This article was first published 8 years ago

Sharapova's great fall: From most followed athlete to two-year doping ban

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June 08, 2016 22:16 IST

Maria Sharapova

Factbox on Russia's Maria Sharapova who was banned until January 2018 on Wednesday after testing positive for the banned drug meldonium at this year's Australian Open:

Born: April 19, 1987 in Nyagan, Russia

GRAND SLAM TITLES: Five: Wimbledon (2004); U.S. Open (2006); Australian Open (2008); French Open (2012, 2014)

MAKING HER NAME

* Born in Siberia, moves to Black Sea coastal resort of Sochi aged two.

* Moves to Florida in 1996 to train at Nick Bollettieri's Tennis Academy in Bradenton. Sharapova's father Yuri, armed with just $700, moves to US with her. Her mother Yelena has to stay in Russia due to visa restrictions.

* Turns professional in 2001.

TENNIS CAREER

* Wins first tour title in Tokyo in 2003. Finishes inside top 50 for first time.

* Becomes first Russian woman to win Wimbledon in 2004 aged 17, beating holder Serena Williams 6-1, 6-4 in the final.

* In August 2005 becomes first Russian woman to reach the top of the world rankings.

* Wins her second Grand Slam after defeating second seed Justine Henin 6-4, 6-4 in the 2006 US Open final.

* Beats Ana Ivanovic of Serbia 7-5, 6-3 in 2008 to win her third Grand Slam title, and first Australian Open.

* Regains number one ranking by beating Petra Kvitova in the French Open semi-finals in 2012 before defeating Sara Errani 6-3, 6-2 in the final to complete her collection of Grand Slam trophies.

* Wins a silver medal in her Olympic debut at the 2012 Games in London, losing the final against Serena Williams 6-0, 6-1.

* Wins her fifth Grand Slam title at the 2014 French Open.

OTHER NOTES

* Has shoulder surgery in 2008 followed by a nine-month injury layoff.

* Misses second half of 2013 season with a shoulder injury.

* Is the richest woman in sport and, with more than 15 million fans, she is the most followed female athlete on Facebook.

FAILED TEST

*Sharapova tells a news conference in Los Angeles in March that she tested positive at this year's Australian Open for meldonium, which is used to treat diabetes and low magnesium and has been banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) since January 1.

*She is provisionally banned by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) pending the outcome of an anti-doping hearing in London in May

*ITF announces a two-year ban for Sharapova backdated to January 26. Sharapova says she will appeal against the length of the ban.

Photograph: Scott Barbour/Getty Images

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