Jenny Fransson tested positive for the anabolic steroid methyl testosterone on January 9.

She suspects sabotage and therefore wanted to have her water bottle, which she used at a national camp in the US the days before the test was performed, analyzed.

Fransson has previously said that the Swedish Sports Federation (RF) would help her with the analysis of the bottle, but yesterday she told Radio Sports that the bottle has not been analyzed.

According to RF, it is Fransson's own responsibility to substantiate her story or testify about how she got the banned substance - which caused the 32-year-old to react strongly.

- Right now it feels like I've been thrown out as food year sharks and stands completely alone where all the knowledge I gathered during my 32 years has no meaning, writes Fransson on Instagram.

- Now I should apparently be a lawyer, professor of biomedicine and police at the same time to prove that I have not taken any unauthorized substance. As an elite athlete, it is obviously my responsibility. At the same time that my whole life is taken away from me. Right now I feel no bigger than an ant and not worth anything.

Åke Andrén-Sandberg, chairman of the Swedish Sports Federation's anti-doping commission, believes that an analysis of the bottle may not have been free Jenny Fransson anyway.

- If there is something in the bottle, what does it show? It does not become legally sustainable. But I can understand if there can be a value to her, he tells SVT Sport.