As it turns out, random drug tests are bad news for many of the UFC’s biggest stars.
After failing a random drug test, Chael Sonnen effectively retired from mixed martial arts—leaving the middleweight division’s No. 1 contender,…
As it turns out, random drug tests are bad news for many of the UFC’s biggest stars.
Belfort won’t be entering the Octagon against anybody next month, the UFC told MMAjunkie.
This leaves the former champion and fans wondering who he’ll be standing across in his next fight in the UFC. He failed a drug test and wasn’t suspended, but was successfully replaced by LyotoMachida in what would have been a title fight against Chris Weidman.
Months after the banning of testosterone replacement therapy, The Phenom is well on his way to becoming as transparent of a fighter as anyone can be. Fighters likely won’t use his alleged TRT abuse as a way of verbally luring him into the Octagon or as the crux of their complaints after they lose to him
He likely won’t be the exact same guy fans were accustomed to seeing these past three years—any allegedly clean fighter should be chomping at the bit to prove it.
Here are three fights Belfort should take in place of his UFC 175 bout:
Michael Bisping has changed his opinion on Belfort several times. He criticized his opponent before the fight about TRT use, but respectfully accepted the knockout loss immediately afterward.
It wasn’t until Belfort was pulled from a middleweight championship bout with Weidman that Bisping decided to sound off again.
A rematch with Belfort would not only help alleviate any concerns Bisping has about that loss on his record, but would also serve as a reliable source to prove how effective Belfort can be against the same opponent without TRT use.
Tim Kennedy
A win over Bisping would prove he’s still as good as he once was.
Kennedy is probably the fastest rising fighter at middleweight outside of the top five. He captured a knockout finish against Rafael Natal with an injured quadriceps, and grinded out solid victories against Bisping and Roger Gracie.
With a 3-0 UFC record, Kennedy’s strength could pose several problems for the aging Belfort.
Winner of Weidman vs. Machida
This one’s probably the most obvious bout for Belfort to take.
Not only would it help the No. 1 contender’s body become accustomed to life after TRT, but it would also grant Belfort the title shot he was promised in the first place.
It’s difficult to predict whether the UFC would gift Weidman or Machida an immediate rematch, assuming the champion loses or the challenger plays victim to a controversial loss.
Either way, Belfort’s no longer the young fighter he once was and it’s unlikely he’ll find himself in the title picture ever again if he loses to anybody who doesn’t have gold wrapped around his waist. He’d be wise to wait.
According to an MMAJunkie report, the UFC has officially removed Vitor Belfort from UFC 175 (July 5th, Las Vegas). Belfort was left without an opponent after Chael Sonnen was pulled off the card himself due to a failed drug test, and the promotion reportedly hasn’t been able to find a suitable replacement opponent for the Phenom.*
Belfort’s appearance at UFC 175 was always tentative, pending the results of a June 17th licensing hearing, which was expected to address his own random drug test failure in February. But now, MMAJunkie reports, Belfort has also been removed from the NSAC agenda for next week, as he’s no longer in immediate need of a license to compete in Nevada.
A timetable for Belfort’s return has not been set…but I’m just saying, if he competes in Brazil again without settling his business in Nevada first, it’ll just add another sorry-ass layer to the biggest drug–fiasco of the year.
* Or, the promotion wanted to avoid the embarrassment of Belfort being denied a license in that June 17th NSAC hearing, which would surely generate some uncomfortable headlines leading up to their biggest pay-per-view event of the year. But hey, I’m just a guy over here click-clackin’ away on the keyboard, calling it as I see it. If you want to take the UFC’s official statements at face value, have fun with that.
The current, slightly-less-stacked lineup of UFC 175 is after the jump…
According to an MMAJunkie report, the UFC has officially removed Vitor Belfort from UFC 175 (July 5th, Las Vegas). Belfort was left without an opponent after Chael Sonnen was pulled off the card himself due to a failed drug test, and the promotion reportedly hasn’t been able to find a suitable replacement opponent for the Phenom.*
Belfort’s appearance at UFC 175 was always tentative, pending the results of a June 17th licensing hearing, which was expected to address his own random drug test failure in February. But now, MMAJunkie reports, Belfort has also been removed from the NSAC agenda for next week, as he’s no longer in immediate need of a license to compete in Nevada.
A timetable for Belfort’s return has not been set…but I’m just saying, if he competes in Brazil again without settling his business in Nevada first, it’ll just add another sorry-ass layer to the biggest drug–fiasco of the year.
* Or, the promotion wanted to avoid the embarrassment of Belfort being denied a license in that June 17th NSAC hearing, which would surely generate some uncomfortable headlines leading up to their biggest pay-per-view event of the year. But hey, I’m just a guy over here click-clackin’ away on the keyboard, calling it as I see it. If you want to take the UFC’s official statements at face value, have fun with that.
The current, slightly-less-stacked lineup of UFC 175 is after the jump…
Chris Weidman vs. Lyoto Machida
Ronda Rousey vs. Alexis Davis
Urijah Faber vs. Alex Caceres
Matt Mitrione vs. Stefan Struve
Uriah Hall vs. Thiago “Marreta” Santos
Chris Camozzi vs. Bruno Santos
Guilherme Vasconcelos vs. Luke Zachrich
Ildemar Alcantara vs. Kenny Robertson
Russell Doane vs. Marcus Brimage
Chael Sonnen went on Fox Sports 1 on Tuesday afternoon and talked.
Boy, did he talk. Just talked and talked.
Sonnen spent nearly 15 minutes on the network—where he works in the awkward dual role of paid analyst and active fighter—trying in …
Chael Sonnen went on Fox Sports 1 on Tuesday afternoon and talked.
Boy, did he talk. Just talked and talked.
Sonnen spent nearly 15 minutes on the network—where he works in the awkward dual role of paid analyst and active fighter—trying in vain to explain away the failed drug test that will likely knock him out of UFC 175.
This part was not a shock. We expect as much from the man universally regarded as MMA’s best orator. During the latter years of his long, curious fighting career, Sonnen has likely come to believe he can talk his way out of almost anything.
The surprising thing was how unconvincing it all was.
Speaking with Fox anchor Mike Hill, Sonnen remained defiant as he admitted testing positive for Anastrozole and Clomiphene, two prohibited substances often associated with steroid use. He freely copped to taking both, but only as a means of transitioning off testosterone replacement therapy, after the Nevada State Athletic Commission banned the controversial treatment in February.
He talked about his health, his family, his plans to appeal the failed test, his hopes for the future and other stuff, too. Lots of other stuff.
For a little while there, he was on a roll, his famous gift of gab working its magic once again. Before the interview even started, Sonnen had Hill apologizing to him for initially referring to the prohibited substances he’d been taking as “illegal” instead of merely “banned.”
The 37-year-old fighter also more or less correctly articulated his best argument: that the NSAC left TRT users without a clear path forward when it abruptly voted to outlaw the stuff a bit more than three months ago. For years, he and others relied on TRT with the tacit blessing of both the commission and the UFC and then, suddenly, were told to kick the habit.
In conversation with Hill, Sonnen scored a few valid points, and it seemed like he might sort of pull this off. Then the segment started to drag. Sonnen’s rhetorical strategy wandered off the path, and he began running himself in circles.
He made repeated references to failing an “out-of-competition” test, despite the fact Yahoo’s Kevin Iole reports he’s been licensed to fight at UFC 175 for nearly a month.
He asserted that Anastrozole and Clomiphene are perfectly legal when an athlete isn’t competing, even though that’s verifiably not true. He talked of the NSAC “changing the rules” when it banned TRT, even though the substances he actually tested positive for have both been against the rules for much longer than that.
He confessed to taking HCG, a banned drug he actually hadn’t tested positive for, and one that earned UFC fighter Dennis Siver a nine-month suspension and a hefty fine when the NSAC caught him using it at UFC 168.
Perhaps most laughable, Sonnen said he never got the chance to disclose to the commission which drugs he was taking and commented he felt like there was no way for combat sports athletes to keep track of fluctuating NSAC rules.
“The rules are very unclear…,” Sonnen said. “If I challenge you right now to go find them out, how are you going to do it? Is there a website you can go to? Is there an 800 number you can go to? Is there somebody’s office door you can knock on? No. This is how we find out the rules. They never tell us the rules until they tell us we’re in violation of them.”
Actually, the rules are pretty clear. Also, the NSAC does indeed have a website, a phone number and people sitting in offices waiting to answer questions.
Even in his own version of events, Sonnen admitted knowingly ingesting banned substances. When the NSAC outlawed TRT, he simply traded the controversial treatment for a pair of out-and-out prohibited drugs. At base, that’s the truth here, and Sonnen was unable to do an end run around it, no matter how many different ways he tried to explain himself.
Somewhere in there, his story crossed from merely implausible to fully absurd. The more he talked, the worse it got. We found ourselves unable to suspend our disbelief and, maybe, it dawned on us that Sonnen’s schtick was starting to wear a little thin.
He’s been running this one-man campaign of misinformation for some time now. Longer than anyone probably thought it would last. When his swaggering, professional-wrestling-style personality first gained notoriety during the lead-up to his bout against Anderson Silva at UFC 117, it seemed like a brilliant, but ultimately flash-in-the-pan kind of con.
He failed a drug test in the wake of that first, epic loss to the middleweight champion, too. At the time, Sonnen blamed it on a procedural misunderstanding, and then showed up at a California State Athletic Commission meeting with his team of lawyers and his personal physician and talked.
The CSAC reduced his suspension from one year to six months, but MMA fans wondered which Chael was sitting up there in front of the commission, and whether he was playing us all. We also wondered: How long could he keep this up?
For years, it turned out. Sonnen just kept grinding, working his patter. In the process, he effectively transformed himself from inconsistent midcarder to one of the UFC’s biggest stars. He even dragged Silva out of the pay-per-view doldrums and turned him into a bonafide draw. All told, he fought for UFC titles three times but never won one.
In small doses, it was easy to tell Sonnen the man from Sonnen the character. When he charged Silva’s manager with worshiping “a demon effigy” or accused the Nogueira brothers of trying to feed carrots to a bus. That was the act.
The guy who would show up battered and defeated after losses and pour his heart out about the pain and the things he’d done wrong? That was the real Chael.
Eventually, though, the line between the brash heel and the hardworking, hard-nosed amateur wrestler blurred. Call that an occupational hazard; one that tends to befall guys who are really, really good at pretending to be someone else.
By the time he showed up to coach opposite Wanderlei Silva on TUF: Brazil earlier this year, he’d become completely immersed in his own creation. When the two brawled on the set of the reality show a few months ago, people refused to believe it was real.
Perhaps the last successful performance in Sonnen’s tired stage act came six days ago, when he sat on the set of Fox Sports Live and lambasted Silva for reportedly skipping his own NSAC drug test.
Silva had just been removed from a proposed bout between the two at UFC 175 and Sonnen—ever the showman—didn’t mince words. For months he’d been predicting that Silva would find a way to squirm out of their fight and his glee was palpable at having been proved right.
“Wanderlei Silva has always operated under a shadow of speculation that he’d been taking performance enhancing drugs,” Sonnen said, “but he’s never tested positive, so you can’t say things like that. That all came to a halt on Saturday. He failed a drug test. As a matter of fact, he ran from the drug test. He refused to take it.”
Those words obviously took on some cruel irony on Tuesday. The “shadow of speculation” around Sonnen got so thick we couldn’t see him anymore and he proved powerless to find his way out.
In the past, when he’s decided to bury a problem (or a person) in verbiage, it’s worked. The guy is such an articulate and high-volume wordsmith that he always managed to be successful, sometimes against very long odds.
Now, though, that spell is broken. Fans no longer know when they’re supposed to believe Sonnen and when they’re not. Maybe they no longer even care to try.
That makes it very difficult for him to go on TV and convince us this second failed drug test is just another misunderstanding. Maybe he’s telling the truth as he sees it, but with all the bad behavior we’ve witnessed from him over the years, we’re well within our rights to be skeptical.
Funny thing about those old pro-wrestlers Sonnen worked so hard to impersonate during his high-profile UFC run. Back in wrestling’s old territory days, it was standard procedure for a bad guy to blow into town, thrill the fans for a few months with his evil and cunning, and then blow out again before his act got too stale.
Maybe now it’s time for Sonnen to shuffle off down the road awhile, too.
A lot of blame has been thrown around since word of Chael Sonnen’s failed drug test and subsequent removal from UFC 175 broke yesterday. Some are blaming the Nevada State Athletic Commission for their lack of foresight in banning TRT yet providing fighters currently on the therapy with no means or information on how to adjust to life without it. Some are blaming Sonnen for failing to disclose the banned substances he was on to NSAC prior to his drug test last month. There are even some MMA media members out there crazy enough to blame the UFC for rushing guys like Sonnen and Belfort into fights without first understanding how long their bodies would need to adjust to post-TRT life. Hope you enjoy getting blacklisted, fellas!
In order to help clear things up, both Chael Sonnen and Dana White appeared on FS1’s America’s Pregame last night, because Sonnen is not as expendable a fighter as say, Jason High and thus requires his boss’ assistance when putting out fires. While Sonnen opted to expand on his interview with Jay Mohr Sports that was published just hours beforehand, White fell back on his usual mix of finger-pointing and blatant lies delivered at just below shouting level.
Both are at fault. I think the Nevada State Athletic Commission could have laid it out better for how they were going to end this thing. What would be banned and what wouldn’t be banned for the guys coming down off of it. But again, it’s a matter of them not being very educated on TRT. It’s the thing that made this whole thing impossible anyway. And it’s Chael’s fault too, because Chael should have called the Athletic Commission and said, ‘This is what my doctor told me I need to do to come down off of this stuff, so here is what I’m taking.’ He absolutely should have done that.
Just to clear the air here, nobody is on TRT. And, we only had five guys out of over 500 that were ever on TRT, and it was absolutely legal.
Well thank God the UFC isn’t to blame in any way, shape, or form for this (*wipes sweat from forehead*). Dodged a bullet there, boys. Also, the number of fighters who have ever fought in the UFC while on TRT is a lot closer to 15 than 5. No biggie.
Check out White’s full interview above, then head after the jump for Sonnen’s much lengthier defense.
A lot of blame has been thrown around since word of Chael Sonnen’s failed drug test and subsequent removal from UFC 175 broke yesterday. Some are blaming the Nevada State Athletic Commission for their lack of foresight in banning TRT yet providing fighters currently on the therapy with no means or information on how to adjust to life without it. Some are blaming Sonnen for failing to disclose the banned substances he was on to NSAC prior to his drug test last month. There are even some MMA media members out there crazy enough to blame the UFC for rushing guys like Sonnen and Belfort into fights without first understanding how long their bodies would need to adjust to post-TRT life. Hope you enjoy getting blacklisted, fellas!
In order to help clear things up, both Chael Sonnen and Dana White appeared on FS1′s America’s Pregame last night, because Sonnen is not as expendable a fighter as say, Jason High and thus requires his boss’ assistance when putting out fires. While Sonnen opted to expand on his interview with Jay Mohr Sports that was published just hours beforehand, White fell back on his usual mix of finger-pointing and blatant lies delivered at just below shouting level.
Both are at fault. I think the Nevada State Athletic Commission could have laid it out better for how they were going to end this thing. What would be banned and what wouldn’t be banned for the guys coming down off of it. But again, it’s a matter of them not being very educated on TRT. It’s the thing that made this whole thing impossible anyway. And it’s Chael’s fault too, because Chael should have called the Athletic Commission and said, ‘This is what my doctor told me I need to do to come down off of this stuff, so here is what I’m taking.’ He absolutely should have done that.
Just to clear the air here, nobody is on TRT. And, we only had five guys out of over 500 that were ever on TRT, and it was absolutely legal.
Well thank God the UFC isn’t to blame in any way, shape, or form for this (*wipes sweat from forehead*). Dodged a bullet there, boys. Also, the number of fighters who have ever fought in the UFC while on TRT is a lot closer to 15 than 5. No biggie.
Check out White’s full interview above, then head after the jump for Sonnen’s much lengthier defense.
Sonnen’s appearance on America’s Pregame was a little more successful, I guess. The former title challenger, who is planning to file an appeal on the ruling when his hearing comes up, admitted to being completely transparent about what he would have to take to make it through the transition period of a post-TRT lifestyle:
Look, they changed the rules, and I’ve got to comply with the rules. I don’t resist that at all. However, there is a transition period, and I couldn’t have been more open or more transparent, whether it was ‘UFC Tonight,’ whether it was different interviews or different places. Anybody that I could tell that I could talk to about this, I did.
And indeed, the Nevada State Athletic Commission dropped the ball when it came to actually informing athletes on TRT how to adjust to life without it. Then again, when hasn’t NSAC proven their complete incompetence when it comes to the sport they are supposed to be presiding over?
There is at least one obvious difference between Sonnen’s version of the truth and the actual truth, however: NSAC changed their ruling on TRT, not the prohibited substances Sonnen was recently caught with in his system. Of course, it’s when Sonnen explains his reasoning for not disclosing the fact that he was on post-cycle drugs that things begin to get even more murky:
I had no opportunity to go before the commission – I had not spoken to them, but I’m saying I had done other interviews. Anywhere where it had come up. The only opportunity you’re ever given to disclose a medication that you’re in is in competition. When the state of Nevada comes to you, you do have a form that you can fill it out. This was an out-of-competition (test). This was done by a separate lab known as [the United States Anti-Doping Agency]. It’s the finest lab in the world. But these were also strangers. This was not the Nevada State Athletic Commission that came to me, and there was no attempt to have a disclosure form.
But even if I had disclosed or hadn’t, you have to understand, this is out of competition. An athlete does not have to remain off medication 365 days of the year – not the NCAA, not [with] the [International Olympic Committee], and not even with the Nevada State Athletic Commission. This is [unprecedented]
First off, “out of competition” is not a term that can be applied to MMA like it can professional football — a fighter can literally be called up to fight for whatever reason (replacing an injured opponent, for instance) on a moment’s notice — and Sonnen should know this better than anyone. He did, after all, attempt to wiggle his way into a title shot against Jon Jones less than a day out from when the fight was scheduled. “In competition” in MMA is an indefinable concept, ranging anywhere from a couple months to a week, and is simply being used as a technicality to hide behind here.
Secondly, it’s not as if Sonnen, one of the more intelligent fighters in the UFC, was simply powerless to inform NSAC of his condition and how it could affect him professionally. The NSAC’s official website has a “Contact Us” page wherein their phone number, fax number, email, and address are clearly listed, so for Sonnen to act as if he had “no opportunity” to reach out and maybe inform the commission that he was on banned substances is a bit presumptuous to say the least.
Oh yes, speaking of those banned substances. Sonnen was insistent that neither Anastrozole and Clomiphene, two of the three non-steroidal, non-anabolic substances he tested positive for, are only banned “in competition.” This is completely false, as one look over the 2014 Usada Prohibited List will reveal that both are considered “prohibited hormone and metabolic modulators” both in and out-of-competition. Written in bold. On page 5 (S4) of a 10 page document. The idea of in vs. out of competition, shaky as it may be, holds no bearing here. Sonnen likely knew this, hence his decision to simply not disclose the substances he was on until it was too late, as he has done before.
Former PRIDE champion Wanderlei Silva apparently hasn’t given up hopes of fighting at UFC 175 next month, calling for a rematch with Vitor Belfort since he is slated to face the dreaded “to be determined” at the moment.
In light of Chael Sonnen f…
Former PRIDE champion Wanderlei Silva apparently hasn’t given up hopes of fighting at UFC 175 next month, calling for a rematch with VitorBelfort since he is slated to face the dreaded “to be determined” at the moment.
In light of ChaelSonnen failing a Nevada State Athletic Commission-administered random drug test for anti-estrogenic drugs, per ESPN, Silva wants back in the mix—even though Belfort was the one who replaced him in the first place.
While “a source close to the organization” already told MMA JunkieBelfort may remain a part of the July 5 pay-per-view, it’s a little early to start betting money on “The Axe Murderer” being his opponent.
Belfort served as a replacement for Silva after Wanderleirefused a random drug test from the NSAC, and to make matters worse, he also didn’t apply for his fighter’s license in time.
Nevertheless, the way Silva sees it, the whole situation was a big misunderstanding—mostly due to a language barrier—so the Brazilian brawler is still ready to go on July 5 if the situation calls for it.
Now if this bizarre situation isn’t unpredictable enough as it is, the kicker is that “The Phenom” is no lock to fight on the UFC’s annual Fourth of July weekend card, either.
Belfort admitted last week that he failed a random drug test for elevated levels of testosterone back on February 7, and his eligibility to compete rests in the hands of the NSAC, who will make a decision at their June 17 hearing.
Belfort, like Sonnen, was an open user of testosterone replacement therapy, and this was not the first time he failed a drug test for performance-enhancing drugs.
The Brazilian knockout specialist tested positive for the anabolic steroid 4-hydroxytestosterone after a decision loss to Dan Henderson at PRIDE 32 in October 2006, per MMA Weekly.
Belfort and Silva fought all the way back in October 1998 at UFC Brazil, where Belfort scored a blistering knockout less than a minute into the light heavyweight contest.
In the event that Belfort is licensed to fight at UFC 175, who would a suitable opponent be given the current unique set of circumstances?
John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.
Instead, Sonnen partook in a rushed interview that not only failed to beat the ESPN story out of the gate, but left as many questions as it answered. Mohr also chimed in at one point that Sonnen should use the next 30 days before his hearing to get “loaded up on steroids,” so there’s that to look forward to as well.
Sonnen’s statement, along with a full transcription (via MMAFighting) is after the jump.
(“Thank God there aren’t random drug tests in @EASPORTSUFC” — former CP writer Jason Moles dropping truth bombs.)
Instead, Sonnen partook in a rushed interview that not only failed to beat the ESPN story out of the gate, but left as many questions as it answered. Mohr also chimed in at one point that Sonnen should use the next 30 days before his hearing to get “loaded up on steroids,” so there’s that to look forward to as well.
Sonnen’s statement, along with a full transcription (via MMAFighting) is after the jump.
They changed the ruling in Nevada. Earlier this year they did away with what’s known as TRT — Testosterone Replacement Therapy — in Nevada, and I was on that. So when they changed the rule, we all had to go through a transition phase. For me, for the transition, I had to take a couple of things: one is called clomiphene and the other is called HCG (human chorionic gonadotropin). So this is what we did. And I took my boards out of the water in the meantime, meaning I didn’t fight, I didn’t ask for a license. You had to wait to cross this bridge, if you will.
In the interim, they did a test. I tested positive for these things, which I should have. I took them. They were in my system. That wasn’t a surprise. These aren’t anabolics, these aren’t steroids, these aren’t performance-enhancers. None of that stuff. But they have deemed that they are banned substances.
What’s interesting, in my case, we’re out of competition. These are not things that I showed up with on gameday. This is out of competition due to a rule that they changed. So this is kind of an odd spot for me.
What happens is they do out-of-competition testing, and the lab that they went to is the USADA [United States Anti-Doping Agency] lab. Now the USADA lab is the greatest lab in the world. It’s a very sensitive test. We had done our own tests, at our own labs, and we thought that everything was out of the system. These were not secrets that I took this stuff. This is what you have to take when you’re coming off testosterone. But any rate, it was picked up on their test. Now they can handle that however they want. They can look at that and go, Yeah, this makes sense to us, or they can say, You know what? We don’t like this. And they can do either one. They’re the commission. I just got to be a reactor and live with it. The confusing part is for a non-anabolic, non-steroid, non-performance enhancing agent that is perfectly legal that I need for a healthy life, essentially they’re saying you gotta choose between health and sport.
It’s very tough for me too because I did a number of interviews talking about what I’ve done, whether it’s on UFC Tonight, Canada, UK, Brazil … I couldn’t have told any more people. So when this came back they said, Why did this come back in your system? I said, Why did it come back in my system? Because I took it. I’ve been taking it. I had to take it because you guys changed the rules. So I did feel a little bit frustrated in that regard. And they may listen to me, they may agree with me, but the way this works is I now have to go to a hearing. And that hearing gets kicked down the road who knows how many days. I have a fight in 30 days, there’s no way the hearing will be before then.
There is a little bit of a confusion on the rules. It’s kind of tough where you’re like, Oh, really? This is a banned substance? Where do we find that? Who exactly do we go to for clarity on this? And the commission has always been very clear. Whether it’s the Nevada Commission, and now there is a new guy at the helm [Bob Bennett], but the old executive director [Keith Kizer], I’ve got quotes I downloaded right off the Internet, but he has been very clear that there is a clear distinctions between gameday and out-of-competition testing. Now you could never take an anabolic or anything, I understand that. This is not an anabolic. This is not a steroid. These are just the substances I had to go to transition, who’s also having — this is a very private part of my life I wasn’t planning to share with anybody — but I’m having fertility issues.
The next scheduled meeting of the NSAC is scheduled for June 17th, where Vitor Belfort will also have his hearing for his failed drug test back in February. It has yet to be confirmed whether or not Sonnen’s hearing will go down on the same date.
Sonnen is set to appear on FOX Sports at any moment to further explain his failed test, so we will have more on this story as it develops. In the meantime, I’m just going to go lay my head down and think of how hilarious it would be if Jon Jones offered to step in and save UFC 175 by fighting Wanderlei Silva on a day’s notice.