laureus Awards revoke Sina’s nomination
Richard Pagliaro | @tennisnow | Thursday, February 27, 2025
Image source: Matthew Calvis
Jannik Sinner Has been laureus World Sports Awards.
laureus Academy announced today that the world’s No. 1 sinner’s World Athlete of the Year has been deleted.
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Laureus Academy said it decided to cancel Sina’s nomination after the dominant Australian Open and U.S. Open champions accepted a three-month suspension to resolve WADA’s appeal to his doping case.
The sinner failed the drug test twice in March last year, but successfully appealed his temporary suspension due to unintentional contamination.
“After discussions at Laureus Academy, it has been decided to nominate Jannik Sinner for this year’s Laureus Athlete of the Year Award,” said Sean Fitzpatrick. “We followed the decisions of relevant global institutions and, while we noticed the serious circumstances involved, we still believe that the three-month ban made the nomination unqualified.
“Jennik and his team have learned.”
Read full Statement of the Laureus World Sports Awards.
The world’s No. 1 sinner has received a three-month suspension and will ban him from tennis from February 9 to March 4 to resolve the case, i.e. World Anti-Doping Agency Announced two weeks ago.
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Under the terms of the agreement, the offender will serve from 9:00 to 11:59 pm on May 4, 2025 from 11:59 pm on May 4, 2025.
Wada announced: “Under Rule 10.14.2 of the Code, Mr. Sina may return to the formal training activities from 13 April.”
Sina said in a statement that he accepted the suspension
“This case has been on me for nearly a year now, and the process is still being decided for a long time. I have always accepted that I am responsible for my team and realized that Wada’s strict rules are an important protection for the sports I love.”
“On this basis, I accepted Wada’s proposal to resolve these procedures with three months of sanctions.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cktkeicqney
Last March, Sinner, an international tennis integrity agency announced a few days before the start of the U.S. Open, tested positive twice at a “low level” of “low level.”
Two-time Australian Open champion Sinner was not suspended and allowed to compete as an independent court ruled that he had made “no fault” about steroid pollution in his system.