Chief football news reporter
Paul Pogba's four-year ban for a doping offence has been reduced to 18 months after winning his appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas).
Sources close to the 31-year-old Juventus midfielder told BBC Sport he can resume training in January 2025 and will be eligible to play again from March.
France international Pogba was suspended by Italy's national anti-doping tribunal (Nado) in February after a drugs test found elevated levels of testosterone - a hormone that increases endurance - in his system.
Cas director general Matthieu Reeb confirmed to Reuters the ban had been reduced to 18 months from 11 September, 2023.
Former Manchester United midfielder Pogba took his case to Cas and gave evidence in person at a hearing earlier this summer.
He previously said he would "never knowingly or deliberately" dope and believed the verdict was "incorrect".
Had the original ban stood, 2018 World Cup winner Pogba would have been unable to play until 2027, when he will be 34.
Pogba was provisionally suspended in September 2023 after being randomly tested following Juventus' first match of the 2023-24 season on 20 August.
The positive test was confirmed by Nado in a second sample in October, and the anti-doping prosecutor's office requested a four-year suspension.
Speaking at the time of the initial suspension, Pogba's agent, Rafaela Pimenta, said: "What is certain is that Paul Pogba never wanted to break a rule."
Juventus re-signed Pogba on a four-year deal in July 2022 after the player ran down his contract at Manchester United and left as a free agent following a six-year spell.
However, his return to Turin has been beset by persistent injury problems which also saw him miss the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.
Pogba managed just 162 minutes across five appearances during the 2022-23 season and had played a total of 51 minutes as a substitute in the following campaign before his suspension.
Cas has been contacted by BBC Sport for comment.