Chael Sonnen Talks Testosterone: ‘Yes, I Took It To Get an Edge’

The argument about testosterone replacement therapy and its use in MMA continues to be a popular subject, and it inadvertently took center stage during a recent interview with Chael Sonnen when he appeared on the Jim Rome Show that will air on Showtim…

The argument about testosterone replacement therapy and its use in MMA continues to be a popular subject, and it inadvertently took center stage during a recent interview with Chael Sonnen when he appeared on the Jim Rome Show that will air on Showtime Wednesday night.

Sonnen was part of a panel speaking about performance-enhancing drugs and the recent discoveries made by Major League Baseball and suspensions that may be handed down regardless of positive drug tests being administered and returned.

During the discussion, Rome put the spotlight on Sonnen. In 2010 following his fight with Anderson Silva at UFC 117, the Oregon native tested positive for elevated levels of testosterone. 

Rome asked Sonnen point blank: “Were you looking to get an edge, were you trying to cheat, and did you get caught?”

In response, Sonnen said he wasn’t cheating and fully admitted he did it to gain an advantage, but also denied testing positive for elevated levels of testosterone for his infraction in 2010.

“That is inaccurate.  I didn’t have high levels (of testosterone), I had a separated T to E (testosterone to epitestosterone) ratio, which is not illegal,” Sonnen stated.  “I was in trouble for the disclosure issue and they gave me six months. 

“Testosterone’s not illegal, which we all found out. It’s perfectly legal.  I followed all the rules as I understood them and yes, I took it to get an edge.  I would never take anything if I didn’t think it would help me.”

In September 2010, California State Athletic Commission Executive Director George Dodd revealed in a statement that in a postfight drug test, Sonnen‘s “test came back with a high T/E (testosterone-to-estrogen) level, which is indicative of anabolic steroid use.”

The levels were ultimately revealed in testing released to the media as a 16.9-to-1 ratio of testosterone to epitestosterone.  Normal ratio levels of testosterone in men come in at 1-to-1, while the acceptable levels by the World Anti-Doping Agency reach as high as 4-to-1.  State athletic commissions such as Nevada will even allow up to a 6-to-1 level before considering it a failed test. 

Sonnen‘s levels were clearly over all of those limits at the time.

Still, Sonnen‘s statement to Rome was partially true because in a December 2010 hearing with the commission, the focus became less about his elevated testosterone levels and more about his lack of disclosure that he was prescribed testosterone replacement therapy by a physician to battle a condition known as hypogonadism.

Sonnen failed to properly apply and receive permission to use testosterone injections leading up to his fight, and that was really the major subject dealt with when he appeared before the commission.

Ultimately, the commission opted to suspend Sonnen for six months at the time for his failure to disclose the use of the treatments.

Sonnen continued speaking about the use of testosterone and reiterated that it’s not an illegal substance and that he never tested out of range.  He claims now it was just false reporting that did him in.

“It’s a legal substance versus a banned substance. Don’t say performance enhancing, that’s what this is, we don’t take things to bring us down,” Sonnen stated.  “That’s called malpractice in this country.  All medication is meant to enhance us in America. 

“I took testosterone that was perfectly legal, and I did not have elevated levels.  I wasn’t even accused of that.  The media did that to me.”

Unfortunately for Sonnen this time around, the facts released by the California State Athletic Commission tell a different story.

Regardless, Sonnen‘s larger point was concerning substances being taken by all athletes competing in professional sports—nothing is being taken without trying to one-up the opposition.

The full episode with Sonnen appearing on the Jim Rome Show airs on Wednesday night on Showtime starting at 9 p.m. ET/PT.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Winner of Jon Fitch vs. Josh Burkman Will Battle for Title in Their Next Fight

The first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight champion won’t be crowned at the show coming up this Friday from Las Vegas, but the winner of the main event, either Jon Fitch or Josh Burkman, will challenge for the belt in their next fight. World …

The first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight champion won’t be crowned at the show coming up this Friday from Las Vegas, but the winner of the main event, either Jon Fitch or Josh Burkman, will challenge for the belt in their next fight.

World Series of Fighting Vice President and matchmaker Ali Abdel-Aziz, in an interview with MMA‘s Great Debate Radio for Bleacher Report that will air on Thursday, broke the news that the winner of the bout between Jon Fitch and Josh Burkman will then move onto a welterweight title shot later this year.

“The winner of this fight, Burkman or Fitch, is getting a title shot,” Abdel-Aziz stated. “It doesn’t matter who, but the winner will get a title shot.”

Many wondered when the featured fight was announced if the title would already be up for grabs or not.  Fitch signed with World Series of Fighting just days after he was released from the UFC, and Burkman is currently riding a four-fight win streak, including two victories in the World Series of Fighting cage.

While both fighters bring veteran experience to the table, Abdel-Aziz felt it was premature to put the title up for grabs with Fitch in his first bout under the World Series of Fighting banner.

“Fitch is always going to be a champion, Burkman deserves to become a champion, and the best man is going to be fighting for the title and have the opportunity to have the world title,” Abdel-Aziz explained.  “A lot of people wanted this to be a title fight, and I didn’t want (to) disrespect Burkman in any kind of way, but I think Jon Fitch has got to get his feet wet with the promotion before even talking about titles.”

Fitch enters the fight off of a loss to Demian Maia in his last trip to the UFC Octagon but hopes to bounce back and pick up his second win over Burkman when they meet this weekend. Fitch first defeated Burkman while both fighters were in the UFC back in 2006.

Now Fitch and Burkman will be competing with the knowledge that the winner will move on to fight for the World Series of Fighting gold later this year.

The current agenda for the upstart promotion is for their fourth show to take place in August, followed by cards in September, October and December. It’s over the next two shows that Abdel-Aziz plans to crown the other No. 1 contender in the welterweight division.

“The winner is probably going to have to sit for a little bit while I put on some other fights,” Abdel-Aziz said.  “We’ll see what happens when they fight each other, and the best guy who fits will fight Fitch or Burkman.”

Two up-and-coming welterweight prospects will have their chance to impress this weekend when Tyson Steele meets Steve Carl in the co-main event of the World Series of Fighting 2 card.

More welterweight bouts will also be added to the August and September shows, and when the dust settles, the promotion will pit the most impressive fighter in that list against either Fitch or Burkman for the first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight title.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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Alexis Davis Poised to Become the Biggest Threat to Ronda Rousey’s Title Reign

Ever since the UFC announced that women’s fighters were coming to compete in the Octagon, the bouts that have taken place in the division have all felt like something special was happening. For years and years, UFC President Dana White said that women’…

Ever since the UFC announced that women’s fighters were coming to compete in the Octagon, the bouts that have taken place in the division have all felt like something special was happening.

For years and years, UFC President Dana White said that women’s fighting just wasn’t evolved yet and didn’t have enough stars to promote an entire division in his organization.  White gladly ate his words with the emergence of current women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey, and now with the entire division thriving, it appears women’s MMA is here to stay in the UFC.

From Rousey‘s debut against Liz Carmouche, to the epic back-and-forth battle between Cat Zingano and Miesha Tate, to the debut of former Olympic silver medalist Sara McMann—the women have arrived in a big, big way.

UFC 161 fighter Alexis Davis has been watching this show the entire time because she was one of the first fighters the promotion signed after entering the women’s MMA fray.  She was front and center for Rousey‘s debut win while headlining a pay-per-view card, and this weekend, she will be part of the first international UFC event with women on the main card.

As much as the spotlight has been shone down on the women’s fighters, Davis refuses to look at her upcoming bout against Rosi Sexton as anything more than just another trip to the cage. 

“This just feels like another fight,” Davis told Bleacher Report.  “Even when they sent us out to watch (Ronda) Rousey and (Liz) Carmouche, and we got to go behind the scenes, I felt like I was back at Strikeforce.  It could be different by the time I get there, but I don’t think the nerves will get to me quite as much.”

The attention and the reception of women’s fighting in the UFC has been nothing less than positive.  Each bout has almost been treated like a main event of its own, and there always seems to be something extra on the line every time a woman steps foot in the Octagon.

There was some worry when White said that the promotion was getting into women’s MMA solely because of Rousey‘s star power and skill in the cage that the other fighters would basically act as a feeder system into her title fights.  Davis says the hype surrounding women’s MMA in the UFC has been nothing less than fantastic, and it hasn’t circled around only one fighter thus far.

“It seems like the norm now.  It’s not like, ‘Oh my God! Women are on the card!’  Now, the UFC’s done a really good job of pushing it,” Davis said.  “Now, every couple cards, they are going to have a women’s fight.  So I don’t think there’s quite as much pressure as there was before.  We’re great fighters, and we just have to do our thing.  Whether we’re fighting for the UFC or we’re fighting for Invicta or an amateur fight, we put on great fights regardless.

“A lot of us were worried that it was going to be the Ronda show, and it hasn’t.  They push all of their fighters, anyone who has a fight coming up.  Like sending me out to the press conference, that was a great experience for me to get my name out there and just exposing women’s fighters.  It’s kind of exploded these last few months.”

For her upcoming fight at UFC 161, Davis will be on the main card when she takes on Sexton, and while there’s no title shot on the line, she’s approaching this as a chance for the spotlight to fall on her shoulders.

Since losing to Sarah Kaufman in one of the best fights of 2012, Davis has turned into a machine, submitting her last two opponents in impressive fashion. She’s hitting her stride at the exact right time, and title shot or not, she’s out to prove she’s the biggest threat to Rousey‘s title.

“I’m happy where I am.  I may not be fighting for the title next, but I’ve just got to keep going on the path that I’m on and I’m sure I’ll get there,” Davis said.  “It’s a great opportunity, and there are so many women who are dying to be in the position I’m in, so I’m just going to kind of focus on the fight at hand, and show them why I should be the No. 1 contender.

“Rousey is at the top of the food chain.  It’s going to happen eventually.  She’s still new, still new in the UFC, so eventually it’s going to happen that someone’s going to dethrone her.  Obviously, I’d love to have that opportunity.”

Davis knows that beating Sexton is just the first step towards a title shot.  With Rousey locked up filming The Ultimate Fighter and with her next bout scheduled against Miesha Tate likely to take place in December, the women’s bantamweight title won’t be defended again until at least a few months into 2014.

The pedigree is there, however, for Davis to be the fighter the UFC needs to truly challenge Rousey in the cage.  Davis is a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt with serious ground credentials to not only stop Rousey‘s signature armbar attack but possibly put the champion away with a submission of her own.

The time waiting for a title shot just means Davis has the chance to prepare, get better and become the fighter most poised to rip that belt away from Rousey‘s waist.

“The longer people wait to fight me,” Davis commented, “the worse it’s going to be.”

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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Jon Jones Targeting October Return; Wants Alexander Gustafsson as Opponent

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones was hoping for a summer return to defend his title, but the injured toe he suffered in his last fight will likely push him back until at least October.Jones suffered a gruesome toe injury during his UFC 159 bout…

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones was hoping for a summer return to defend his title, but the injured toe he suffered in his last fight will likely push him back until at least October.

Jones suffered a gruesome toe injury during his UFC 159 bout against Chael Sonnen, but once the doctors looked over everything, it only ended up being a dislocation.

Still, the toe had to heal over time, and while the champion was pushing for an earlier return date, his doctors slowed that down and asked Jones to continue his recovery before fighting again.

According to a report on UFC Tonight on Tuesday, Jones’ camp revealed that while he was hoping to come back earlier, an October date is much more realistic.

Many rumors had swirled that Jones could have possibly filled a slot on one of the upcoming major fight cards as early as August, but as more and more main events were announced, his name was nowhere among them.

Now the revelation has been made that Jones’ toe just was not quite healed enough to push him back into a training camp for a summer fight.

With October as his targeted timeline for a return, Jones is still seeking a fight against current UFC light heavyweight contender Alexander Gustafsson when he gets back in the Octagon.

Jones and Gustafsson have both called for the fight to happen and continue to banter on Twitter, trying to get their bout to become official with the 205-pound title on the line.

Jones has made it clear that he wants his next fight at light heavyweight regardless of the opponent because with a win he would officially break the title defense record in the division currently held by both Tito Ortiz and himself.

The record currently stands at five title defenses in a row, and if Jones wins his next fight, that would mark six wins for him already. 

If Jones can accomplish that goal by fighting Gustafsson, then he may start entertaining other ideas, like superfights against notable names like UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva or a potential move to heavyweight.

Either way, for right now, Jones seems dead set on facing Gustafsson next, but it won’t be before his toe heals completely first.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Georges St-Pierre Possible for Fall Return: Is He Waiting for Anderson Silva?

Following a couple of fight camps back-to-back, UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre was looking for some much-needed time off. But now it seems he is starting to target a return date to the Octagon. St-Pierre last fought in March, when he won …

Following a couple of fight camps back-to-back, UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre was looking for some much-needed time off. But now it seems he is starting to target a return date to the Octagon.

St-Pierre last fought in March, when he won a unanimous decision over longtime rival Nick Diaz at UFC 158. Following that win, St-Pierre advised the UFC that he was taking a vacation after two fights in a five-month span.

During his down time, St-Pierre managed to film a small part in the upcoming Captain America: The Winter Soldier movie while enjoying some time at home with no focus on a fight date. However, on Tuesday night’s edition of UFC Tonight, it was reported that St-Pierre is starting to look at the calendar again with a fall date in mind for his return to action.

According to the report, sources indicated that St-Pierre is looking at a possible October date for his next fight, which also matches some information released from UFC president Dana White earlier in the day as well.

Speaking to Sportsnet in Canada, White said he expects St-Pierre to fight next in October against top-rated contender Johny Hendricks. It is noteworthy that Hendricks still hasn’t been informed in any way when he could be facing St-Pierre.He remains on the sidelines, waiting for his shot at the belt.

“It’s looking like it,” Hendricks responded when asked on UFC Tonight if St-Pierre is scared of him. “Just give me a date. Time, place, that’s all I care about.”

UFC Tonight analyst Kenny Florian agreed with that assessment. As a member of St-Pierre’s team for some time, he knows that fear fuels the champion to work that much harder in the gym. He knows how dangerous a fighter like Hendricks can be.

Florian then interjected an interesting opinion about why St-Pierre isn’t exactly racing to sign a contract to face Hendricks in the Octagon.

“I’m not sure he’s going to fight Johny Hendricks,” Florian said about the potential fight. “Because I think he’s waiting to see what’s going to happen with the whole Chris Weidman/Anderson Silva fight.”

Florian’s theory could hold some weight. It’s no secret the UFC has been trying to put together a fight between St-Pierre and Silva for many years, but the bout has never come together. With the UFC’s 20th anniversary show coming up in November, the promotion could end up placing St-Pierre in the main event against Silva should he get past Weidman on July 6 at UFC 162.

It will be interested to see how this plays out if an actual date and location for St-Pierre vs. Hendricks comes out before the events of UFC 162 happen. If not, and Silva is victorious in his title defense, the UFC could very easily plot a course to put together a superfight for the ages between two of the best pound-for-pound fighters on the planet.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Bellator Confident That Move to Friday Won’t Suffer the Same Fate as TUF on FX

For the last two years, while Bellator MMA has quietly become the No. 2 promotion in mixed martial arts, it has also been searching for the right home on television and the best night to broadcast its shows. Bellator has survived the volatile MMA marke…

For the last two years, while Bellator MMA has quietly become the No. 2 promotion in mixed martial arts, it has also been searching for the right home on television and the best night to broadcast its shows.

Bellator has survived the volatile MMA marketplace by making smart business decisions and slowly building to where it is now as the featured MMA organization on Spike TV. Media giant Viacom owns the majority stake in the company.

It hasn’t been an easy process, however, because Bellator has bounced around numerous networks over the last few years as it looked to grow its fanbase.

On top of that, it was always a battle to find the right night and time to showcase the live fight cards.

The promotion has bounced back and forth between shows on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays over the years and it appeared to have landed on a good night once it signed a new deal with Spike TV. 

Bellator was showcased on Thursday nights starting in January and the ratings were a huge improvement from anything the company had experienced before. But with summer approaching, the executives at Spike TV decided to make a move once again.

Bellator‘s Summer Series, along with the debut of its new reality show, Fight Master: Bellator MMA, will shift to Wednesday nights, but that’s only a temporary move until the fall.

At that time, Bellator will headline one show on Saturday, September 7 to feature the finale of Fight Master. Then, as reported by Sports Illustrated (h/t MMAJunkie.com), the promotion’s regular time slot beginning on September 13 will be from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. ET on Friday nights.

The move comes in large part because of the head-to-head battle Bellator would deal with on Thursday nights if it stayed in its previous time slot against a true powerhouse in American television sports programming.

“We’ve done Friday nights before. I don’t think it’s a surprise to anybody the demographic that watches the NFL and the demographic that watches Bellator on Spike are really similar and the NFL is a juggernaut,” Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney told Bleacher Report on Tuesday. 

“I think they’ve got 11 games in the fall. It just made sense to get off that Thursday night time slot. 

“Thursday was good to us, we had over a million people watching the first and second run together in sequence on Spike together. It was good, it was a really solid start for us, but the NFL is a major player and the demos are so similar it made sense to move off of it.”

The move to Friday nights was immediately met with some reservation because of the difficulties shows  have with pulling in ratings on that particular night of the week.

It’s hard to ignore that when the UFC showcased two seasons of its long-running reality show, The Ultimate Fighter, on Friday nights, the ratings were the worst in the program’s 17 seasons.

Rebney admits that there’s always going to be concern with a move in programming to Friday nights. However, he is confident that the promotion can not only carry an existing fanbase but add more numbers as the year moves forward.

“Fridays can be a tough slot, but combat sports from a live combat sports perspective have always had a pretty good strong hold on Friday nights,” Rebney said. 

 “We’re hopeful to continue that trend in terms of live fight events doing well. I mean, there were issues with a taped reality show (The Ultimate Fighter), but a live sports event that’s happening right there in front of you, I’m hopeful we’ll be able to maintain our current position and our current numbers and outgrow it.”

ESPN has featured its Friday Night Fights series for more than 14 years with positive ratings growth while largely featuring up-and-coming pugilists in the sport.

The other positive that comes from the move to Friday nights is the changing schedule of UFC programming as it expands its current deal with Fox. The UFC will move some of its Saturday night live shows to Wednesday nights starting in late August as part of the launch of the new Fox Sports 1 network.

While the UFC will still feature major pay-per-view cards as well as featured shows on the Fox network on Saturday nights, the move to Wednesdays could open up some more weekend fight fans to tune into Bellator.

“The UFC is making a lot of different moves now and I’m not sure how that will all play itself out in terms of Wednesday nights and the new network and people having the opportunity or the ability to find it, but I do know there are going to be some gaps on the weekends from a MMA fan’s perspective that have not occurred in the past,” Rebney stated.

Like anything else, the new Friday night time slot is a work in progress, but Rebney and the executives at Spike TV are confident fight fans will tune in for what they are expecting to be their biggest season yet.

 

Damon Martin is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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