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Game, set and mismatch: Inconsistency in tennis' recent anti-doping cases

Game, set and mismatch: Inconsistency in tennis' recent anti-doping cases
Friday, 20 June 2025 Author: Meg Cochrane

In the last year, the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) has charged both Jannik Sinner and Iga Świątek (both World No. 1s) with anti-doping rule violations after they tested positive for prohibited substances. Surprisingly though, the existence of these violations at the very top of the game has not been the primary focus of the tennis world. Rather, discussion has centred largely around the way the ITIA (and latterly WADA) have handled the cases when compared to those of other professional players.[1]  

This article reviews the Sinner and Świątek cases, together with those of Sharapova and Halep, before exploring the concerns around inconsistent treatment and sanctions:

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Meg Cochrane

Meg Cochrane

Meg is a barrister at 1EC.  She has a multi-disciplinary practice and welcomes instructions across a range of Chambers’ areas of expertise.  In sports, recent matters on which Meg has been instructed include drafting an application on behalf of the purchasers of the EFL League One football club, Reading FC, (led by Jonathan Miller); and advising on whether a decision rendered by the International Cricket Council’s Anti-Corruption Tribunal could be judicially reviewed (assisting Lisa Hatch).

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