The Asian Age

Sharapova wild card polarises opinions

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Indian Wells, March 10: The wild card tournament invitation­s awaiting Maria Sharapova when she returns from a 15-month doping ban next month divided opinion among players at Indian Wells.

“This is, all over, a strange situation,” Germany’s Angelique Kerber said of the Stuttgart WTA tournament’s decision to issue a wild card to Sharapova, who will play her first match since the 2016 Australian Open on April 26 — just hours after her ban for using meldonium ends.

“I don’t know what to say about this because it’s a little bit strange for the other players that somebody can just walk on site Wednesday and play Wednesday,” added Kerber, who is set to return to number one in the world after Serena Williams’ withdrawal from the tournament in the California desert.

“This is a German tournament,” said Kerber, the reigning Stuttgart champion who indicated that there were plenty of German players who could benefit from a wild card.

Sharapova, without any world ranking to gain direct access to tournament­s in the wake of her ban, has also been issued wild cards to play in Rome and Madrid.

She was also to meet with the French Tennis Federation to plead her case for a wild card at Roland Garros, where she is a two-time champion, although federation officials have voiced reservatio­ns about issuing a wild card to someone convicted of a doping offense.

France’s world number eight Jo-Wilfried Tsonga said he didn’t think fivetime Grand Slam winner Sharapova should get a French Open wild card.

“I would not do it,” he said. “It’s like if you give a sweet to a kid who did a bad thing, it’s going to do it again. It sends the wrong message.”

Men’s number one Andy Murray hit out at the wild cards already issued Sharapova, telling The Times last week that he believed a player “should have to work your way back” from a drugs ban.”

“The tournament­s are well within their rights to give a wild card, there’s nothing saying they can’t,” he said.

“There’s no rule in place, so the tournament­s are going to do what they think is best for their event. But should you get a wild card into every event when you come back? I’m not sure about that. That’s something that maybe should be looked at.”

Romanian Simona Halep thinks Sharapova’s past achievemen­ts justify the wild cards.

“She was number one in the world and won Grand Slam titles,” Halep said. “But even without wild cards she could come back easily.

 ??  ?? Maria Sharapova
Maria Sharapova

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