TENNIS in DEPTH.

ITF admits there’s nothing they can do about Agassi’s case.

by on Nov.03, 2009, under Andre Agassi

Agassi's Book Crystal MethAndre Agassi has played his cards well. The eight-time Grand Slam champion has timed his confessions as sweetly as the backhand returns that felled the likes of Pete Sampras during his playing days. Despite the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) thundering on Sunday that it wants to reopen the case and launch an investigation, the tennis governing body has virtually ruled out such a move.

According to the International Tennis Federation (ITF), it would be very difficult to prosecute the American due to a number of reasons. “It would have been difficult even if he was still playing,” an ITF official told DNA over the phone from London on Monday.

“Not only is the case outside the statute of limitations due to the eight-year bar, we cannot put someone on trial — who has since retired — based on laws which were not even formed when the supposed offense took place,” he added.

The ITF’s statement is significant since it manages dope testing at just about every tennis tournament, including the Grand Slams and all ATP-sanctioned events.

Following Agassi’s admission in his soon-to-be-published autobiography that he had lied to the ATP after taking crystal meth and failing a drug test in 1997, the WADA has since said that “the Agassi issue is not dead yet.”

WADA director general David Howman said on Sunday that “if he’s lied, and confessed he lied, so he’s obviously lied under oath. That warrants further investigation to see whether there might be any other charges.”

But the ITF sees no such developments. “The incident happened before the WADA was formed in 1999 and when the dope-related offenses were managed by the ATP. So it’s extremely unlikely that this particular case would be reopened,” it said.

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