Agassi’s memoirs make awkward reading for ATP

DOHA, (Reuters) – When Andre Agassi failed a drugs  test 12 years ago having dabbled with crystal meth then  fabricated an excuse to the ATP, the men’s governing body took him at face value and moved on to other business.

The incident would probably have remained in the back of a filing cabinet had the eight-times grand slam champion not decided to describe in graphic detail in his autobiography how he took the substance and then hoodwinked the ATP into believing  that it was all a simple mistake.

That Agassi, now 39, found himself in such a dark place in 1997, the crisis year of his glittering career, and he felt the need to get high on drugs is sad. That he lied to avoid what probably would have been a three-month ban is shocking.

But probably the most worrying aspect of the story which has stunned tennis is just how ATP officials were so easily duped and how little they have said on the subject.

It makes a mockery of the ATP’s drug-testing procedures in the days before tennis signed up to the World Anti-Doping Agency  (WADA) code in 2006. While there is no suggestion of a cover-up  (Agassi’s case was heard by an independent tribunal) it does raise awkward questions for the ATP.
Considering that Agassi, who retired at the U.S. Open in 2006, was one of the greatest players ever to wield a racket, the ATP’s reaction this week to his confessions has been equally mystifying.

After all the charismatic American was no ordinary tennis  player.
He is one of only six men to capture all four grand slams and he was living proof that you did not need to be tall and powerful to reach the top.
Brains and a gunslinger’s reflexes allowed Agassi to survive and prosper amongst the serving monsters who threatened to take over the game in the 1990s.

Yet the ATP’s bland statement on Wednesday merely repeated their protocol on doping cases, that a player’s anonymity be respected unless he be found guilty.

It did not even mention Agassi by name. The story that was buzzing across the world’s sports pages and websites was treated as a routine piece of office admin.

RAISE SUSPICIONS

WADA president John Fahey was certainly not taking the matter lightly, although in his statement he stressed that action against Agassi was unlikely so long after the event.
What he did say, however, might cause discomfort at ATP headquarters, even if the people in charge at the time of Agassi’s drug-taking have probably moved on.

“(Agassi’s admission) shows the importance of having a global independent monitoring body like WADA in place, which  receives notice of all positive tests in sports that adopted the  World Anti-Doping Code from WADA accredited laboratories and can  follow up with the relevant anti-doping organisation to ensure  that proper management of the results is conducted.
“This ensures that no doping case is swept under the carpet.

“WADA would, however, expect the ATP, which administered its  own anti-doping programme at that time, to shed light on this  allegation.”
The ATP was unavailable for comment on Fahey’s request yesterday.
The ease with which Agassi appears to have got away with a failed dope test, albeit for a recreational substance rather than a performance-enhancing one, will inevitably raise suspicions over a whole era in the men’s game.
It also leaves a nasty stain on Agassi’s reputation.

Agassi was always a good talker in post-match press  conferences. Journalists hung on his every word as he analysed  matches and spoke from the heart.
Throughout his career he was the perfect package for the ATP as they tried to give the men’s game the sex appeal that was provided by Bjorn Borg, John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors in the 1970s and 80s.

Swashbuckling on court, charming off it, the Las Vegas showman was the perfect adversary for golden boy Pete Sampras who often got a rough ride in the media despite his dominance of the sport for nearly a decade.

Sampras, whose record of 14 grand slam titles was recently surpassed by Roger Federer, was seen as a little dull, lacking that unpredictability that has fans flocking to tennis stadiums.

Right now, however, the ATP is probably wishing Agassi’s memoirs were full of the kind of mundane nonsense normally found inside the glossy covers of sporting autobiographies.