American tennis player Jenson Brooksby suspended for 18 months on whereabouts failures
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Jenson Brooksby will be eligible to return to competition in January 2025.
PHOTO: REUTERS
NEW YORK – Tennis player Jenson Brooksby of the United States has been banned for 18 months after missing three drug tests in a 12-month window, the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) said in a statement on Tuesday.
The Californian, who reached a career-high world ranking of 33 in 2022, will be eligible to return to competition in January 2025.
The ITIA said in a statement Brooksby’s suspension had been confirmed following a meeting on Oct 10 involving the player and witnesses, including a doping control officer.
Brooksby, who turns 23 on Thursday, admitted missing the first and third drug tests, but had challenged the validity of the second test he was judged to have missed.
However, the tribunal dismissed his arguments and imposed an 18-month sanction.
“Having considered the evidence, the tribunal found that Brooksby’s degree of fault for the missed test was high,” the ITIA said in a statement.
The panel said a doping control officer who attempted to carry out the second test had taken “all reasonable steps” to locate Brooksby at the time.
“The whereabouts programme is a vital tool in maintaining a clean sport and no one wants players to fall foul of the rules in this way,” ITIA chief executive officer Karen Moorhouse said in a statement.
“We urge all players to take the necessary steps to ensure that they are meticulous with their whereabouts filings.”
Brooksby indicated he planned to appeal against the suspension, vowing to “keep fighting” in a post on Instagram after his punishment was announced.
“I have never taken a banned substance in my life and I was open and honest with the ITIA throughout my case,” he said.
“I accepted that two of my missed tests were my fault.
“But I continue to maintain that my June 4, 2022, missed test should be set aside.”
Brooksby said the doping control officer had arrived at his hotel on June 4 to be told that he had not checked in.
In fact, the room had been booked in the name of his physiotherapist at that time.
He said that while he had asked his hotel to add his name to the reservation several days before June 4, staff told the doping control officer he had not checked in.
Brooksby said that the doping officer called his mobile phone at 6.56am – but he had not heard the call because it was switched to silent mode.
“Had the doping control officer called my hotel room even once, I would have for sure been tested because I was awake and had nothing to hide,” he wrote.
The player is currently ranked 301st in the world. AFP


