MMA: Is TRT Becoming the Default Excuse for Cheating in MMA?

I’m going to do something in this article I once thought I’d never do.I’m going to agree with BJ Penn.Recently, the pride of Hilo took to Twitter to vent his frustration about the Nate Marquardt/TRT scandal. In his usual measured, dip…

I’m going to do something in this article I once thought I’d never do.

I’m going to agree with BJ Penn.

Recently, the pride of Hilo took to Twitter to vent his frustration about the Nate Marquardt/TRT scandal. In his usual measured, diplomatic style, Penn explained that the recent rash of TRT (Testosterone Replacement Therapy) cases in MMA was, in his educated opinion, “B.S.”

Amen, brotha (editor’s note: the author of this article is not BJ Penn’s “brotha” in either the biological or Hulkamaniac sense of the word).

It was a little surprising to find myself siding with the vitriolic Hawaiian. I remember the last time Penn made so public an outcry—the seemingly endless BJ/GSP “Greasegate” fiasco—I spent pretty much the whole time doing this.

It was just a three-month long biblical rain of facepalms. It sucked.

Yet here I am, shaking my clenched fist of indignant rage right alongside him.

Maybe it’s because I’m starting to feel like I’m caught in MMA “Groundhog Day” every time another fighter gets busted for having enough testosterone in their system to fuel a high school basketball team.

The script reads something like this: suspicions are raised after Fighter X takes a piss test that melts the Daisy cup (or whatever) faster then a lougie from this guy. Fighter X breaks out the violin to tell one of the two default excuse stories for steroids in MMA.

The first story revolves around Fighter X somehow not knowing that one of the many “supplements” he grinds into his morning bowl of Wheaties each day contains enough testosterone to kill a Centaur.

The second story—and the one that has become the du jour favorite—usually starts with a heart-wrenching story about misspent puberty’s, failing personal lives and the all-important symptom of “not feeling like myself” lead Fighter X to seek out medical advice.

Usually, this comes from a trench coat wearing “doctor” who’s degree is neatly scribbled on the back of a napkin from Harvey’s (which also doubles as his office).

The problem? Low testosterone levels, of course! The solution? Some nice, totally legal, medically approved shots of liquid cheating in your left ass cheek, stat!

Am I being cheeky here (OK, pun intended)? Of course I am.

Yet in both Chael Sonnen’s case and Nate Marquardt’s (the two most recent high profile cases of TRT in MMA) there is considerable suspicion to be cast on their respective physicians.

In Marquardt’s case, his application was all wrapped up except for the minor problem of his doctor being not USADA approved and being reg-flagged in the state of New Jersey. Whoops.

In Chael Sonnen’s case, well, he brought this guy to his CSAC hearing. This guy didn’t bring an M.D.

Let me be clear: I don’t mean to completely discredit the millions of people who take TRT for sound, medically justifiable reasons.

I just find it hard to believe so many of those millions chose to pursue Mixed Martial Arts as a career path.

Look at Chael Sonnen, possibly MMA’s most (in)famous TRT case. The normally abrasive Sonnen told quite a sad story when he was dragged in front of the CSAC to explain why he had taken testosterone in advance of his UFC 117 fight with Anderson Silva.

Rather then go with the obvious reason (“Because I was fighting Anderson freakin’ Silva, and I didn’t think I could smuggle a baseball bat or a .44 Magnum int the Octagon in m trunks”), Sonnen broke into a long soliloquy about non-functioning gonads and critically low testosterone and a non-existent puberty and the challenges of living with a disability.

Never mind the fact that while Chael was battling this debilitating handicap, he was also winning high school, state and national wrestling championships.

Quite a feat for a man who needed a doctor’s needle to even achieve “normal” levels of testosterone, wouldn’t you say?

Or what about Shane Carwin, a teammate of Marquardt’s at Grudge Training Centre and a man who looks like someone stretched Bruce Banner’s skin over The Hulk’s body. A federal investigation revealed Carwin once had equine growth hormone (yeah, horse steroids) mailed to his house.

Carwin recently said there was “nothing to comment on” in regards to those now year-long steroid allegations. He then stuck his fingers in his ears, stuck out his tongue at Ariel Helwani, and ran away shouting, “La la la la! I can’t hear you!”

And then there’s Marquardt himself, who to his credit has been much more forthcoming and remorseful then either Carwin or Sonnen.

I want to believe his sad tale of failing marriage and lost energy and the dreaded “not feeling like himself”. I do. I really do.

But then I remember his 2005 suspension for PED use and his use of the tried and true “Story A” (the supplements in the Wheaties one) to explain away the infraction. I remember his post-fight scrap with Renzo Gracie in Pancrase, his attempt to piledrive Thales Leites and the accusations of greasing from Rousimar Palhares.

And it all adds up to a plate full of excuses and half-truths I don’t think I can swallow.

You know the old adage about where there’s smoke, there’s fire? Well right now Nate Marquardt’s house is billowing smoke from every door, window and crack, while he stands out front trying to tell people that he merely left the cake in the oven too long. Again.

It almost makes me respect Josh Barnett, MMA’s most despised PED user, for the audacity and the—can I call it honesty?—of his “excuse.”

His explanation (to the extent he even has one) pretty much boils down to, “Yeah, maybe I took steroids. Maybe not. Maybe f**k yourself.” Blunt. Unremorseful. Real.

It beats the multitude of fighters who are pissing in fans ears and telling them it’s rain. Or to use a more fitting analogy, are leaking chemical whatever into commission approved testing cups and telling them it’s piss.

I won’t get into the morality or “rightness” of PED use, which is a whole discussion in and of itself. If we’re going to outlaw them, and react with anger and disappointment as fans when someone gets caught using (which we always do, don’t lie) then we need to not be satisfied with the same lame excuse—or worse, no excuse at all—time after time.

Fool me once, shame on me. Fool me twice, well, better blame your non-functioning gonads.

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Dana White Discusses UFC 132, Nate Marquardt and Spike TV Situation

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LAS VEGAS — MMA Fighting spoke to UFC president Dana White about Saturday night’s UFC 132 event, building Urijah Faber vs. Dominick Cruz, whether Wanderlei Silva and Tito Ortiz are facing do-or-die situations on Saturday night, his take on the Nate Marquardt and Spike TV’s recent programming decisions when it comes to UFC.

 

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LAS VEGAS — MMA Fighting spoke to UFC president Dana White about Saturday night’s UFC 132 event, building Urijah Faber vs. Dominick Cruz, whether Wanderlei Silva and Tito Ortiz are facing do-or-die situations on Saturday night, his take on the Nate Marquardt and Spike TV’s recent programming decisions when it comes to UFC.

 

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Dana White Discusses UFC 132, Nate Marquardt and Spike TV Situation

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LAS VEGAS — MMA Fighting spoke to UFC president Dana White about Saturday night’s UFC 132 event, building Urijah Faber vs. Dominick Cruz, whether Wanderlei Silva and Tito Ortiz are facing do-or-die situations on Saturday night, his take on the Nate Marquardt and Spike TV’s recent programming decisions when it comes to UFC.

 

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LAS VEGAS — MMA Fighting spoke to UFC president Dana White about Saturday night’s UFC 132 event, building Urijah Faber vs. Dominick Cruz, whether Wanderlei Silva and Tito Ortiz are facing do-or-die situations on Saturday night, his take on the Nate Marquardt and Spike TV’s recent programming decisions when it comes to UFC.

 

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Nate Marquardt Is ‘Done,’ Dana White Says, but TRT Use a Trickier Subject

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Nate MarquardtLAS VEGAS — UFC president Dana White isn’t against testosterone replacement therapy on principal, he told reporters after Thursday afternoon’s UFC 132 pre-fight press conference, but all testosterone use isn’t equal in the boss’s eyes

“There’s a difference between testosterone replacement therapy and when you get it to a level where it’s performance-enhancing,” White said.

As for the differences between the situation with Chael Sonnen, who White said should have been granted a license to fight “a month ago” after serving his suspension for testosterone use, and Nate Marquardt, who he fired from the UFC after the fighter was pulled from last weekend’s UFC Live card for his use of the same hormone, a lot seems to hinge on past behavior and full disclosure, at least in White’s eyes.

“The difference with Chael and Marquardt, is we can talk about everything in the Chael incident. We can’t with Marquardt. I’ve seen some of the stuff people are saying. You think I’m this crazy, emotional psycho. Give me a break. This isn’t the first time. Everybody’s like, ‘Oh, give him a second chance.’ This would be like the fourth time.”




White pointed to medical privacy laws in the state of Pennsylvania as the reasons why he couldn’t talk more about the Marquardt situation, but seized on Marquardt’s past positive drug test and his problems gaining a therapeutic-use exemption in New Jersey as reasons for Marquardt’s dismissal.

“He tested positive before, then apparently he was on suspension with New Jersey, because his levels were high, then he comes into [Pittsburgh] and he doesn’t pass his medicals. Now you tell me: is that the fourth chance? Or is that a second chance? Sounds like a fourth chance to me.”

As for why Marquardt was even offered a fight in Pittsburgh when he was still dealing with lingering issues from his TUE application in New Jersey, White said he wasn’t aware that Marquardt was not totally cleared following UFC 128, though other UFC officials were.

“I literally didn’t know that until Thursday, but people in my organization did — the people who handled the medicals and things like that,” White said. “I was pretty upset about it when I found out about it on Thursday. …If I would’ve known earlier, I would have made sure it was handled differently.”

The way White sees it, testosterone replacement therapy is not, in and of itself, always a problem for professional fighters. There are some who may legitimately need it for one reason or another, he said, and those fighters “probably need to really take it.”

That said, there’s getting back to normal hormone levels and then there’s getting to higher than normal levels, and the distinction is what matters.

“I think it depends. Listen, it’s obvious that there’s guys who use steroids early in their career, and when you get up to around that age, 30 years old, your body isn’t producing it the way that it’s supposed to. Listen, I’m the furthest f–king thing from a doctor you’ll ever see, but I guess if they go in there and start replacing it and getting it to normal levels where normal, average guys are at these levels. If it’s five or whatever over that, you’re taking too much or you’re going to see the wrong doctor. I think this whole testosterone therapy thing works for guys who absolutely need it, but I think it’s a messy loophole.”

In the case of Marquardt, White said he thinks it’s “fair” that New Jersey won’t overturn his win against Dan Miller, but said the fighter has absolutely no future in the UFC, even though there’s no personal animosity between them.

“Nate’s done,” said White. “I’m done with Nate. Listen, Nate’s a really nice guy. He’s a really sweet, nice, humble guy, but the facts are the facts and it is what it is. It’s easier to go after a guy like Josh Barnett. He’s just callous and rude and he’s a d–k. So when he does it it’s easier to just go, you know what, f–k Josh Barnett. The difference is, Nate’s such a sweet, nice guy, but the same results.”

A few months ago, a fighter like Marquardt might have been able to reconcile his career in Strikeforce after being banished from the UFC. But now that the UFC’s parent company, Zuffa, owns that organization as well, could Marquardt still have a shot with MMA’s second-biggest promotion?

“I don’t know,” White said. “Don’t even ask me about Strikeforce.”

 

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Nate MarquardtLAS VEGAS — UFC president Dana White isn’t against testosterone replacement therapy on principal, he told reporters after Thursday afternoon’s UFC 132 pre-fight press conference, but all testosterone use isn’t equal in the boss’s eyes

“There’s a difference between testosterone replacement therapy and when you get it to a level where it’s performance-enhancing,” White said.

As for the differences between the situation with Chael Sonnen, who White said should have been granted a license to fight “a month ago” after serving his suspension for testosterone use, and Nate Marquardt, who he fired from the UFC after the fighter was pulled from last weekend’s UFC Live card for his use of the same hormone, a lot seems to hinge on past behavior and full disclosure, at least in White’s eyes.

“The difference with Chael and Marquardt, is we can talk about everything in the Chael incident. We can’t with Marquardt. I’ve seen some of the stuff people are saying. You think I’m this crazy, emotional psycho. Give me a break. This isn’t the first time. Everybody’s like, ‘Oh, give him a second chance.’ This would be like the fourth time.”




White pointed to medical privacy laws in the state of Pennsylvania as the reasons why he couldn’t talk more about the Marquardt situation, but seized on Marquardt’s past positive drug test and his problems gaining a therapeutic-use exemption in New Jersey as reasons for Marquardt’s dismissal.

“He tested positive before, then apparently he was on suspension with New Jersey, because his levels were high, then he comes into [Pittsburgh] and he doesn’t pass his medicals. Now you tell me: is that the fourth chance? Or is that a second chance? Sounds like a fourth chance to me.”

As for why Marquardt was even offered a fight in Pittsburgh when he was still dealing with lingering issues from his TUE application in New Jersey, White said he wasn’t aware that Marquardt was not totally cleared following UFC 128, though other UFC officials were.

“I literally didn’t know that until Thursday, but people in my organization did — the people who handled the medicals and things like that,” White said. “I was pretty upset about it when I found out about it on Thursday. …If I would’ve known earlier, I would have made sure it was handled differently.”

The way White sees it, testosterone replacement therapy is not, in and of itself, always a problem for professional fighters. There are some who may legitimately need it for one reason or another, he said, and those fighters “probably need to really take it.”

That said, there’s getting back to normal hormone levels and then there’s getting to higher than normal levels, and the distinction is what matters.

“I think it depends. Listen, it’s obvious that there’s guys who use steroids early in their career, and when you get up to around that age, 30 years old, your body isn’t producing it the way that it’s supposed to. Listen, I’m the furthest f–king thing from a doctor you’ll ever see, but I guess if they go in there and start replacing it and getting it to normal levels where normal, average guys are at these levels. If it’s five or whatever over that, you’re taking too much or you’re going to see the wrong doctor. I think this whole testosterone therapy thing works for guys who absolutely need it, but I think it’s a messy loophole.”

In the case of Marquardt, White said he thinks it’s “fair” that New Jersey won’t overturn his win against Dan Miller, but said the fighter has absolutely no future in the UFC, even though there’s no personal animosity between them.

“Nate’s done,” said White. “I’m done with Nate. Listen, Nate’s a really nice guy. He’s a really sweet, nice, humble guy, but the facts are the facts and it is what it is. It’s easier to go after a guy like Josh Barnett. He’s just callous and rude and he’s a d–k. So when he does it it’s easier to just go, you know what, f–k Josh Barnett. The difference is, Nate’s such a sweet, nice guy, but the same results.”

A few months ago, a fighter like Marquardt might have been able to reconcile his career in Strikeforce after being banished from the UFC. But now that the UFC’s parent company, Zuffa, owns that organization as well, could Marquardt still have a shot with MMA’s second-biggest promotion?

“I don’t know,” White said. “Don’t even ask me about Strikeforce.”

 

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While Nate Marquardt Awaits Clearance, UFC 128 Win Won’t Be Overturned

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Nate Marquardt and Dan Miller at UFC 126Nate Marquardt will have to wait until after Independence Day to have his Pennsylvania state athletic commission suspension lifted. A spokesman from his Alchemist Management team told MMA Fighting that Marquardt’s camp has been informed by the commission that “all of our paperwork and lab results are in order,” and the team is hoping he will be removed from the suspension list around July 5 or 6.

Meanwhile, as other developments of Marquardt’s hormone replacement therapy have come to light, additional related issues have been raised. Among them: if New Jersey denied Marquardt a testosterone usage exemption (TUE) and placed him on its suspension rolls following his March UFC 128 win over Dan Miller, couldn’t the result of that fight be changed to a no contest?

According to New Jersey athletic control board legal counsel Nick Lembo, the answer is no.

As Lembo explained it, a TUE is a two-pronged process. First, the commission and its doctors must determine whether the treatment is a medical necessity, and second, the fighter must still test within normal testosterone ranges to qualify for competition.

Here’s the tricky part. Determining medical necessity is a lengthy ordeal that can take months. By way of context, Marquardt first approached New Jersey officials about a TUE on Feb. 11, and he was still working with them on the process when his TUE was denied on June 23, a full four-and-a-half month stretch.

During that time, state commission doctors examined medical records, paperwork, check blood test results, and interacted with the athlete’s doctors. Because that type of due diligence takes so much time, fighters are allowed to compete while undergoing the process as long as they can test in an acceptable range in the meantime.

New Jersey regulators gave Marquardt approval to fight, provided that he go through this entire lengthy process and that his testosterone levels remained within range. According to Lembo, just in relation to the March bout, he was subject to testosterone-level checks twice before the bout, on fight night, and twice afterward.

“He was not at an unfair advantage against Dan Miller in New Jersey,” Lembo said. “If his levels were abnormal, the fight result would have been changed and Nate Marquardt would have been suspended, and his TUE would have been denied at that time. But when he fought Miller, his levels were fine.”

The problem then, came afterward, as the state continued to monitor him through June. Marquardt had been asked to stop undergoing therapy for eight weeks to check his baseline levels, which he did. He took three tests in May, and two in June. Everything seemed fine until he returned to his personal doctor, a primary care physician. The NJACB had strongly suggested Marquardt continue his care under a board-certified endocrinologist.

On June 16, a week before his scheduled Pennsylvania fight with Rick Story, Marquardt took another test in his continued New Jersey monitoring. The results of this one, however, were high, forcing a TUE denial and full disclosure to the Pennsylvania commission. For the longtime UFC mainstay, it was the beginning of the end of his octagon career. But since it had no impact on his March fight with Miller, the result of that fight — a Marquardt unanimous decision — will stand.

“What we want to do is ensure there’s no unfair advantage,” Lembo said. “On the night of the fight, there was not. Nate came to us and cooperated. He was subjected to several tests. Once the TUE process started, he was compliant all the way along until weeks later, returning to his original treating physician. His next test had problems. If you’re continually tested and your level is high, you’re going to get caught.”

 

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Nate Marquardt and Dan Miller at UFC 126Nate Marquardt will have to wait until after Independence Day to have his Pennsylvania state athletic commission suspension lifted. A spokesman from his Alchemist Management team told MMA Fighting that Marquardt’s camp has been informed by the commission that “all of our paperwork and lab results are in order,” and the team is hoping he will be removed from the suspension list around July 5 or 6.

Meanwhile, as other developments of Marquardt’s hormone replacement therapy have come to light, additional related issues have been raised. Among them: if New Jersey denied Marquardt a testosterone usage exemption (TUE) and placed him on its suspension rolls following his March UFC 128 win over Dan Miller, couldn’t the result of that fight be changed to a no contest?

According to New Jersey athletic control board legal counsel Nick Lembo, the answer is no.

As Lembo explained it, a TUE is a two-pronged process. First, the commission and its doctors must determine whether the treatment is a medical necessity, and second, the fighter must still test within normal testosterone ranges to qualify for competition.

Here’s the tricky part. Determining medical necessity is a lengthy ordeal that can take months. By way of context, Marquardt first approached New Jersey officials about a TUE on Feb. 11, and he was still working with them on the process when his TUE was denied on June 23, a full four-and-a-half month stretch.

During that time, state commission doctors examined medical records, paperwork, check blood test results, and interacted with the athlete’s doctors. Because that type of due diligence takes so much time, fighters are allowed to compete while undergoing the process as long as they can test in an acceptable range in the meantime.

New Jersey regulators gave Marquardt approval to fight, provided that he go through this entire lengthy process and that his testosterone levels remained within range. According to Lembo, just in relation to the March bout, he was subject to testosterone-level checks twice before the bout, on fight night, and twice afterward.

“He was not at an unfair advantage against Dan Miller in New Jersey,” Lembo said. “If his levels were abnormal, the fight result would have been changed and Nate Marquardt would have been suspended, and his TUE would have been denied at that time. But when he fought Miller, his levels were fine.”

The problem then, came afterward, as the state continued to monitor him through June. Marquardt had been asked to stop undergoing therapy for eight weeks to check his baseline levels, which he did. He took three tests in May, and two in June. Everything seemed fine until he returned to his personal doctor, a primary care physician. The NJACB had strongly suggested Marquardt continue his care under a board-certified endocrinologist.

On June 16, a week before his scheduled Pennsylvania fight with Rick Story, Marquardt took another test in his continued New Jersey monitoring. The results of this one, however, were high, forcing a TUE denial and full disclosure to the Pennsylvania commission. For the longtime UFC mainstay, it was the beginning of the end of his octagon career. But since it had no impact on his March fight with Miller, the result of that fight — a Marquardt unanimous decision — will stand.

“What we want to do is ensure there’s no unfair advantage,” Lembo said. “On the night of the fight, there was not. Nate came to us and cooperated. He was subjected to several tests. Once the TUE process started, he was compliant all the way along until weeks later, returning to his original treating physician. His next test had problems. If you’re continually tested and your level is high, you’re going to get caught.”

 

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Alexis Davis vs. Julie Kedzie is Not Kinda Like PG Porn

Strikeforce: Fedor vs. Henderson added Julie Kedzie vs. Alexis Davis to their fight card! Though we were all saddened that Gina Carano wasn’t medically cleared for her June return to Strikeforce—hey, what the hell? How.

Alexis Davis (left) and Julie Kedzie (right)

Strikeforce: Fedor vs. Henderson added Julie Kedzie vs. Alexis Davis to their fight card! Though we were all saddened that Gina Carano wasn’t medically cleared for her June return to Strikeforce—hey, what the hell? How come we were all down on Nate Marquardt‘s junk (*Note I said down, ’cause his testosterone is low…whatever, that joke totally went over your head) to give us the truth and we don’t even know what kept Carano from fighting??? We are so sexist! Regardless, thank you Strikeforce for this match up between two pretty smokin’ hot tough ladies, as you can see by my side by side comparison above.

We’re not excited because Alexis Davis and Julie Kedzie are pretty. If you’ve watched any of those Ultimate Female Sexual Wrestling porn videos, you’d know “pretty” isn’t exactly a requirement to get excited. We’re actually excited to see two very capable women slug it out, roll around, and choke each other in hopes that maybe one day Dana White will welcome them into the UFC Octagon.

So we look forward to seeing these girls in compromising positions as they’ve looked in past fights,

here:

Alexis Davis (black trunks) vs. Shayna Baszler

and here:

Julie Kedzie vs. Gina Carano

And if you clicked on this post hoping to see PG porn, you have problems you *semi-pervert, but you can totally check out some great PG porn with Sasha Grey: here and Craig Robinson from The Office: here.

(*semi-pervert only because the videos contain no actual sex, but they’re really funny.)