Around 07.20 on January 9 this year, Jenny Fransson was visited by what she used to call the "doping police".

A visit she was neither surprised nor stressed over.

But the test result would do just that.

In Radiosporten's documentary, the wrestling star now convicted of doping opens up about the time after the message that turned life upside down.

- It was my worst nightmare, I have never felt so powerless, she says in the documentary.

On February 3, the news was out.

Now everyone knew, she saw it in the looks she dared to meet in the grocery store.

Or she was quickly reminded of them when she opened her phone.

- I felt cramped, became paranoid, she says.

"My worst nightmare"

She had tested positive for the anabolic steroid methyltestosterone.

Something Fransson then, as now, does not want to feel and a message that she would later appeal.

The Doping Commission's Åke Andrén Sandberg, on the other hand, says he is satisfied with both the handling and the outcome.

Consequences came immediately: no Swedish Championships, no Olympics in Tokyo and no support from SOK.

It was not until June that the final sentence came - a four-year suspension.

Stick to the theory of sabotage

In October, the news came that the National Sports Board upheld the Doping Board's decision, following Fransson's appeal.

Now the alternative remains for her to appeal the verdict to the sports arbitration court, Cas.

But there is nothing Fransson has planned when Radiosporten asks her.

Nevertheless, Fransson stands by his previous theory of sabotage.

That someone, at some point, somewhere has exposed her to the preparation.

Became a family home

With 39 months left of his suspension from sports, Fransson has realized another dream, which previously ended up in the shadow of the person who was crushed.

This summer, she and her partner Jalmar Sjöberg became a family home for a little boy.

- This dream should not be crushed either.