Marinko Matosevic handed four-year ban for anti-doping violations

An independent tribunal has suspended former Australian No. 1 Marinko Matosevic for four years under the Tennis Anti-Doping Programme. The 40-year-old committed five violations between 2018 and 2020, including blood doping and assisting others. The ban runs until March 15, 2030, barring him from tennis activities.

Marinko Matosevic, once Australia's top-ranked tennis player, has received a four-year suspension from the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA). The decision, announced on March 16, 2026, follows findings by an independent tribunal under the Tennis Anti-Doping Programme (TADP). The tribunal determined that Matosevic violated rules five times between 2018 and 2020, including using a prohibited blood doping method while active, assisting another player with blood doping, and advising others on evading detection. One charge involving clenbuterol was dismissed for insufficient evidence, though deemed likely by the tribunal. Matosevic initially denied all charges, maintaining innocence until shortly before the February 9, 2026 hearing, where he admitted to blood doping in media comments but did not attend despite notices. Tribunal chair Michael Heron KC stated that Matosevic’s actions on advising players “went far beyond passive association and constitute intentional participation” and that the “conduct strikes at the integrity of the anti-doping framework.” The ITIA rejected Matosevic’s prior criticisms, affirming it acted within TADP authority. Investigations began in 2024, with formal charges issued May 15, 2025. Results and prize money from February 2018 events in Morelos and Indian Wells are disqualified. Until prize money repayment, Matosevic cannot play, coach, attend ITIA events (ATP, ITF, WTA, national), or associate with players. Other Australians faced similar scrutiny: Max Purcell accepted an 18-month ban for exceeding IV infusion limits, ending June 11, 2026 after reductions for cooperation; Tara Moore received a four-year ban upheld by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

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Photorealistic image of tennis player Tara Moore announcing her $20M lawsuit against WTA over doping ban from contaminated meat.
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Tara Moore files $20 million lawsuit against WTA over doping ban

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British tennis player Tara Moore has sued the WTA Tour for $20 million, claiming the organization failed to warn her about contaminated meat in Bogotá that led to her positive doping test. The 33-year-old, who is serving a four-year ban until 2028, argues the ban resulted from negligence during a 2022 tournament in Colombia. An independent tribunal initially cleared her, but the Court of Arbitration for Sport upheld the suspension after an appeal by the International Tennis Integrity Agency.

The International Tennis Integrity Agency has charged 2023 Wimbledon singles champion Marketa Vondrousova with refusing a doping test in December 2025. The Czech player cited mental health struggles and fear from a late-night visit by testers as reasons for her refusal. No provisional suspension has been imposed, allowing her to compete pending the outcome.

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The International Tennis Integrity Agency has officially reinstated Serena Williams as an active player, removing her from the retired list on February 22, 2026. This move follows her rejoining the anti-doping testing pool last year, making her eligible for tournaments. Her former coach Rick Macci expressed certainty about a comeback, citing her intensive training.

Dominic Thiem, the 32-year-old former US Open champion who retired at the end of 2024, has teased a return to tennis in a new capacity. In an Instagram story, he announced news coming on March 23 about continuing his journey by passing on his knowledge and experience.

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Building on earlier reports of withdrawals linked to prize money reductions, nine ATP players have confirmed pullouts from the men's singles at the 2026 BNP Paribas Open primarily due to injuries, while seeded Russians Daniil Medvedev, Karen Khachanov, and Andrey Rublev face uncertainty after being stranded in Dubai by UAE airspace closures tied to Middle East tensions. The ATP 1000 event begins its main draw on March 4 at Indian Wells Tennis Garden.

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