![Tennis world No. 1 Jannik Sinner gets 3-month ban to end doping case](https://assets1.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2025/02/15/71c33b73-16a6-4fd7-8353-1855d8a7a8ec/thumbnail/1200x630/9275b086e384a1d67aa964bd674918d0/ap25026419357653.jpg?v=f303dc12868a012283443d8b9123e5fe)
Tennis world No. 1 Jannik Sinner gets 3-month ban to end doping case
CBSN
Top-ranked tennis player Jannik Sinner accepted a three-month ban in a settlement with the World Anti-Doping Agency and said Saturday the agreement ends a case that was "hanging over me" since his two positive doping tests nearly a year ago.
WADA, which was seeking to ban the three-time Grand Slam champion from the sport for at least one year, had challenged a decision last year by the International Tennis Integrity Agency not to suspend Sinner for what the ITIA judged was accidental contamination by a banned anabolic steroid last March.
Sinner's explanation — that trace amounts of Clostebol in his doping sample was due to a massage from a trainer who used the substance after cutting his own finger — had been accepted.
![](/newspic/picid-6252001-20250215112113.jpg)
American-Israeli Sagui Dekel-Chen, 36, was among three hostages released by Hamas on Saturday morning after being held in captivity in Gaza for almost a year and half. The other two hostages handed over to Red Cross personnel in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis were Israelis Sasha Troufanov, 29, and Iair Horn, 46.