Rising tennis star Yanina Wickmayer says she isn`t a drugs cheat and blames Belgian doping authorities for the breach of anti-doping regulations which caused her to be banned for a year.
|Last Updated: Dec 30, 2009, 03:34 PM IST|Source: Bureau
Auckland: Rising tennis star Yanina Wickmayer says she isn`t a drugs cheat and blames Belgian doping authorities for the breach of anti-doping regulations which caused her to be banned for a year.
A Belgian court and the International Tennis Federation have since suspended the bans imposed on Wickmayer and compatriot Xavier Malisse in November for breaches of the World Anti-Doping Agency`s whereabouts rule.
The 20-year-old Wickmayer will return to the court as a wild card in next week`s ASB Classic in Auckland, a warmup to January`s Australian Open.
At a news conference on Tuesday, Wickmayer told New Zealand media she was regularly drug tested during the period she reportedly failed to inform her national anti-doping agency of her whereabouts.
She had never failed a drug test or missed a drug test and the Flemish anti-doping agency Nado Flanders was aware of her whereabouts because she was playing in a televised tournament in Australia, she said.
Wickmayer rose from 71 to 16 on world rankings during 2009. As a top-50 player she came under WADA`s whereabouts rule which requires players to notify their whereabouts 365 days a year for out-of-competition testing.Wickmayer said the requirements of the whereabouts rule had never been adequately explained to her and letters notifying her of her breach of the rule were sent to her home in Belgium while she was in Australia.
She was banned, as was Malisse, when she failed to notify authorities of her whereabouts on three occasions. Her lawyers have since appealed her ban to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, the European Commission and the European Court of Human Rights.
"Maybe I didn`t fill in my whereabouts in Belgium but I got tested every two or three weeks," Wickmayer said.
"I didn`t fill in that I was in Australia but I was there and I got tested. I never tested positive and I never missed
doping test. I think that is the main thing that is important. That is why they made the system, to catch the ones who test positive and I never did."
Wickmayer said her alleged breach of anti-doping rules was a technicality caused by poor communication, the fault of Belgian officials."They saw me play on TV in Australia and they kept on sending me letters when they knew I wasn`t able to get them," she said. "By the time I had three strikes already I didn`t even know I had to fill something out. I know I didn`t do anything wrong.”
"I worked my butt off for the last eight years to be where I am today. Some people just decide to take that all away (for) stupid papers that haven`t been filled out."
Wickmayer said she had no objection to the whereabouts rule once she was aware of its requirements.
"There has to be a system like that to keep away the cheaters," she said. "I am not against the system, I am against the communication. They don`t communicate with us as human beings, they treat us a little bit like robots."
Bureau Report
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