Mykhaylo Mudryk of Chelsea looks dejected following the team's defeat during the Premier League match between Chelsea FC and Nottingham Forest at Stamford Bridge on September 02, 2023 in London, England
Mykhailo Mudryk faces a lengthy ban if his second sample also tests positive
Mykhailo Mudryk and Chelsea have confirmed that the winger has provided a positive doping sample that could result in a four-year ban.
Having submitted a positive urine sample (‘A’ sample), it is understood that Mudryk has been provisionally suspended by the Football Association while he and Chelsea wait for the result of a second sample (‘B’ sample).
The player and club have not confirmed what the substance is, with reports in Ukraine claiming it is meldonium. Representatives of Mudryk and the Football Association have not commented. Meldonium is a performance-enhancing drug that was added to the World Anti-Doping Agency’s prohibited list on Jan 1, 2016.
Mudryk last started a game for Chelsea at the end of November, when he scored in the Europa Conference League victory over Heidenheim.
The 23-year-old was then an unused substitute against Aston Villa on Dec 1, but has not been in a match-day squad since.
Mykhailo Mudryk is introduced to the fans on the pitch at half time during the Premier League match between Chelsea and Crystal Palace
Mudryk signed for Chelsea in January 2023 Credit: Getty Images/ Darren Walsh
Chelsea head coach Enzo Maresca had claimed that Mudryk has been missing since the Villa game through illness.
According to the FA’s website, footballers who provide a positive ‘A’ doping sample are provisionally suspended pending the findings of their ‘B’ sample and can face a ban of four years.
In a statement posted on Instagram, Mudryk said: “I can confirm that I have been notified that a sample I provided to the FA contained a banned substance.
“This has come as a complete shock as I have never knowingly used any banned substances or broken any rules, and am working closely with my team to investigate how this could have happened.
“I know that I have not done anything wrong and remain hopeful that I will be back on the pitch soon. I cannot say any more now due to the confidentiality of the process, but I will as soon as I can.”
Mykhailo Mudryk scores
Mudryk scored on his last appearance for Chelsea against Heidenheim last month and was said to be absent with illness for the past fortnight
Chelsea released a statement that said: “Chelsea Football Club can confirm the Football Association recently contacted our player Mykhailo Mudryk concerning an adverse finding in a routine urine test.
“Both the club and Mykhailo fully support the FA’s testing programme and all our players, including Mykhailo, are regularly tested. Mykhailo has confirmed categorically that he has never knowingly used any banned substances. Both Mykhailo and the club will now work with the relevant authorities to establish what has caused the adverse finding.
“The club will not be commenting any further.”
Murdryk joined Chelsea almost two years ago in a deal worth an initial £62 million and still has seven years to run on a contract which was extended by 12 months this year.
Paul Pogba had a four-year ban for doping reduced to 18 months and subsequently had his contract terminated at Juventus.
Having joined from Shakhtar Donetsk in 2023, Mudryk has struggled with the transition to the Premier League and is yet to fulfil his promise.
He has worked with a personal trainer, Dmytro Chapovskyi, who has also been pictured with Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernández.
Mudryk has scored five Premier League goals in 26 League starts and has fallen behind Pedro Neto, Noni Madueke and Jadon Sancho in the Chelsea pecking order.
As part of his £62 million move, Chelsea agreed to a series of bonuses that could push Mudryk’s total fee above £80 million.
Maradona, Guardiola, Pogba: Football’s infamous drug bans
Diego Maradona
Maradona’s career at Napoli was cut short when he was banned for 15 months for testing positive for cocaine after a game for Napoli against Bari in 1991. The same happened with his Argentina career three years later when he was thrown out of the 1994 World Cup in disgrace after testing positive for ephedrine after his country’s match with Nigeria.
Diego Maradona
Diego Maradona was kicked out of the 1994 World Cup finals following a positive test for ephedrine
Paul Pogba
Pogba was banned for four years in February after a drugs test found elevated levels of testosterone in his system. In October, that was reduced to 18 months on appeal after the Court of Arbitration for Sport accepted his ingestion of a banned substance “was not intentional”. Having already served almost all of his suspension, Pogba will be free to resume playing early next year.
Pep Guardiola
The Manchester City manager tested positive for nandrolone during his playing days after leaving Barcelona for Brescia in 2001. He was banned for four months and was even handed a suspended seven-month prison sentence before overturning his conviction on both fronts in 2009.
Adrian Mutu
Mutu was banned for seven months for cocaine use in November 2004 and was later ordered to pay Chelsea a record £14.3 million in compensation five-and-a-half years later. He went on to serve a nine-month ban after testing positive for sibutramine in January 2010 while at Fiorentina.
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