The most talked about in these last hours is, without a doubt, the doping case of Jannik Sinner and his subsequent innocence. There are many uncertainties about why it has come to light now or how he got contaminated to test positive on two occasions. The Italian and his team managed to prove that those positives were due to massages received from his physio, Giacomo Naldi, after he had treated a cut on his finger with a spray containing Clostebol, a prohibited substance. Well, that matter raises some doubts. According to the report published by ITIA, his physio cut his finger on March 3 and put a band-aid on from that day until March 5. Naldi confessed to using the spray from March 5 to 13, mentioning that on the 10th, he applied Trofodermin before massaging Sinner without gloves. The strange thing about all of this is that Naldi was not seen wearing any bandages on his finger during the Italian's matches in Indian Wells, except for the 10th when he was wearing a band-aid and the day they performed a doping test on Jannik.
That's it, I'm finished with this.
— José Morón (@jmgmoron) August 21, 2024
One VERY IMPORTANT thing, which is the most puzzling part of Sinner's case. For me, this is the strangest aspect of the whole process.
According to the report, Naldi's finger cut happened on March 3. He claims he wore a band-aid from the 3rd to the… pic.twitter.com/HOd5kLJxGQ
This news is an automatic translation. You can read the original news, El asunto más inexplicable del caso de doping de Sinner

