Maria Sharapova during her first round win over Christina McHale on Monday. (AP)
Paris - The former world number one will miss the tournament for the second year in a row
Published: Tue 16 May 2017, 10:38 PM
Last updated: Thu 18 May 2017, 1:01 AM
Two-time champion Maria Sharapova has been denied a wild card for this year's Roland Garros, French tennis federation president Bernard Guidicelli said on Tuesday.
The former world number one, who only returned from a 15-month doping ban last month, will miss the tournament for the second year in a row.
Earlier, French Open organisers are bracing for controversy ahead of Tuesday's decision on whether to grant Sharapova a wildcard for Roland Garros.
The decision on whether the former world number one, returning from a 15-month doping ban, will gain wildcard entry for the Grand Slam is to be announced at 1700 GMT by the president of the French Tennis Federation Bernard Guidicelli.
"Some say she shouldn't get it, others say she served her time," tournament director Guy Forget told the BBC.
"As you talk with players, it's very controversial. So no matter what happens, there will be a lot of questions around that wildcard." The five-times Grand Slam winner was banned for two years for using meldonium, but the penalty was reduced to 15 months on appeal by the Court of Arbitration for Sport which ruled she was not an intentional doper.
After the ban expired last month, the Russian returned to competition at the Stuttgart Open, reaching the semifinals, and progressed to the last 32 of the Madrid Open, too late to earn herself a qualifying spot for Paris. On Monday she won her opening match at the Rome Masters, guaranteeing a qualifying spot at Wimbledon and she could earn a slot in the main draw if she reaches the semifinals of the event she has won three times.
Meanwhile, the 30-year-old is setting some big goals for herself. "I certainly have expectations of myself... when you have won big events and you have been No. 1 in the world, you know that feeling. So that feeling ultimately stays inside of you... and you know what you work for," Sharapova told reporters. - AFP/Reuters