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Emma Raducanu refuses insect bite spray due to doping fears

Emma Raducanu refuses insect bite spray due to doping fears
Aiah Bathan
Jan 11, 2025

Emma Raducanu of Britain declined treatment for an insect bite before the start of the Australian Open this weekend out of concern that she would accidentally consume a contaminated product. 

Prior to her match against the 26th-seeded Russian Ekaterina Alexandrova in the first round of the competition, the former US Open Champion admitted that she was getting cautious due to recent high-profile doping instances. 

Raducanu said: “I got really badly bitten by I don’t know what, like ants, mosquitoes, something. I’m allergic, I guess… They flared up and swelled up really a lot. Someone was giving me this antiseptic spray, ­natural, to try to ease the bites. I didn’t want to take it. I didn’t want to spray it.” 

She added: “I was just left there with my swollen ankle and hand. I was like: ‘I’m just going to tough it out because I don’t want to risk it.’ It’s obviously a concern on our mind.”

High-profile doping scandals

Last year, men’s world number one Jannik Sinner shocked the tennis community when he tested positive for the illegal drug clostebol. He was exempted from a ban after an independent tribunal hearing found he had not been at fault or negligent. The tribunal accepted his explanation that he had been inadvertently contaminated with the drug during a massage by his physiotherapist.

The women’s five-time Grand Slam winner Iga Swiatek also tested positive for a prohibited substance called trimetazidine, which was an ingredient for her sleeping drug melatonin. She was also exempted from a lengthy ban when the tribunal accepted this reasoning. 

Raducanu stated that every player needs to be careful. She said: “We’re all in the same boat. I think it’s just how we manage as best as we can the controllable… If ­something out of our control ­happens, then it’s going to be a bit of a struggle to try and prove.”

 

Source: CNA