Qatar Tribune

Zverev to face no action from ATP after domestic abuse investigat­ion

The 25-year-old German had faced accusation­s from an ex-girlfriend

- PA MEDIA/DPA

THE ATP will take no action against Alexander Zverev after a 15-month investigat­ion into allegation­s of domestic abuse found “insufficie­nt evidence.” The 25-year-old German, currently ranked 14 in the world, was accused of domestic abuse by his former girlfriend, Olya Sharypova, in 2020.

An independen­t investigat­ion began in October 2021 which focused on alleged abuse at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Shanghai in 2019, as well as other locations including Monaco, New York and Geneva.

However, it was unable to substantia­te the allegation­s and as a result no disciplina­ry action will be taken by the ATP, the governing body announced on Tuesday.

ATP chief executive Massimo Calvelli said in a statement: “The seriousnes­s and complexity of these allegation­s required an extremely thorough investigat­ive process and considerab­le resources.

“It also required us to turn to specialist investigat­ors, which was new ground for ATP.

“We ultimately believe the exhaustive process was necessary to reach an informed judgement.

“It has also shown the need for us to be more responsive on safeguardi­ng matters. It is the reason we’ve taken steps in that direction, with a lot of important work still ahead.”

Zverev, who rose to world number two last year, has played just one tournament since suffering a serious ankle injury against Rafael Nadal at the French Open in June.

He was beaten in the second round of the Australian

Open by Michael Mmoh earlier this month.

In a statement, Zverev said: “From the beginning, I have maintained my innocence and denied the baseless allegation­s made against me. I welcomed and fully cooperated with the ATP’s investigat­ion and am grateful for the organisati­on’s

time and attention in this matter.

“This decision marks a third, neutral, third-party arbiter who has reviewed all relevant informatio­n and made a clear and informed decision on this matter in my favor. In addition to the ATP’s independen­t investigat­ion, I have also initiated court proceeding­s in Germany and Russia, both of which I have won.

“I am grateful that this is finally resolved and my priority now is recovering from injury and concentrat­ing on what I love most in this world - tennis.

“I want to thank my friends, family and fans for their ongoing support. We followed the long and difficult process and justice has prevailed.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? Alexander Zverev is currently 14th in the world and was beaten in the second round of the Australian Open by Michael Mmoh.
(AFP) Alexander Zverev is currently 14th in the world and was beaten in the second round of the Australian Open by Michael Mmoh.

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