Former world No 1 Simona Halep has called on the International Tennis Federation (ITF) to give her the chance to clear her name after she was provisionally suspended in October for failing a drugs test.
The 31-year-old Romanian former Wimbledon and French Open champion was tested during last year’s US Open and both her A and B samples confirmed the presence of banned blood-booster roxadustat.
Halep strenuously denies knowingly taking a banned substance and says she has evidence which proves low quantities of the anti-anaemia drug entered her body because of an authorised supplement that was contaminated.
In an interview with Tennis Majors, her first since learning of her failed drugs test, Halep said she has so far been denied her right to be heard by an independent court.
“I didn’t want to get out and talk because it was very emotional,” said Halep, who at the time described her failed test as the “biggest shock of her life”.
“Actually, I couldn’t handle it very well. But now I feel the need to speak out loud to my supporters, my fans, and to the public because I am sure they really want to know why it’s taking so long and I really felt the need to do that.”
Halep says she sent evidence about the contamination to the ITF in December and hoped her case would be heard by an independent tribunal in February, but that it was postponed and then a new date in March had also been put back.