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ATP boss says Jannik Sinner doping case has been done correctly

ATP boss says Jannik Sinner doping case has been done correctly
The head of men's tennis is vehemently rejecting claims Jannik Sinner is receiving favourable treatment and is confident the sport will "survive" if the world number one ultimately cops a lengthy doping ban.

The head of men's tennis has vehemently rejected claims Jannik Sinner has received favourable treatment and is confident the sport will "survive" if the world number one ultimately cops a lengthy doping ban.

In an interview with AAP, ATP chairman Andrea Gaudenzi insisted Sinner's doping affair had been "run by the book" and that, just like Novak Djokovic — who has complained about players being left in the dark over the controversy — he too was not told before the firestorm.

Sinner avoids ban for failed doping tests

Nick Kyrgios slams an independent tribunal's decision to clear Australian Open champion Jannik Sinner of wrongdoing after he failed two doping tests earlier this year.

Sinner has arrived in Melbourne for his Australian Open title defence with his future under a murky cloud after the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) appealed a decision to ban him for one month for twice testing positive for an anabolic steroid last March.

The International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) ruled Sinner was not at fault, accepting the 23-year-old's explanation that the banned performance enhancer entered his system unintentionally through a massage from his physiotherapist, who apparently used a spray containing the steroid to treat his own cut finger.

However, with WADA appealing, Sinner could still be suspended for up to two years if found guilty.

Gaudenzi is urging fans and the media to be patient and let the matter play out.

"I genuinely believe there has been a lot of misinformation out there, which is unfortunate,' Gaudenzi told AAP ahead of Sinner's Open title defence starting on Sunday.

"I am 100 per cent sure that there has not been any preferential treatment. The process has been run by the book and according to the rules, by the ITIA.

"I'm extremely pleased that the ITIA is now in place, which wasn't the case, for example, in the '90s when I was playing. It was the responsibility of the ATP or the WTA to manage the tennis anti-doping program."

Gaudenzi said he was not informed of the Sinner saga before many others, and pleaded for patience.

"I found out two days before the announcement from the ITIA — the way it should have been," he said.

"I initially was a bit shocked. [But] it is completely independent and they obviously went to an independent panel."

Gaudenzi believes it is lazy for armchair critics to offer up "conspiracy theories".

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"It's a very popular thing to say — he's number one in the world, obviously he's Italian and I'm Italian," Gaudenzi said.

"People sometimes confuse the outcome of a specific case versus the process. I think that's where the problem is.

"The process is identical — he hasn't been treated differently. But every case is different, every circumstance is different.

"Sometimes a player might appeal a suspension and might not get the appeal. Sometimes they do, and it depends on the evidence and it depends on the expert opinion and it depends on the substance.

"It depends on a very large number of variables."

Gaudenzi is pleading for fans and stakeholders to let the matter play out

"The case is still ongoing. WADA appealed so it is not over yet and justice is doing its course," he said.

"But I really want to underline and assure everyone that the process has been 100 per cent by the book.

"And we have the full evidence and anyone who wants to dig deeper and actually read the documents will understand."

Jannik Sinner is warming up for his Australian Open title defence.

If Sinner is banned, Gaudenzi concedes, "obviously, it's not good for the sport and it would be a shame".

"But we will have to live with it and justice will do its course," he said.

"If that is the case, I think he'll survive and I think we'll survive. Overall, tennis is a very strong product.

"When I started, I was in the age of, 'OK, you're going to have an issue because Rafa [Nadal] or Roger [Federer] or Novak [Djokovic] are retiring and there's a new generation'.

"And I've lived through the whole Agassi and Sampras, 'when they retire it's going to be a disaster' type of thing.

"But the whole product is very, very strong."

AAP

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