Wimbledon is top of mind for many tennis fans, but not because it’s around the corner.The tournament’s 2023 champion, Marketa Vondrousova, has been handed a four-year ban from tennis for refusing an after-dark anti-doping test back in December. For a 27-year-old athlete who has never failed a drug test, this is effectively a forced retirement.ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON'T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!The Czech player has stated that she refused to open her door to the doping control officer because the officer failed to provide proper identification or follow protocol. She explained that she was scared and alluded to the in-home knife attack of her compatriot Petra Kvitova in 2016, which left Kvitova with serious injuries and a lengthy absence from competition. She further stated that at the time she had suffered an acute stress reaction and generalized anxiety disorder, which impaired her decision-making capabilities.Supporters of the ban say, "rules are rules." It is a known fact that anti-doping officers can and do show up at inconvenient hours to perform invasive and uncomfortable tests. The testing must be done during random times to ensure the lowest probability of manipulating results, with the aim of maintaining a clean sport.But when we put policy over people, we have gone too far.Yes, rules are rules. But the question is not what rules are — it is why they are. Vondrousova was tested again three days after her refusal, and the result was negative. Her ban is as long as the "starting point" for a ban for testing positive.The reason for the hefty four-year ban resulting from a refusal, according to International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) CEO Karen Moorhouse, is that "you can’t have an anti-doping system where a player is in a better place by refusing to take a test than they would [be] by taking a test and testing positive."CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COMCertainly, we don’t want it to become commonplace that athletes can refuse a test and simply be retested later. But we do need to consider the circumstances of Vondrousova’s case and ask whether a four-year ban serves the purpose of the policy. The purpose, again, is to maintain a clean sport. Vondrousova tested negative.Critics would argue that a later negative test cannot conclusively establish what would have been found on the night of the refusal. This is a legitimate concern. However, even accepting that uncertainty, the particular circumstances of this case raise questions about whether the maximum penalty serves justice as well as deterrence.Instead of dismissing valid concerns over personal safety to strictly adhere to a policy whose purpose in this case is not served by implementing a four-year ban, the ITIA should take additional measures to protect athletes and not just the sport that wouldn’t exist without them. Rather than forcing athletes to choose between compliance and personal safety, the ITIA can consider enhanced identification procedures, advance verification mechanisms, or accompaniment protocols for after-dark testing visits.In no world is it reasonable to tell women to ignore their instincts when a stranger shows up at their home unannounced after dark.