapova said she never considered getting American citizenship, crediting her Russian heritage for her success.

“I was shaped into the individual I was from those experiences. And not necessarily simply the country, but the people, the mentality and the toughness and that never giving up attitude," she told CNBC in an interview.

Those are qualities Sharapova will need in the coming months to return WADA's unsightly serves.

@Robert_Bridge

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT
 

teddytennisfan

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I don't think anyone is arguing (not even Teddy) that Maria shouldn't be banned. I don't think that is the issue. Or that she or her team shouldn't have been more diligent in following the news, especially when she was taking something. That shows me that she didn't think that medication was performance enhancing. She is not stupid, so what is the other explanation? Whatever the reason, she should suffer the consequences. But slowly her whole career is getting tainted, even if the drug was legal until 2.5 months ago.

How about this notion that all Russian athletes should be banned from the Olympic games in Rio? Isn't that targeting everybody, even the ones who don't use this drug? It is a well known fact, at least now, that some Russian coaches gave this medication to their athletes. But they claim that it is not a performance enhancing drug, that is helps them with vigorous training and recuperation process. Even a London pharmacist, who is on medical and antidoping commission of the European Olympic committees, thinks that evidence that this drug enhances performance is thin.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/10/s...-russian-athletes-maria-sharapova-doping.html

I am against all drugs, if I can endure pain, I won't take anything against it. I won't take anything when I am depressed or in bad mood. Yet there are people living in constant consummation of all kinds of drugs when natural alternatives are available. There are illnesses that drugs are the only way to help fight them. But our society has become drug obsessed, unfortunately, so we see the cases where medications are used when there are alternatives: right food, meditation, healthier living. I think athletes are the same as us, ordinary people.

As for recovery means, who knows what else is out there that coaches use to help their athletes? The main question is what gets banned and what doesn't and on whose recommendation.


there are a few critical matters here that are being ignored by the ``western view`» »posters around here.


that somehow -- the ``global rules`-- such as by wada -- or IMF -- or ``human rights`-- or ``what is legal`--

are so RIGHTEOUS and mighty with such moral rectitude...,.

TRUTH AFTER nato BEING the source of wars ....and continued wetsern colonialism -- of which WADA ``rules`are JUST one form.

somehow because ``eastern countries`consider LEGAL the use of such drugs -- <`<THE RUSSIANS and ``easterners -- those SLAVS, u know those NON-ANGLO-AMERICAN and who don`t REALLY belong in OUR western paradigm of our WONDERFUL LAWS`--

``are cheats``.

IT IS THE same species of thinking as ``the russians are aggressive -- they keep EXPANDING -- look at how CLOSE they are to OUR NATO BASES `!!

this -- this judgmental attitude comes from the SAME folk of the ``west`-- whose institutions are responbile for the CREATION of conditions such as global terror by allying themselves with the brutal dictatorships of saudi arabia, qatar, etc...who are OK GUYS so long as they are BUDDIES with the american-led establishment and world order -- namely -- the wonderful petro-dollar imperialism...

but hey -- ``ASSAD is a brutal dictator, chinese are bad, bad, bad`...

let`s ``SNCTION RUSSIA because putin is an AUTHORITARIANé`!!

this -- coming from an EU or ``west` ruled by WASHINGTON dc through NATO AND UNELECTED OFFICIALS IN BRUSSELS -- WHICH even britain wants to ``exit`from -- NOT forgetting BRITAIN itself is just a vassal state of the high amighty ``authority` NSA of global surveillance EMPIRE USA!

that somehowq -- thtough WADA -- finds a way to just have THE ENTIRE RUSSIAN athletic federation banned from olympics --

but hedck -- the DRUGS to enhance performance BY THE WESTERN ATHLETES should come in HANDY!! SO LONG as the ÙSA LED - BRITISH, FRENCH LED <<

àuthorizations are there....

this coming from the ``western` masters of the universe who -- having CREATED the terrorism for

regime change in syria and libya , iraq - etc...through their PROXY governments such as turkey`s erdogan and the saudis and qataris -- now pretend to ``fix them ```

and blame the mass migratiohn they CAUSED on RUSSIA TOO...

THIS COMING FROM THE SAME economic system -- ruled from london and wall street -- that created the global recession with their 2008 implosions -- and today LECTURE the world about àccountability.....

i mean -- it goes on and on and on...

and ya -- DJOKOVIC KNOWS EXACTLK WHAT WE ARE TALKING ABOUT by standing up FOR MARIA!! A FELLOW SLAV AND -- YES -- THE ``untrustworthy easterners`

whose biggest and richest resources LAND just happens to be RUSSIA thaT

WILL NOT KNEEL TO WASHINGTON, LONDON AND BRUSSELS !



we are talking here abotu HYPOCRISY .
 
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britbox

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Well, we'll have to agree to differ on this one teddy. At the end of the day, whether you like WADA or not, they ARE running the anti-doping side of thing globally and the information was provided to the athletes.

But... and you'll enjoy this.... (I'm throwing a bit of fuel on the fire :lightning:) a White House official is on the 12 man executive committee of WADA.

https://www.wada-ama.org/en/executive-committee

Mr Michael K. Gottlieb
Assistant Deputy Director
White House Drug Policy Office
Executive Office of the President
USA
 

tossip

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Mledanovic went in no sugarcoating...
 

Federberg

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The world has gone a bit mad in my humble opinion. It gets to the point that you wonder if an individual who is seen murdering someone will be defended by those of their race religious, or political persuasion, to the exclusion of the criminal action. Come on people. She has admitted taking the drug. That is the fundamental point here. The rest is just excuses
 

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the AntiPusher said:
Front242 said:
Sharapova calls news conference to make 'major announcement'

http://www.tennis.com/pro-game/2016/03/sharapova-calls-news-conference-to-make-major-announcement/57808/#.VtxetuZ2NfI

Please retire. It's been a scream of a time watching you.

Even if she "retires",it will be less than two years,*Serena will probably leave the game by then and Pova will come back to dominate the tour again.

Dirty Drug test = Dirty Maria. Dirty Maria won't be back.
 

Tennisman12345

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Mladenovic has had a lot of hateful comments on her facebook page from Sharapova fans because of what she said :mad:
 

tossip

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Tennisman12345 said:
Mladenovic has had a lot of hateful comments on her facebook page from Sharapova fans because of what she said :mad:
it doesnt matter ...she spoke the truth...pova the dopa is going down.:popcorn