The Southland Times

All eyes on Stuttgart for Sharapova’s return

- MARTYN HERMAN Reuters

Not much fazes Roberta Vinci after 16 years on tour but the maelstrom swirling around her opening match in Stuttgart against Maria Sharapova will test even the Italian’s vast experience.

Her 946th singles match might ordinarily have been one to chalk off and forget about but standing over the other side of the net tomorrow will be the former world No 1 on her return from a 15-month doping ban.

Whatever else is happening on any other tennis court in the world will become irrelevant as Russian multi-millionair­e Sharapova, who turned 30 last week, resumes a career that made her the world’s richest sportswoma­n.

Debate still rages about Sharapova’s crime and punishment.

While some say the five-times grand slam champion, initially banned for two years after testing positive for Meldonium at the 2016 Australian Open, has done her time some fellow players are angry the red carpet is being rolled out.

With no ranking after such a long period without swinging her racket in anger, Sharapova could have been forced to work her way back from the lower rungs of the tennis ladder.

Instead, with tournament chiefs and sponsors well aware of her ticket-selling appeal she has been handed wildcards into the claycourt events in Stuttgart, Madrid and Rome. It is not an arrangemen­t Vinci approves of. ‘‘My personal opinion is [I do] not agree about wild cards . . . about Rome, about other tournament­s,’’ she said.

‘‘She is a great player – I don’t have nothing against her. She made her mistakes for sure. She can return to play, but without wild cards.

‘‘I know [Sharapova] is important for the WTA, for tennis, for everything. She is a great person, a great champion. My personal opinion is this.’’

Former world No 1 Caroline Wozniacki and Agnieszka Radwanska have also cried foul, believing a player returning from a doping ban should have to do it the hard way.

Sharapova, whose defence was that she had not realised Meldonium had been added to a list of banned substances at the start of 2016, insisted the substance is as common as aspirin in Russia where it is known as Mildronate.

The Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS) agreed that Sharapova was not an intentiona­l doper shortened her ban from two years to 15 months.

Sharapova has hardly been full of contrition and has criticised the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation (ITF) for failing to notify her that Meldonium, a medication she said she had used for a number of years to treat health issues, had indeed been flagged up by Wada as ‘performanc­e enhancing’.

Only last week Sharapova’s agent Max Eisenbud stoked the fires by saying Wozniacki and Radwanska were ‘‘journeyman’’ players hoping to benefit from Sharapova’s exclusion.

A decision is expected soon on whether the French Tennis Federation (FFT) will fast-track the 2012 and 2014 Roland Garros champion into the French Open draw.

Her only other route is to win the Stuttgart title so that she can boost her ranking to enter French Open qualifying.

What adds intrigue to Sharapova’s return is that it comes at a time with the WTA Tour reeling from the news that world No 1 and 23-times major champion Serena Williams will not play again this year after announcing she is pregnant.

With twice Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova recovering from being stabbed, former No 1 Victoria Azarenka still to return from childbirth the cupboard looks a little bare when it comes to headline acts.

So while Sharapova’s might get a lukewarm welcome in the locker room there is no question the money men will welcome her back with open arms, not least Porsche.

The German sports car giant is the lead partner of the Stuttgart event and also sponsor Sharapova.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Debate has raged as glamour girl Maria Sharapova prepares to return to competitiv­e tennis after sitting out a 15-month doping ban.
PHOTO: REUTERS Debate has raged as glamour girl Maria Sharapova prepares to return to competitiv­e tennis after sitting out a 15-month doping ban.

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