ITF Drops Agassi Drug Inquiries..Statue of Limitations Sited

Tennis officials drop Agassi drug inquiries
AP - Tuesday, March 16, 2010

ROME (AP)—Tennis officials have closed the book on Andre Agassi's drug revelations.

International Tennis Federation president Francesco Ricci Bitti told The Associated Press on Wednesday that despite appeals from the World Anti-Doping Agency, the statute of limitations in the case expired long ago and no retroactive punishment was possible.

In Agassi's recently published autobiography, ``Open,'' he wrote that he took crystal meth in 1997 and lied to the ATP to avoid a suspension after failing a doping test.

The statute of limitations in the case was eight years.

``The ATP is the only entity that could have shed light on what happened, but it's too late,'' Ricci Bitti said. ``WADA asked information from the ATP without much success. As a member of WADA's executive committee, I'm obviously very disappointed that Agassi - such a great and emblematic player - decided to make these revelations.

``I'm sure he had his reasons, which were not easy to understand. ... There were a lot of strange reasons involved. From a sports point of view, it's very unfortunate. I think what he did hurt our sport.''

In another drug issue, Ricci Bitti is awaiting the outcome of appeals launched by Belgian players Yanina Wickmayer and Xavier Malisse, who were given one-year bans for violating WADA's whereabouts rule.

The suspensions were lifted in December after the players appealed to a Belgian court, and both still have appeals pending with the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Wickmayer also has taken her case to the European Commission and the European Court for Human Rights.

``It's a very important case because it could have consequences resulting in the revision of the WADA code,'' said Ricci Bitti, who is also an International Olympic Committee member.

Wickmayer claims she was not properly informed of the online reporting requirements for drug-testing that led to her ban.

Under WADA rules, elite athletes must be available for out-of-competition testing for one hour a day, 365 days a year. They must give three months' notice of where they will be so they can be tested.
 
Crystal meth is a performance DEBLITATING drug. I don't even understand why a doping agency would be concerned about it. Meth users I see in hospitals would be giggling their way through a tennis match.
 
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