The Guardian (USA)

Tottenham’s Chioma Ubogagu gets ninemonth ban over banned substance

- Paul MacInnes

The Tottenham and England forward Chioma Ubogagu has apologised after she was suspended from football for nine months for taking a banned substance.

Ubogagu, 29, was found to have consumed Canrenone, a prohibited substance often used as a masking agent, as part of an anti-acne treatment. A Football Associatio­n hearing found that Ubogagu had used the substance innocently but should have checked with authoritie­s that it was appropriat­e for use.

Her suspension was announced after the end of a disciplina­ry process but has been in place since the beginning of the year and will run until October, after the start of the Women’s Super League season. “I am so sorry to my teammates and staff that I can’t be out on the pitch,” Ubogagu said. “The club has been fully supportive throughout this entire process, and I am so appreciati­ve of all their help. My faith, family and close friends have helped me immensely in this difficult time. I am eager to be back soon now that this has been resolved.

“I want to make clear that the medication had no performanc­e-enhancing effects for me, but I still made the mistake of not being as diligent as possible, and as a result I am unable to play the game I love until I serve my suspension.

While my dermatolog­ist is aware of my profession, it is also my responsibi­lity to know more about the medication­s I am prescribed.”

Ubogagu, who was born in London but moved to Texas as a child and was educated in the US, joined Spurs from Real Madrid last summer and has three England caps, the most recent of which came in March 2019. On 7 October 2021 she gave a urine sample that was found to test positive for Canrenone. A disciplina­ry process was undertaken which ended on 22 April.

An FA regulatory commission investigat­ing the case found that Ubogagu had experience­d nodulocyst­ic acne for most of her life and had been prescribed a new drug by her dermatolog­ist in Texas. Although the commission ruled that the player should have done more to establish it was safe to take the medicine, it also found she had acted without “significan­t” fault or negligence. She had also cooperated fully with authoritie­s and the commission’s judgment reduced Ubogagu’s punishment from a standard two-year ban.

 ?? ?? Chioma Ubogagu provided a positive test after being prescribed a new drug by her dermatolog­ist.Photograph: Tottenham Hotspur FC/ Getty Images
Chioma Ubogagu provided a positive test after being prescribed a new drug by her dermatolog­ist.Photograph: Tottenham Hotspur FC/ Getty Images

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