Markéta Vondroušová will not play again until 2030. The 26-year-old Czech has been suspended for four years by an independent tribunal for refusing an out-of-competition anti-doping test in December 2025. The ruling, announced on June 21, strikes one of the most gifted players of her generation.
The incident dates back to last December. An anti-doping control officer presented himself at Vondroušová's home for an unannounced test. The player denied him entry, citing safety concerns and claiming the officer had failed to follow correct procedures. The tribunal ruled she provided "no compelling justification" for the refusal. Under World Anti-Doping Code standards, refusing a test without mitigating circumstances carries an automatic four-year suspension.
No banned substance was detected in this case. The violation concerns exclusively the test refusal, which makes the situation all the more tragic. Vondroušová responded with an unequivocal statement: "I have never doped." A declaration that changes nothing about the sanction, but reflects the bitterness of a player convinced she fell victim to a procedural misunderstanding.
The ban runs from June 21, 2026 through June 20, 2030, one week before her 31st birthday. Four years that erase what should have been the peak of her career. Markéta Vondroušová will be remembered as the first unseeded player to win Wimbledon in 2023, at just 24 years old. A 2019 Roland-Garros finalist, Tokyo 2020 Olympic silver medallist, and former world number six: her record speaks for itself.
The case reignites the debate around out-of-competition testing and the whereabouts requirements imposed on athletes. Every tour player must report their daily location through the ADAMS system, and controllers can arrive unannounced between 5 a.m. and 11 p.m. A refusal is treated with the same severity as a positive test.
For women's tennis, it is a clean loss. Vondroušová will be missed at Wimbledon, the tournament she left her mark on three years ago with an unforgettable run. She retains the right to appeal before the Court of Arbitration for Sport.


