Rafa Nadal has asked the International Tennis Federation to distribute the aftereffects of his medication tests taking after an allegation of doping by a previous French bureau priest.
The 14-times excellent pummel champion said on Monday he was suing Roselyne Bachelot, a previous wellbeing, games and get-togethers pastor, after she claimed the Spaniard had fizzled a medications test.
The Spaniard kept in touch with the ITF asking his medication test results to be made open, British media have reported.
"It can't be free any more in our tennis world to talk and to denounce without confirmation," media reports cited the 29-year-old as saying.
"If it's not too much trouble make all my data open, please make open my organic identification and my complete history of hostile to doping controls and tests.
"Starting now and into the foreseeable future I request that you impart when I am tried, and the outcomes, when they are prepared from your labs."
Nadal has never fizzled a medication test. The ITF declined Nadal's solicitation yet said the player was allowed to distribute them himself.
"Mr Nadal has entry to his hostile to doping records through WADA's ADAMS database and is allowed to make them accessible," the overseeing body said in an announcement.
"The exactness of any such discharge would be checked by the ITF."
Fizzled drug tests in tip top tennis are uncommon yet doping has been in the spotlight since previous ladies' reality number one Maria Sharapova declared a month ago she had given back a positive test for banned substance meldonium.
Nadal to convey Spain banner at Rio Games
14-times fantastic pummel singles tennis champion, will convey Spain's banner at the opening function during the current year Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, he said on Wednesday.
"I'm truly glad to be Spain banner carrier in #Rio2016," the 29-year-old left-hander said on Twitter.
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