MARIA
SHARAPOVA
Stronger
Af ter
Scandal
IN A NEW MEMOIR THE TENNIS STAR
CHRONICLES HER RISE TO FAME,
HER DEVASTATING 2016 SUSPENSION—
AND HOW SHE’S COMING BACK FIGHTING
ByPATRICK GOMEZ
A
five-time Grand Slam
winner and 2012 Olym-
pic silver medalist,
Maria Sharapova was
poised for success at the
2016 Summer Olympics in Rio when her
dreams of gold disappeared. In early 2016
she tested positive for meldonium (also
called Mildronate), a supplement she’d
taken for years that had just been added to
the World Anti-Doping Agency’s banned
substances list, and the tennis pro was
suspended from her sport for 15 months.
“It’s probably the toughest thing an ath-
lete can go through,” says Sharapova, 30.
But now she’s back: On July 31 she won
her first U.S. tournament in almost two
years. Her comeback hasn’t been com-
pletely smooth. There are still some who
think she used meldonium to enhance her
performance (see box), and she was side-
lined by an arm injury after her recent win.
But the Russian-born athlete is used to ris-
ing above adversity. “I don’t know a lot of
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Telling Her Story
“It’s less a tennis
book and more an
inspirational story,”
Sharapova says of her
memoir (out Sept. 12).
Going all out for her
first post-suspension
win,at Stanford on
July 31.
FROM TOP: LACHLAN CUNNINGHAM/GETTY IMAGES; BJORN IOOSS/TRUNK ARCHIVE; PETER ZAMBOUROS