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Saturday, October 20, 2012
Roy Nelson, Shane Carwin Tapped for Random Drug Testing by NSAC, Ahead of TUF 16 Finale Fight
(Not pictured: Fabricio Werdum and Junior Dos Santos, merrily sharing a caipirinha.) All of Roy Nelson's rabble-rousing about drug-testing has paid off...sort of. While Big Country has been campaigning to have his upcoming fight against Shane Carwin overseen by the Voluntary Anti-Doping Agency (VADA), it was confirmed today that the Nevada State Athletic Commission has informed both fighters that they'll be subject to random testing at some point before their December 15th meeting at the TUF 16 Finale. The fighters will need to provide samples within 24 hours of request, and the results will be returned in approximately two weeks. (Serious question: The NSAC is completely within its rights to randomly drug test fighters out of competition, so why is it necessary to inform those fighters that that's what it intends to do? I'm just saying, if you were Nelson or Carwin, and you were, hypothetically, using steroids up until yesterday, and the NSAC calls you and says they're going to randomly test you sometime in the next two months, wouldn't that be your signal to stop using PEDs immediately and hope they're out of your system by the time they ask for your piss?) If you've been keeping up on this story, you know that Carwin's camp had been against VADA's involvement from the beginning, with Shane's manager Jason Genet calling VADA an "opportunistic" organization with an "anti-Shane" bias, and questioning why an independent testing body is any better than the athletic commission testing currently in place for MMA fighters. "I'm questioning where the relevancy coming from," Genet said earlier this week. "As a manager, it's not that I wouldn't agree with outside testing. I want to know what's wrong with what's currently taking place."
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