Brock Lesnar FAILED June 28 drug test - 11 days before UFC 200

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USADA: Brock Lesnar fails out-of-competition test for UFC 200
http://mmajunkie.com/2016/07/usada-brock-lesnar-fails-out-of-competition-test-for-ufc-200


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Brock Lesnar reportedly was tested five times after initial testing data was released by UFC anti-doping partner USADA.

Today, the promotion announced that Lesnar failed an out-of-competition test conducted June 28, or 11 days prior to his fight against Mark Hunt at UFC 200 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The positive test was reported by the WADA-accredited UCLA Olympic Analytical Laboratory on July 14, five days after the event.

Lesnar, per a release, has been notified of a potential anti-doping violation and is likely to receive a provisional suspension by the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which regulated the July 9 pay-per-view event.

Per the UFC and USADA’s standard procedure on potential doping violations, the substance for which Lesnar tested positive was not disclosed, and will not be unless the fighter discloses it or the results management process has concluded.

Returning to the octagon for the first time in five years, Lesnar (6-3 MMA, 5-3 UFC), a former heavyweight champion and pro wrestling champion in the WWE, evaded the heavy-handed Hunt (12-11-1 MMA, 7-5-1 UFC) and repeatedly took the fight to the mat and worked ground and pound. Judges gave him a unanimous decision by scores of 29-27.

Related:

Mark Hunt unhappy with USADA exemption for 'juiced to the gills' Brock Lesnar



Afterward, Lesnar reaffirmed his plans to return to the wrestling ring at the WWE’s “SummerSlam 2016” and said he would decide afterward whether to continue his comeback in MMA.

Here is the UFC’s full statement on Lesnar’s violation:

“The UFC organization was notified today that the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) has informed Brock Lesnar of a potential Anti-Doping Policy violation stemming from an out-of-competition sample collection on June 28, 2016. USADA received the testing results from the June 28, 2016 sample collection from the WADA-accredited UCLA Olympic Analytical Laboratory on the evening of July 14, 2016.

“USADA, the independent administrator of the UFC Anti-Doping Policy, will handle the results management and appropriate adjudication of this case. It is important to note that, under the UFC Anti-Doping Policy, there is a full fair legal review process that is afforded to all athletes before any sanctions are imposed. The Nevada State Athletic Commission also retains jurisdiction over this matter as the sample collection was performed in close proximity to Lesnar’s bout at UFC 200 in Las Vegas.

“Consistent with all previous potential anti-doping violations, additional information will be provided at the appropriate time as the process moves forward.”
 
I had my annual physical back in April (Emory U. Hospital in midtown Atlanta) and they drew SIX vials of blood. The full lab results report was available for me to read in my online patient portal within 24 HOURS. They ain't got but ONE job - so why the fuck does it take the USADA so long to complete its tests???
:idea:
 
I had my annual physical back in April (Emory U. Hospital in midtown Atlanta) and they drew SIX vials of blood. The full lab results report was available for me to read in my online patient portal within 24 HOURS. They ain't got but ONE job - so why the fuck does it take the USADA so long to complete its tests???
:idea:

UFC 200

He already lost Jon Jones
He wasn't going to fuck this up too

Plus he was in the process of selling UFC for 4 Bil :smh:
 
Fuck giving Jon Jones a pass. I don't care if he got suspended for taking Baby Tylenol. Jones should've been on his BEST behavior. No banned drugs, no questionable substances. It was estrogen blockers more than likely, not bullshit weed. Jones cost DC and his family MILLIONS, not to mention his own family paid the price as well.

...AND we had to watch that bullshit fight between DC and Silva.
 
I heard he had a clause where he didn't even have 2 test for ufc. I could be totally wrong but i thought i heard that somewhere leading up 2 the fight
 
Everybody talking about ufc200 was a good event...

Shit was lukewarm to me...luckily i didn't pay for that ppv or the alcohol i consumed in the process of watching it
It was. And I'm glad I didn't either. The sport has way too many injuries and variables.

I actually like the fact that it's unpredictable. Tells me the fights ain't ficed .but this tells you why FIGHTS and other competitive sports ARE fixed to some degree. People need em to be.
 
Meanwhile

Jon jones do a lil hit of weed

He suspended

Jon Jones didn't smoke weed... rumor is that he went to a party and had an energy drink that increases sexual performance, I guess, he didn't think to read the label because he had pussy on his mind while his fiance is at home with their kids....
 
I had my annual physical back in April (Emory U. Hospital in midtown Atlanta) and they drew SIX vials of blood. The full lab results report was available for me to read in my online patient portal within 24 HOURS. They ain't got but ONE job - so why the fuck does it take the USADA so long to complete its tests???
:idea:

The testing they do takes time and thousands and thousands of dollars...it's not your average tests. I think it's $45,000
 
I had my annual physical back in April (Emory U. Hospital in midtown Atlanta) and they drew SIX vials of blood. The full lab results report was available for me to read in my online patient portal within 24 HOURS. They ain't got but ONE job - so why the fuck does it take the USADA so long to complete its tests???
:idea:


Fam, a regular blood test and a PED test (urine or blood) aint the same deal at all.
 
Lesnar might have ruined a perfectly good story
http://espn.go.com/blog/mma/post/_/id/23159/lesnar-might-have-ruined-a-perfectly-good-story


In hindsight, it was a feel-good story that might have felt a little bit too good to be true.

Just days shy of his 39th birthday, former UFC champion Brock Lesnar returned from a five-year MMA retirement to defeat Mark Hunt on Saturday at UFC 200, allowing the WWE star a moment of two-fold redemption.

Lesnar flagged for potential anti-doping violation
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Brett Okamoto breaks down USADA notifying Brock Lesnar of a potential anti-doping violation on a June 28 test and how it could affect Lesnar's return to the Octagon in the future. Watch


The victory gave Lesnar a chance to rewrite the ending of a mixed martial arts career robbed by a nearly fatal battle with diverticulitis years earlier. Meanwhile, the gift of his star power twice saved the UFC’s landmark event, first after Conor McGregor was pulled in April, and once again three days before UFC 200 when Jon Jones was popped for a doping violation.

For one more day, the obsessively competitive Lesnar once again owned the headlines of the unscripted sporting world. One week later, he’s back, but for all the wrong reasons.

Lesnar and the UFC were informed by the United States Anti-Doping Association on Friday that the heavyweight had been flagged for his own potential anti-doping violation, stemming from an out-of-competition test administered on June 28.

If the news feels cryptic, it is. USADA, which has administered the UFC’s anti-doping program since last July, has a standard policy not to divulge the cause of the potential violation, meaning the public may never know. What we do know is Lesnar wasn’t flagged for recreational drugs, which USADA doesn’t test for outside of competition and his fate ultimately resides in the hands of both USADA and the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which oversaw the fight in Las Vegas.

Without knowing the specifics or severity of his “possible” violation, reacting critically against Lesnar is a slippery slope for now. But to act like the news was shocking for anyone following closely would have been disingenuous, just the same.

Lesnar became the first fighter to be granted an exemption by the UFC from a four-month drug testing window before the fight in a story that was covered by many mainstream outlets. So was Hunt’s belief that the WWE’s drug testing was a joke, along with his telling Fox Sports Australia that Lesnar would be “juiced to the gills” entering the fight.

But none of these stories were elevated to the level of prominence even close to the buzz and excitement that surrounded Lesnar’s short-notice return.

Hunt believed the UFC’s decision to waive the mandatory four-month notice for all fighters returning from retirement -- reserved for “exceptional circumstances” according to its policy, which is enforced by USADA -- essentially allowed Lesnar to train without being tested for the majority of his camp.

In the end, Lesnar submitted eight tests to USADA, according to the agency’s website, in the 35 days between the June 4 announcement of his return and UFC 200 on July 9. But considering Lesnar, who works a part-time schedule with WWE, hadn’t been involved in an on-screen storyline since WrestleMania 32 on April 3, the timing of his announcement to return remains somewhat dubious in light of Friday’s news.

Simply put: Anyone who watched Lesnar compete at UFC 200 or saw the kind of shape he was in wouldn’t be honest with themselves if they believed he had been preparing for north of only one month. It’s doubly troubling when you consider that’s the same amount of notice that was given to Hunt.

If Lesnar is found to have tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs ahead of the fight, the decision by the UFC to make the exemption will be looked at as short-sighted at best, placing their financial interests ahead of fighter safety. Had Lesnar been forced to give the four-month notice and still tested dirty during training camp, he would've been pulled from the fight.

The situation also makes Lesnar look like a hypocrite.

He reacted to comments about his hulking physique in the buildup to the fight by defiantly saying, “I’m a white boy and I’m jacked, deal with it.” He was also asked directly just two days before the fight for his opinion of Jones’ doping violation.

“It’s unfortunate,” said Lesnar, who had previously never tested positive for banned substances during his UFC career. “It’s unprofessional. That’s just what it is. What else can I say? Merry Christmas to Brock Lesnar.”

Lesnar’s UFC return was deemed a “one-off” by WWE, which allowed him permission to take the fight despite admitting publicly they may not have “supported it necessarily.” His victory left him largely free of injury outside of a swollen left eye, clearing him for a quick return to compete at WWE SummerSlam on Aug. 21 (although Lesnar teased of a possible UFC return after the fight).

Now, his immediate future with both organizations will be very much dependent on the severity of his doping violation.

At the very least, the news is unwanted negative press at the wrong time, as WWE is days away from a much-publicized draft and storyline brand split, and the UFC was recently sold for a reported $4 billion to WME-IMG.

Should we have known better watching Lesnar flex on the scale before the fight or been more vocal when he relied on his gas tank late in Round 3 against Hunt despite not having entered the Octagon in five years? If we hadn't already, the answer is sadly, yes.

For many, the news is a bitter pill to swallow as Lesnar remains the rare athlete who is so much larger than life that everything he does simply has to be true because there’s no one else like him.

But we aren't living in a dream world. And for Lesnar, the reality is this casts a potentially dark shadow on the unique career of a freak athlete and entertainer whose legend has long been connected with his indomitable size and super-human athleticism.

Even more, it might have ruined a perfectly good story.
 
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