Nadal Sues Former French Minister; Wants His Drug Test Results Made Public

April 26, 2016 | By Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Photo Credit: Lee Seidner

Nine-time French Open champion Rafael Nadal has had enough of the allegations of doping and performance enhancing drug use thrown his way, filing a lawsuit against a former French minister on Monday.

Roselyne Bachelot, the former French minister for health and sport, went on the French television show Le Grand 8 last month and accused Nadal’s time off from the tour in 2012 was “probably due to a positive doping test.”

Nadal announced the defamation suit on Monday to defend his integrity.

“Through this case, I intent not only to defend my integrity and my image as an athlete but also the values I have defended all my career,” said Nadal in a statement. “I also wish to avoid any public figure from making insulting or false allegations against an athlete using the media, without any evidence or foundation and to go unpunished.”

Bachelot’s accusations came following the revelation of Maria Sharapova’s failed drug test during the Australian Open, and her comments did not sit well with Nadal’s camp and Spaniards in general.

Nadal said he has “complete trust in the French justice system” and said any compensation he is awarded will be “paid back in full to an NGO or foundation in France.”

Nadal followed up his lawsuit filing on Monday by writing a letter to David Haggerty, the president of International Tennis Federation, wanting to make all of his drug-test results and blood profile records to be made public

“It can’t be free anymore in our tennis world to speak and to accuse without evidence” Nadal said in the letter. “I know how many times I am tested, on and off competition. Please make all my information public. Please make public my biological passport, my complete history of anti-doping controls and tests. From now on I ask you to communicate when I am tested and the results as soon as they are ready from your labs. I also encourage you to start filing lawsuits if there is any misinformation spread by anyone.

It is unacceptable and mostly unfair that someone that should have knowledge of sports to a certain point and degree can publicly say something like this with no proof or evidence.”


Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Pointset
Bethpage

March/April 2024 Digital Edition