Comments Thread For: Ryabinsky Admits The Povetkin Mess is Bad, Career is at Risk
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Ryabinsky needs to own this, look how good Povetkin looked in that fight. Just start a boxing league in Russia where PEDs are allowed. No one even talks about how Stiverne also failed his testing for the fight.
I'm tired of watch fat tired HW's laboring around the ring leaning on each other. I'd rather watch giant super humans battle it out than a fat slob like Tyson Fury slap out a jab once every 30 seconds.
The reality is, the majority of all the fighters are using some level of PEDs already. We the fans are getting a half-ass product, open the flood gates already! In a few more years it won't matter anyways. Already guys can get stem cell IV's that are already more potent than trt or hgh and completely undetectable. Gene therapy is coming and then the most advanced PEDs will be the poor man's alternative.
http://www.espn.com/boxing/story/_/i...reatest-moment
Stiverne acknowledged his own failed test, but he emphasized -- and he is right about this -- Povetkin's positive test was the result of a muscle-building PED and Stiverne's came from a banned substance in an over-the-counter energy drink that he took in front of the VADA collector and never denied it.
"They spoke about how I failed a test," Stiverne said. "But I told them that is two different things. Mine was a five-hour energy drink and [Povetkin] is shooting up. So we got online and got an earlier flight so we could get out of Ekaterinburg right away. There were people following us since the moment we arrived. It's hard to explain, but it was like we were in a movie, so we discreetly left the hotel and made it to the airport.Last edited by joseph5620; 12-21-2016, 03:45 PM.Comment
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An over the counter energy drink. Maybe that's why nobody is talking about it. Their situations are not comparable.
http://www.espn.com/boxing/story/_/i...reatest-moment
Stiverne acknowledged his own failed test, but he emphasized -- and he is right about this -- Povetkin's positive test was the result of a muscle-building PED and Stiverne's came from a banned substance in an over-the-counter energy drink that he took in front of the VADA collector and never denied it.
"They spoke about how I failed a test," Stiverne said. "But I told them that is two different things. Mine was a five-hour energy drink and [Povetkin] is shooting up. So we got online and got an earlier flight so we could get out of Ekaterinburg right away. There were people following us since the moment we arrived. It's hard to explain, but it was like we were in a movie, so we discreetly left the hotel and made it to the airport.
One guy claims energy drink the other tainted meat. Both cases are performance enhancers.
BY MITCH ABRAMSON
Bermane Stiverne failed a drug test ahead of his WBC title eliminator with Alexander Povetkin on Dec. 17, the WBC announced on Monday.
But much as it did with Povetkin in his own doping troubles, the WBC has adopted a lenient, boxer-friendly approach and won’t suspend Stiverne, keeping the much-criticized eliminator with Povetkin on schedule, the WBC said in a statement. Stiverne will be fined $75,000 and put on a more rigorous drug-testing program, a veritable slap-on-the-wrist to keep a fight alive involving two fighters who have failed drug tests this year.
Stiverne tested positive for the banned substance methylhexaneamine (also known as dimethyamylamine or “DMAA”) on Nov. 4 as a result of the WBC’s Clean Boxing Program with VADA, the WBC said on Monday. Methylhexaneamine can be used as a stimulant to boost energy and is listed as a banned substance by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
The WBC Board of Governors decided not to suspend Stiverne since they didn’t think Stiverne took it to get an edge in his bout with Povetkin and because it was apparently the first time he had failed a drug test. “There is no evidence that Stiverne intentionally or even knowingly, ingested a banned substance with the purpose of enhancing his performance in any fashion,” the WBC said after conducting an investigation.
The WBC will allow the fight with Povetkin to continue, it said, as long as Stiverne submits himself to a “specific testing protocol” designed by VADA, which Stiverne will have to foot the bill for, the WBC said. If he fails another test, Stiverne will be suspended and won’t be allowed to face Povetkin, the WBC said.
According to the WBC, Stiverne informed officials that he took a dietary supplement called SUPERPHARM in front of a WBC sample collector in order to “facilitate urination.” Stiverne also admitted to taking it “twice” because the “supplement staff at EOS Gym in Henderson, Nevada recommended it to him,” the WBC said in its statement.
“He was looking for a product that would help him with post-work out fatigue,” the WBC said. “He now realizes that he was very naïve by following a store’s recommendation of an off-the-shelf supplement while being ignorant of its contents,” the WBC remarked after Stiverne expressed remorse.Comment
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I'm not excusing Povetkin you twit. Throw the book at him, he shouldn't be allowed to fight for another belt ever again. I only pointed out how prevalent PED use was and that some how upset you.Comment
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