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Josh Barnett gets no suspension after arbitration in USADA doping case

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  • Josh Barnett gets no suspension after arbitration in USADA doping case

    Josh Barnett is free and clear of his issues with USADA.

    The former UFC heavyweight champion received only a public reprimand following arbitration in his USADA doping case, the agency announced Friday. That means Barnett will receive no suspension and can return to the Octagon right away.

    Barnett, 40, tested positive for the banned substance ostarine in an out-of-competition drug test stemming from a sample collected Dec. 9, 2016. Barnett and his legal team were able to show the arbitrator that the ostarine came via a tainted supplement. Richard H. McLaren, the chief arbitrator of McLaren Global Sport Solutions, Inc., heard the case.

    “Given the source was established to be a contaminated supplement, along with the athlete’s care and diligence concerning the nutritional products consumed, the arbitrator determined that a public reprimand was appropriate,” USADA stated in the release.

    Ostarine is not approved by the FDA and is illegally sold in the United States as a performance-enhancer, per USADA. It’s not available as a prescription medication in any country, but has been found as a declared and undeclared ingredient in many dietary supplements in the United States.

    Barnett is the first fighter to test positive for what can be considered a performance-enhancing drug and not get any kind of suspension since USADA started leading the UFC’s anti-doping program in 2015.

    “On the evidence before me, the Applicant is not a drug cheat,” McLaren wrote in his decision. “He unknowingly ingested a Contaminated Product. In doing so, he did commit an ADPV because he had a Prohibited Substance in his Sample but he did not actively engage in attempting, in any way, to engage in the use of a Prohibited Substance.”

    Barnett (35-8) last fought in September 2016, a third-round submission win over Andrei Arlovski. The Los Angeles resident and Washington native had failed two drug tests previously, most recently in 2009. Barnett was stripped of the UFC heavyweight title when he failed a drug test in 2002.

  • #2
    Man. When you aren't guilty in these PED situations you still end up f#cked doe. Guy hasn't fought in 18mos ffs. Thats about 5 paydays for Barnett & probably a million+ he lost out on.

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    • #3
      "the arbitrator determined that a public reprimand was appropriate,” USADA stated in the release.
      What's the logic of that? If the guy did nothing wrong he shouldn't even get a reprimand.

      Originally posted by Eff Pandas View Post
      Man. When you aren't guilty in these PED situations you still end up f#cked doe. Guy hasn't fought in 18mos ffs. Thats about 5 paydays for Barnett & probably a million+ he lost out on.
      Guessing he can't do much about it, not sure how the legal system works on cases like this but would be reasonable for him to sue the supplement company for loss of earnings. With the Dillian Whyte case IIRC they were able to prove the supplement company Jack3d was responsible for the contamination and they were shut down by the government, but then once that happens I guess there is nobody to sue.

      I do feel just a tiny bit like if there was anyone who deserved this happening to them it's Barnett. He fucked up whole events with his previous roiding so getting wrongly popped now he's clean is a somewhat luzly. I have liked some of Barnett's fights and interviews though tbf to him.

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      • #4
        Yes, good for Barnett.

        War War Master!

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Willy Wanker View Post
          Yes, good for Barnett.

          War War Master!
          The man, the myth, the legend is back.

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