In today’s
Daily Dose of Social Media, we review the most notable
activities and commentary from ATP and
WTA players.
The recent news of Iga
Swiatek’s doping case and her one-month suspension has sparked widespread
reactions in the tennis world.
Taylor Fritz,
Denis Shapovalov,
Eva Lys, and
Liam Broady are among those
who took to social media to share their opinions on this controversial case,
drawing comparisons to Jannik Sinner’s situation and fuelling criticism of the
associations responsible for ensuring fair competition.
Swiatek accepts one-month suspension after positive
doping test
5-time Grand Slam champion
Iga Swiatek has accepted a one-month
suspension following a positive doping test. The ITIA confirmed on Thursday
that the Polish player tested positive for trimetazidine due to contamination
in a medication. The World No. 2 accepted the suspension and received support
from the WTA.
In a social media announcement, Swiatek shared details of the situation:
“In the last 2½ months, I was subject to strict ITIA proceedings, which
confirmed my innocence," Swiatek said in an Instagram video. "The
only positive doping test in my career, showing unbelievably low levels of a
banned substance I’ve never heard about before, put everything I’ve worked so
hard for my entire life into question.”
"Both me and my team had to deal with tremendous stress and
anxiety. Now everything has been carefully explained, and with a clean slate I
can go back to what I love most." Watch the rest of her statement below.
Shapovalov questions Swiatek’s suspension
Denis Shapovalov was quick to voice his criticisms following the
revelation of Iga Swiatek’s doping case. A few months ago, amid the controversy
surrounding Jannik Sinner, the Canadian harshly condemned the perceived
“special treatment” given to the Italian World No. 1.
True to his style, the former Wimbledon semifinalist posted succinctly
on X: “1 month ban eh” after Swiatek’s suspension was announced.
“That doesn’t make it fair that players like Halep and others had crazy
long bans for similar things. I’m glad it’s changing because the doping rules
are unfair. But guys like Ymer are still suspended, and he’s never even tested
positive.”
“You have to really hope it never happens to you...” a user replied,
adding, “Because it can happen to anyone to be contaminated, and I am sure you
would appeal too to avoid being suspended.”
Shapovalov continued, reiterating his opinion and mentioning Simona
Halep and Mikael Ymer as examples of players who, in his view, faced different
treatment:
“That doesn’t make it fair that players like Halep and others had crazy long
bans for similar things. I’m glad it’s changing because the doping rules are
unfair. But guys like Ymer are still suspended, and he’s never even tested
positive.”
Taylor Fritz condemns fan bias in doping scandals
ATP World
No. 4 Taylor Fritz offered a different perspective, highlighting how social
media often acts as a tool for unfair criticism and biased narratives in doping
controversies. “It’s fine to have your own honest opinions, but what I can’t
fathom and what is so upsetting to see as a player is the INSANE bias from the
tennis public supporting whatever story pushes the agenda they want to be
pushed," Fritz wrote.
"If
it’s a rival of the player you support that tests positive, then you are on
team ‘let’s call them a doper/cheater/disgrace them as much as possible.’ But
if it’s your fav player that it’s about, then it’s ‘innocent, no questions
asked.’"
"How
are you not able to remove your own personal bias and form an educated and
honest opinion for yourself? Even if the player proves their innocence (not
saying anyone is or isn’t), people who support rival players or have a bias
against you will always blindly push the narrative that you’re a cheater. That
fact really makes me sad for all the truly innocent players that have to go
through this,” he concluded.
Liam
Broady ironically dismisses criticism of doping regulations
Former
Wimbledon junior champion Liam Broady took to social media to mock a user’s
criticism of tennis authorities for not providing a list of approved
medications. The user suggested: “Wouldn't it make sense for the tennis
authorities to have an allowed list of branded supplements/medications from
reputable manufacturers, who could show their products were clean? Anything
else should be submitted for testing before use.”
Broady
disagreed and responded sarcastically: “Totally agree. This is already in place
🤣 Very easy to just get products that are tested. You can go on a website
and just search up the product to make sure they’re safe from contamination.”
Eva Lys questions Swiatek’s case, highlights unequal
doping sanctions
German tennis player Eva Lys reflected on the case of her colleague Tara
Moore, who faced a lengthy suspension after consuming contaminated meat during
a tournament in South America. At the time, it was reported that the organisers
were aware that the local meat could cause positive doping tests but delayed
informing players.
“What about players that ate contaminated meat in South America? Why
didn’t @TaraMoore92 get a one-month suspension? I’m slowly starting to think
that not everyone gets an equal process…” Lys wrote on social media. “There are
a lot of lower-ranked players that are not getting the same treatment as
‘higher-ranked’ players. I’m not saying someone is or isn’t innocent; I’m
saying that everyone deserves equal opportunities.”
“How was she allowed to play?”: Tara Moore critiques
Swiatek doping case
Former World No. 80
Tara Moore, who faced suspension in 2022 due to
Colombian meat contamination at the Bogotá Open, also weighed in on the current
controversy. The Brit, along with Chilean player Bárbara Gatica, was suspended
for 19 months until it was proven neither had fault or negligence, leading to
their bans being lifted.
Moore expressed her disbelief on social media:
“Wait… so she was supposed to be suspended until Dec 4th yet played BJK Cup…
which was (correct me if I’m wrong) LAST WEEK. HOW WAS SHE ALLOWED TO PLAY
WHILST BEING SUSPENDED??? Someone plz explain cause I’m spiralling. @jon_wertheim
@Tennis @TennisChannel”