Do you think Fury was guilty of using the performance enhancing steroid, nandrolone?

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  • Dr. Z
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    • Dec 2020
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    #1

    Do you think Fury was guilty of using the performance enhancing steroid, nandrolone?

    Do you think Fury was guilty of using the performance enhancing steroid, nandrolone?

    For those that weren't aware, back in 2015 both Tyson and Hughie Fury tested positive for the anabolic steroid, nandrolone. It was swiftly swept under the rug but was common knowledge at the time. Now that Fury and his followers are trying to convict Usyk without evidence, what do you think?

    "Fury and his cousin Hughie, a fellow boxer, sparked controversy when they tested positive for nandrolone in February 2015 following a urine test. In September 2016, Fury was accused of refusing to provide another sample for further testing."​
    Upon testing positive Fury was put under the spotlight for his su****ious actions following the failed tests.
    This includes:
    • Refusing to provide a second test
    • Both men denied
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      , and provided not one, but TWO EXCUSES for the positive tests. They maintained that the presence of the banned substance was because they had taken contaminated fitness supplements or because they had regularly eaten uncastrated wild boar.
    • Once the excuse was in place they were then accused of bribing a local farmer (Martin Carefoot) to vouch for them
    • He said he lied about supplying boar meat to Fury to defend his failed drug test. However, once it became international news he fronted the media to expose the lies and corruption.
    • Mr Carefoot claimed he was offered £25,000 to concoct a bizarre series of lies

      Carefoot said at the time: 'I feel fed up with the lies and deceit. The public needs to know the truth. I'm happy the public knows what all this is about. I feel cheated and used.'
    But, in a shocking u-turn, he has now withdrawn his allegations, after it triggered the reopening of UK Anti-Doping investigation and threatened the future of Tyson Fury's long-awaited fight with Anthony Joshua next year.

    Mr Carefoot told the Times: 'I've had nothing but problems right from the beginning of this, and I don't want to get involved.'

    The farmer refused to elaborate on his reasons for withdrawing his claims.

    During the initial investigation, Mr Carefoot said he had regularly supplied wild boar meat to the Furys, sending it to their gym in Bolton.

    However, in March, the farmer said his statements had been fabricated, and not only had he not supplied meat to the Furys, but he had never kept or killed wild boar. He said he was paying back 'a few favours' when he wrote the initial letter about supplying boar meat.

    However, he then found himself in difficulty when asked to provide photos of wild boar on his farm and images of uncastrated boars.

    He eventually confessed that the photographs he sent the lawyers were taken not at his farm but at the nearby Bowland Wild Boar Park in Chipping. He also revealed he had never received his £25,000 fee from Fury's entourage. 'I have never kept wild boar,' he said. 'I have never killed a wild boar. The closest I've ever got to a wild boar is when we once got some for a customer in the shop, and I actually chopped it up, and that's the closest I've ever come.'


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