UFC’s new Anti-Doping Policy: All the details

The world’s largest MMA promotion is hitting 2024 with at least one major change on the horizon. In a surprise move this past October, USADA announced that they would not be working with the UFC starting in 2024. In part, they claimed, due to the promotion’s seeming favorable treatment of Conor McGregor and delays in his re-entry to the promotion’s drug testing pool.

Eventually it all shook out that the UFC had, in fact, cancelled their contract with USADA entirely of their own volition—with the intention of setting up their own, in-house program. In announcing the move, UFC drug czar Jeff Novitzky & Chief Business Officer Hunter Campbell tore into USADA CEO Travis Tygart and their soon-to-be-former partner—outlining what they felt were a whole series over overstepping actions from the agency, particularly noting the statements that the company had released about McGregor. They also offered a brief outline of the UFC’s plans for the new year.

In a press release on December 28th, we got a few more details, as well as a look at the complete new Anti-Doping Policy. After pouring over the document and comparing it to the previous USADA policy, we’ve done our best to give readers a complete rundown of all the differences.

UFC sets up anti-doping website, preps for life beyond USADA

The broad strokes of the UFC’s plan don’t appear to have changed at all from previous announcements. Most notably that the promotion will no longer be housing all branches of its drug testing operation under one roof. Instead, the UFC is going à la carte, using Drug Free Sport International (DFSI) as its sample collection agency; the Sports Medicine and Research Testing Laboratory (SMRTL) for its sample processing; and an apparently newly formed Combat Sports Anti-Doping agency (CSAD), headed by former ‘FBI guy’ George Piro, to hand out the punishments.

Most notably from the press release, however, is section four—detailing the the “Comprehensive List of Prohibited Substances.” With the UFC now contracting with each of these vendors individually, it seems as though they could have a lot more flexibility in terms of how they want their services to be tailored. Notably, in working with SMRTL, the UFC has announced that they will be using a “criteria for prohibited substances” that is “modeled after WADA’s In and Out of Competition programs.”

The “Prohibited List,” detailing which substances are allowed and which substances are not, will generally remain the same as the prior program. The criteria for prohibited substances will be modeled after WADA’s In and Out of Competition programs with modifications based on historical findings [i.e. marijuana removed from the prohibited list]. In addition, Decision Concentration Limits [thresholds] will be established that allow the program to differentiate between intentional use cases of prohibited substances and cases stemming from unintentional exposure to low level contaminants.

All things considered, it’s not much different than what was in the UFC’s Anti-Doping policy under USADA, which also noted that their standards would be modeled after the “World Anti-Doping Code.” However once we actually dug into the policy itself, the differences became much more clear.

Early on, a notable omission in the new Anti-Doping policy pertaining to “Establishing Facts and Presumptions,” seems to provide the UFC more room to decide what constitutes a drug test failure. The previous USADA Anti-Doping policy included this paragraph, which has been removed from the new Policy document:

Analytical methods or decision limits approved by WADA after consultation within the relevant scientific community and which have been the subject of peer review are presumed to be scientifically valid. Decision Concentration Levels set forth in the UFC Prohibited List shall not be subject to challenge.

Further down the document, in section 4.2.1/4.2.2 WADA’s absence is again notable. While the UFC has claimed up front that they are still modeling their program off of WADA’s “Prohibited List,” its continuous absence from their policy in comparison to USADA’s version is difficult not to note. The promotion appears to be making absolutely sure that they are not legally binding themselves to WADA’s standards for the future.

What’s more, it seems the UFC has opened the door for more arguments as to what can/should be considered a prohibited substance with their section on “UFC’s Determination of the Prohibited List.” That section basically outlines that whatever the UFC decides is prohibited is not open to challenge from athletes.

But the USADA iteration included the language that their list “shall not be subject to challenge by an Athlete or other Person,” (emphasis mine). The new policy has removed the “other person,” as someone ineligible to challenge the prohibited list. Does that just mean that the list isn’t challengable in any capacity and the language has only been simplified, or does it mean fighters could bring in expert testimony to challenge a substance ban?*

Alongside those changes to drug testing policy, a further note on “Decision Concentration Limits” looks like another interesting departure.

Concentration level arbitration

It’s not that past UFC policy didn’t include notes about “thresholds” (i.e. how many picograms of a substance constitute a drug test failure) and how those thresholds might be applied, but the UFC’s new policy includes this note in section 2.1.3.2:

…in cases where either the Athlete’s A or B Samples measure within 20% above the Decision Concentration Level, the athlete is entitled to challenge the determination that the applicable concentration was above the Decision Concentration Level. Further, the Independent Administrator has the ability to review such cases and determine whether an Anti-Doping Policy Violation has been committed…

Essentially, there’s more gray area and wiggle room for the various metabolites that might cause fighters to fail a drug test. The threshold is no longer a hard line, but something that can be arbitrated or, potentially even dismissed entirely if the Independent Administrator (George Piro) sees fit.

Also missing in the new policy is this bit of language concerning fighters who have used banned substances previous to entering the UFC. In both the past and present policies, the UFC would not consider admission of past PED use a violation of policy, provided the use took place before entering a contract with the promotion, the USADA version included this note as well, however:

…unless the Athlete’s Use of the substance or method in question was pursuant to a valid medical prescription or recommendation, such conduct may also be considered in sanctioning or counted as a violation for purposes of Article 10.7 if the Athlete subsequently commits an Anti-Doping Policy Violation.

In the past, fighters who were doping outside the UFC for means of performance enhancement would potentially have that conduct held against them if they failed future drug tests. Under the new policy, it seems that may not be the case.

Guilt by association

One of the major battlefields in MMA lately has been the crackdown of gambling among athletes. Regulations surrounding fighters potentially betting on themselves or fixing contests are so strict, that they don’t just stretch to athletes and coaches, but family members or other insiders who might have knowledge about a contest not generally available to the public as well.

That was a stance also mirrored by the UFC’s drug testing policy under USADA, which included this policy on simple possession of performance enhancing substances:

Possession by an Athlete Support Person In-Competition of any Prohibited Substance or any Prohibited Method, or Possession by an Athlete Support Person Out-of-Competition of any Prohibited Substance or any Prohibited Method which is prohibited Out-of-Competition in connection with an Athlete, competition or training, unless the Athlete Support Person establishes that the Possession is consistent with a TUE granted to an Athlete in accordance with Article 4.4 or other acceptable justification.

Once again, that language appears to be missing from the new Anti-Doping Policy, potentially providing fighters more leniency surrounding teammates or coaching staff that might be found with performance enhancing substances. Furthermore, in a later section relating to the UFC’s ability to carry out an investigation of an athlete who retires or has their contract terminated during said investigation, language including “Athlete Support Personnel” has been entirely removed. As has language in reference to anti-doping hearings pertaining to persons other than UFC athletes.

Although the new document does include a section about “complicity” which counts any knowing coverup of doping activity as a policy violation, a subsection on “Prohibited Association” meant to keep fighters from partnering with athletes who are under USADA suspension has been removed. All told, it seems the UFC has focused their new policy to only cover fighters under contract wherever it can.

Conor McGregor rule

LAS VEGAS, NV - March 4: (L) Conor McGregor and Dana White share a laugh dayside at T-Mobile Arena for UFC 285 -Jones vs Gane : Event on March 4, 2023 in Las Vegas, NV, United States.(Photo by Louis Grasse PxImages) (Louis Grasse SPP) PUBLICATIONxNOTxINxBRAxMEX xSPPx SPP_157547
Conor McGregor and Dana White chat at UFC 285. | Louis Grasse / Sports Press Photo, IMAGO

The return of Conor McGregor has become an inescapable part of the story of the fractured relationship between the UFC and USADA. McGregor suffered a brutal leg injury back in 2021, during his trilogy fight against Dustin Poirier. Following that loss, the ‘Notorious’ Irishman departed the promotion’s drug testing pool on an indefinite hiatus.

When other fighters, fans, and media started to point out that McGregor’s removal from the USADA system seemed to be a way for him to treat his injury with banned substances, McGregor had this to say:

“Everything was fully disclosed before I began. The state of allowance for athletes to recover from injuries as horrific as the one I overcame must be assessed. My thoughts are with [Chris Weidman] and Anderson Silva. The 3 of us, and only us, know the severity of this injury.”

Whatever substances or procedures McGregor may have used during his time away, USADA policy stated that he would need to undergo six months of testing eligibility and pass two drug tests before he could return to competition. Policy language also allowed that six month window to be bypassed by the UFC, provided that the two drug tests were still passed.

…UFC may grant an exemption to the six-month written notice rule in exceptional circumstances or where the strict application of that rule would be manifestly unfair to an Athlete provided that in either instance the Athlete provides a minimum of two negative Samples before returning to competition.

That language in bold has been removed from the UFC’s new policy.

Testing labs

Under USADA policy, testing of UFC athlete samples could only be carried out by WADA accredited labs. As aforementioned it appears the UFC is invested in making sure that they are not bound by WADA approval processes for the future. As such, while it’s only a minor change in the language, the UFC’s new testing policy includes a very small, but likely meaningful phrase.

For purposes of Article 2.1, Samples shall be analyzed only in laboratories accredited or otherwise approved by WADA or other designated qualified laboratories.

A followup section on the “Purpose of Analysis of Samples” removes all mention of WADA as well.

Suspension periods

While all the language about drug testing, WADA association, guilt by association, and establishing PED thresholds is interesting, the most important change is in section 10. That’s the part of the UFC’s Anti-Doping Policy that covers suspension length and punishments for various types of infractions.

At first blush, the promotion seems to be sticking with USADA regulations, suspending fighters two years for a “non-specified substance,” and one year for a “specified substance”. However, it looks like the promotion is taking a much more lenient view on evading drug tests and/or tampering with evidence. Where USADA carried a minimum punishment of 2 years and a maximum of 4 years for these violations, the new UFC policy will carry a minimum of 1 year and a maximum of 2 for “intentional violations” and a minimum verbal reprimand and maximum 1 year suspension for “negligent violations.”

For whereabouts violations, USADA policy gave a maximum 2 year suspension and a minimum of 6 months. The new UFC policy still carries a maximum of 2 years, but allows for as little as a reprimand “depending on the Athlete’s degree of fault.”

For trafficking or administering prohibited substances, the UFC is still going with a minimum of four years and as much as a lifetime ban for Athletes involved in these activities. But, as has been noted throughout the document, language pertaining to “support personnel” (and, surprisingly, violations “involving a minor”) have once again been removed. All language from the USADA policy involving punishments for “Prohibited Association” have been entirely removed as well.

As for the section on non-performance enhancing drugs or a “Substance of Abuse,” (cocaine, marijuana, heroin, etc.) both USADA and new UFC policies allow for the forgoing of any suspension if “the Athlete can establish… that the violation did not enhance, and was not intended to enhance, the Athlete’s performance….” However, language in the USADA document that required athletes found to be using a “substance of abuse” to complete a drug treatment program at their own expense has been removed.

Snitch clause simplification

March 5, 2023, Las Vegas, NV, LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, United States: LAS VEGAS, NV - March 5: Jon Jones meets with the media following his win over Cyril Gane at T-Mobile Arena for UFC 285 -Jones vs Gane : Event on March 5, 2023 in Las Vegas, NV, United States. Las Vegas, NV United States - ZUMAp175 20230305_zsa_p175_009
Jon Jones at UFC 285 | Louis Grasse / ZUMA Wire, IMAGO

Among USADA’s notable UFC policies was the ‘snitch clause’ (a label infamously tagged on Jon Jones after he received a 30-month reduction in sentence from USADA for providing the company with “substantial assistance”). Essentially it’s the opportunity for a fighter, no matter how much PED trouble they might be in, to bargain for a potential reduction in punishment if they’re willing to turn over evidence against other people they know are doping or providing substances to athletes.

In the past, this was a pretty substantial part of the Anti-Doping policy in which specific language was included that made it clear that in order to get a reduction in sentence, an athlete would have to provide evidence that “results in a criminal or disciplinary body discovering or bringing forward a criminal offense or the breach of professional rules committed by another Person,” or “results in WADA initiating a proceeding against a Signatory, WADA-accredited laboratory.”

Under the new policy, all that language is gone, noting simply that:

The Independent Administrator in its sole discretion may suspend all or any part of the period of Ineli-
gibility and other Consequences imposed in an individual case in which it has results management
authority where the Athlete has provided Full and Complete Cooperation. The extent to which the
otherwise applicable period of Ineligibility may be suspended or eliminated shall be based on the
seriousness of the Anti-Doping Policy Violation and the significance of the Full and Complete Co-
operation provided by the Athlete.

Summary

To sum up, the major changes to the UFC’s new Anti-Doping Policy appear to be a broad-scale (but undetermined as to consistency or distance) move away from WADA as a standard setter for UFC policy. The promotion may still be using WADA’s prohibited list as a guideline for their policy, but references to the agency throughout the document have been removed. Where USADA was insistent in using WADA standards as their own, the new UFC policy is seemingly not.

The other major change is the removal of practically all language concerning “Athlete Support Personnel.” USADA had a range of policies and punishments meant to cover coaches, trainers, cornermen, etc. who might help provide fighters with the means to dope. The new UFC policy appears to be largely unconcerned with trying to adjudicate violations involving figures other than the athletes they have under contract.

Finally, there seem to be more arbitration options open to fighters concerning what constitutes a doping violation. Thresholds are going to be privately established by the UFC with a 20% grey area open for arbitration. Suspension periods for violations other than failed drug tests have been lowered, and more options for the UFC to simply give fighters verbal reprimands have been included. It may be that fighters won’t notice much difference in practice, but it also wouldn’t be terribly surprising if the end result were fewer drug test failures going forward.

*After further consideration, I believe this language is meant to reflect the general removal of support personnel as persons of interest in the UFC drug testing program at large. So that no one other than UFC contracted athletes would need to challenge the Prohibited Substances List.

UFC gives more details on new drug testing system

The UFC made big waves earlier this month with the announcement that, as of January 1st, 2024, the promotion would no longer be continuing its USADA drug testing program. The news was initially broken by USADA itself, in a press release announcing the return of combat sports superstar Conor McGregor to the UFC’s pool of tested athletes.

While USADA couched the separation of the two companies around tension caused by McGregor’s withdrawal from the program—seemingly in order to pursue alternative recovery methods for a broken leg suffered against Dustin Poirier at UFC 264 back in 2021—it was shortly revealed that the UFC itself had announced their decision not to renew their contract with the drug testing agency in a conference call with USADA CEO Travis Tygart.

UFC’s problems with USADA

Shortly after USADA’s statements on the UFC & McGregor, the promotion sent UFC Drug Czar Jeff Novitzky and Chief Business Officer Hunter Campbell to issue a response. The two men outlined a series of grievances that the world’s largest MMA promotion had apparently been holding back for some time.

Along with claims that USADA had mistreated and seemingly mishandled Conor McGregor’s hiatus from competition, they also claimed that the company had been difficult to deal with—not just for the UFC and their athletes, but apparently for athletic commissions as well.

The two men also claimed that the UFC had personally funded improvements in USADA’s system, to the tune of $1.8 million, only to see “jack sh*t” in return for their investment. It was a fairly comprehensive outlining of what the promotion appeared to feel were longstanding failures. To the point that it almost seems surprising the partnership lasted so long. The big question now is, what comes next?

UFC informs athletes of drug testing future

While Novitzky and Campbell gave some details as to what the promotion was planning for the future of drug testing in the UFC, in a recent email provided to Bloody Elbow by multiple UFC athletes they provided a more thorough outline of what’s to come.

The major thing that it seems the UFC wants to get across to their fighters is that the program as they experience it will remain largely unchanged. The UFC will still be performing random drug tests 24/7/365, and will be operating from the same list of banned substances that USADA was using. Allusions were made to the potential future policy shifts, but only in the mention that “The program’s rules will generally remain the same and will be publicly posted in advance of the transition.”

Read the entire email below:

UFC email from Jeff Novitzky to athlete about the transition away from USADA testing.

Of note, under this new program for the UFC, the promotion has hired former high ranking FBI agent George Piro to oversee the program with what they claim will be “all decision making authority,” in a role meant to replicate USADA’s adjudication of fines and suspensions for athletes guilty of a doping violation. While Piro doesn’t seem to have any experience in PEDs or sports, he does have a long history in law enforcement.

Who is George Piro

Bloody Elbow already gave readers a more complete breakdown of Piro’s history and why the UFC may have been so interested in bringing the former head of the 2004 Sadam Hussein Interrogation Team, but here’s some brief background info:

Before joining the FBI in 1999, he went from the Air Force to work with the Stanislaus County Drug Enforcement Agency. He transitioned to the FBI Phoenix field office. Mr. Piro’s FBI career advancement blossomed quickly under Directors Robert Mueller, James Comey, and Christopher Wray. Mr. Piro steadily built a résumé under multiple Presidential administrations.

For over a decade, he rose in the ranks of the most powerful national security divisions within the FBI & Department of Justice. In a video interview shot at the American Top Team gym in Coconut Creek, Florida, Mr. Piro discussed his work experience and learning under the tutelage of John Perren, who was one of the most powerful criminal intelligence analysts in Washington DC.

After spending a decade in DC for the FBI in their Washington Field Office and in an inter-agency capacity overseen by the Counterterrorism Security Group within the White House, he applied to take the job as Special Agent in Charge of the Miami FBI Office. He was back in DC a few years later after an appointment by Director Wray to the number two slot in the International Operations division of the FBI. He returned back to his role as Miami SAC a few years later.

From the outset, it seems any UFC fighters who are hoping that their experience under the new anti-doping system would be less rigorous are going to be disappointed. The promotion is touting a new and improved whereabouts tracking system, and who knows what other changes may come down the line in the future?

UFC & USADA: How did it last so long?

This last week saw a shockwave sent through the MMA ecosystem. After nearly 8-years of cooperation, the UFC and USADA announced the upcoming end of their business partnership. From there, things got pretty nasty.

A brief background

For those that don’t know, the whole circus kicked off when the drug testing agency sent out a press release essentially stating that, while Conor McGregor had re-entered the testing pool, the months long saga of his potential return had worn away the working relationship between the two companies. USADA especially cited comments made by UFC commentator Joe Rogan, which they felt reflected the general attitude of UFC brass.

“I really think [the UFC] should do all that in-house,” Rogan said on a recent podcast, speaking of the UFC’s drug testing program. “’Cause USADA does stuff like—well they don’t do it anymore—but they were doing stuff like waking guys up at 6:30 in the morning like the day of the weigh-ins and testing them. It was ****ing insane, for world title fights, ****ing insane.”

Shortly after USADA’s press release, it was revealed—both by company CEO Travis Tygart, and later by UFC officials—that the UFC had in fact decided to sever the relationship themselves in a recent conference call, citing a desire to (as Rogan suggested) run a program more selectively attuned to their needs. In the days since, there’s been some name calling, some finger pointing, and just a general feeling of a long-strained relationship suddenly snapping in a very public way.

The only real question is: How did it last so long?

The UFC has proven itself to be, more than anything else, a very reactionary company over the years. When COVID-19 hit they scampered away from regulation for as long as possible, until forced by law (and Disney executives) to stop hosting events. From there they publicly touted the tightest protocols in the business, but dropped them all the moment restrictions relaxed. As long as there was a legal need, they made it happen, once the oversight was gone, so was the action.

The UFC’s kneejerk history

More recently, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the promotion made the kneejerk call to ban flags from fighter walkouts. Right up until last week, when Dana White made a big show of bringing flags back at the expense of all those (imaginary) crybabies who couldn’t handle them in the first place. I’d love to know what drove either decision, because it wasn’t public outcry.

Going back in time, fans can remember the testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) era, when fighters were battling for the right to essentially legalize doping through doctor’s notes. With the UFC looking to polish up its image for a future sale, and the NSAC eventually putting it’s foot down on therapeutic use exemptions (TUEs), the promotion needed to make a big statement. So they brought in hardline drug testing for all athletes; they brought in USADA.

The thing with USADA, unlike the UFC’s other moves over the years, is that they very much acted as a business partner with the UFC and not just a subordinate brand that was happy to be there—or a series of regulations the UFC could handle all on their own. This wasn’t the Reebok deal and this wasn’t the ‘official’ UFC rankings. USADA had rules and protocols and processes that had nothing to do with the way the UFC does business and, if the current war of words is any indication, they weren’t all that willing to bend their rules when the UFC wanted.

The thing about a reactionary business like the UFC, however, is that it can survive having a boss if it has to, and it loves being the boss if it gets to, but there’s not much room for a hands-on cohort. When a business prides itself on being able to flex on the fly and adapt to whatever it feels the needs of the moment are—free from broader ideology (beyond a quest to put on fights and make money)—having someone looking over their shoulder is the last thing they need.

This is the reason that, despite years of claiming that they were ‘fixing’ the system, the UFC has maintained the same half-assed in-house rankings pool for years; dictated by a bunch of figures so tangential to the industry that most fans would never know who any of them are even with a formal introduction. Because fixing that system would require bringing in 3rd party oversight and cutting lose basic control over a tool that’s become a key part of contract negotiations and fight card formation.

A new, flexible system

To the UFC’s credit here, with the announcement that they were leaving USADA, the promotion detailed their new drug testing plan and it does include an arbitrator: former high ranking FBI agent—and current American Top Team gym member—George Piro. It also, however, includes a two-part system that allows the UFC to potentially dictate any number of terms and to change out parts while still maintaining the appearance of a whole.

Instead of having a partner like USADA, that runs with their own standard of operation and may not have any interest in what the UFC thinks would make for good comprehensive drug testing, the promotion now has an agency that runs sample collection—almost certainly at a standard set by the UFC. And a lab that tests those samples—likely to a standard that the UFC wants them tested. Piro doesn’t appear to have any history overseeing a comprehensive drug testing program. Which isn’t to say that he’s not potentially capable, but it has to be wondered what his standards of oversight are. Does he know anything about how doping works?

Is Piro just there to see to it that the UFC runs the program they tell him they’re going to run? Does he have standards that he’ll be setting entirely independently? And if he does, as someone hired by the UFC, how strict can he be against their business interests without getting replaced? Like I said above, the modular nature of this program essentially allows the UFC to make whatever changes they want going forward, while still claiming that the system itself has been maintained.

It’s not hard to see how that would appeal to someone like Dana White, who wants to move only when forced. It’s also not hard to see how it could start out as something pretty comprehensive in appearance and end up slowly diluted without casual observers ever being the wiser.

Is worse drug testing actually better?

Maybe that’s all for the best. I’m not going to pretend that I’m the most gung-ho anti-doping advocate out there. Mostly I feel like having something in place that prevents clear abuse—while making easy allowance for TUEs when necessity can be shown, or making room for tainted supplements (considering the popularity of supplement use and the lack of regulation)—is the way to go in a sport that gives athletes little in the way of leverage over their careers in the Octagon. If fighters aren’t going to collectively bargain for it, the best a PED protocol can be is not too terribly detrimental over minor offenses.

That said, for anyone that is a fan of hardline drug testing, this has to feel something like the end of an era. The UFC had a true partner in USADA that held athletes in the promotion to its own standards, independent of what the UFC or those athletes might have wanted. The path forward seems unlikely to be nearly so clear cut.

USADA shoots down UFC champion TJ Dillashaw.
USADA shoots down UFC champion TJ Dillashaw.

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UFC announces new testing partner

The last few days have provided a series of bombshells when it comes to the UFC and their longtime drug testing partner USADA. On Wednesday, October 11th, USADA released an official statement that they would no longer be partnering with the world’s largest MMA promotion, starting January 1st, 2024. Accompanying the statement was the news that Conor McGregor would be re-entering the drug testing program for his return to MMA.

According to USADA, these points where closely linked, with the agency stating that the UFC’s reaction to USADA’s policies surrounding McGregor had made the relationship between the two companies untenable. In a separate statement, USADA CEO Travis Tygart revealed that, in fact, the UFC told the agency during a recent phone call, that they would be leaving USADA at the end of their contract, to start their own internal program.

In a recent press conference, UFC ‘Drug Czar’ Jeff Novitzky and UFC Business Officer Hunter Campbell sat down to give the promotion’s side of the story. While they had a whole hell of a lot to say about USADA’s stance on Conor McGregor and how they felt the agency treated athletes, they didn’t counter the narrative Tygart had given about deciding to move on to a different drug testing system.

UFC hold press conference to announce drug testing future

In their press conference, Cambell and Novitzky were bullish on the idea that the UFC would be moving forward with a new standard of drug testing that wouldn’t just rival the system they had under USADA, but would surpass it. To get there, the UFC announced that they would be partnering with sample collection agency Drug Free Sport International to handle the hands on part of the job, actually working with UFC athletes around the world.

In the press conference, Campbell told reporters that the UFC plans to ensure that their new drug testing program is an improvement on the program they previously had under USADA, with Novitzky noting that he “will never be involved in a program that isn’t the gold, and now platinum, standard.”

To back up that claim, Novitzky pointed to DFSI’s involvement with the NBA, NFL, NHL, WNBA, and NASCAR among others, noting that they are extremely experienced in the job of sample collection. He also added that the promotion will “continue to have the most transparent anti-doping program in pro sports.”

UFC also partnering with SMRTL labs

Alongside partnering with Drug Free Sports International, the UFC has also announced their intention of contracting out their testing to the SMRTL lab for the actual testing of those samples. Novitzky noted that SMRTL has “the highest accreditation in anti-doping,” and that SMRTL head Dan Eichner has recommended increased blood testing using the TASSO+ system which does not require needles or blood draws.

The UFC also claims that they will have “the most comprehensive prohibited list” and will be implementing oral fluid testing alongside “advanced growth hormone detection.”

To run this new program, the UFC has brought on former FBI agent George Piro to act as an independent administrator who will “make every decision in the program” and operate with sole authority.

Piro rose to notoriety during the Iraq war as the leader of the ‘Saddam Hussein Interrogation Team’ in 2004. Piro’s work with Hussein helped confirm that Hussein had not expected the US invasion, did not have weapons of mass destruction, and included a complete denial of any links to Al-Qaeda terrorist leader Osama Bin Laden. Prior to his career with the FBI, Piro served as a law enforcement officer with the City of Ceres Police Department and then a Criminal Investigator for the Stanislaus County District Attorney. In 2017, Piro was appointed Assistant Director of the International Operations Division at FBI Headquarters.

USADA predicted UFC would go to DFSI

As part of Tygart’s statements on the deterioration of USADA’s relationship with the UFC, he included his feelings on what he thought the promotion’s future drug testing program would look like. Coincidentally (or perhaps unsurprisingly) he was quick to pounce on the idea that the Endeavor-owned company would end up working with Drug Free Sport International. Although he had a much different view of rigorous that program would be.

“[Drug Free Sport International], for example,” Tygart noted, stating the kind of company that’s “willing to run any kind of program, whether it has credibility or not.”

“And then they’ll probably try to subcontract out with a laboratory, and then UFC likely will handle all the results will be my guess. So they’ll bring it in-house and control every aspect to it: Who’s tested, what’s tested for, at what times they’re tested, send out collectors to go test it. I don’t know, but that’s my prediction for sure.

“That’s not a model that comes close, probability-wise and effectiveness-wise. But that’s the model you can control and get the results that you want when you want them, without the same level of openness and transparency and independence that our program provides.”

UFC ‘disgusted’ by USADA’s treatment of Conor McGregor; USADA responds

Recently USADA announced that they were parting ways with the UFC starting in 2024. The news came coupled with an announcement that Conor McGregor had officially re-entered the athlete testing pool after months of hemming, hawing, and general foot-dragging.

The saga of McGregor’s re-entry into USADA’s oversight seemed to be an especially sore spot between promotion and agency. With the drug testing organization taking special care to point out that recent sentiments and statements from UFC brass and commentators, surrounding USADA’s requirement of a six-month testing window before McGregor should be cleared to fight, had made the relationship between the two companies untenable.

However, if USADA is painting a picture of McGregor’s re-entry as the core issue between the UFC and the drug testing agency, the world’s largest MMA promotion is pushing back hard against that narrative. In a recent press event hosted by Business Officer Hunter Campbell and ‘Drug Czar’ Jeff Novitzky, the UFC announced that they had demanded a retraction from USADA over their statements about the Irish combat sports superstar.

Speaking to reporters, Campbell stated that USADA CEO Travis Tygart “lost his mind” when told by the UFC that the promotion was severing ties with the drug testing agency, adding that USADA’s treatment of Conor McGregor differs from the way the agency has treated all other past UFC athletes.

Campbell reportedly characterized USADA’s handling of McGregor as dictatorial, and felt that the agency was not used to dealing with independent contractors. Moreover, Campbell also claimed that the UFC were steadfast with USADA, that McGregor would not be getting any exceptional treatment from the promotion, and that the agency used McGregor to push a false narrative based on “ego and fear.”

Alongside Campbell’s statements, Novitzky characterized USADA’s version of events, involving McGregor’s return as “garbage” and that it has damaged the UFC’s reputation as well as sowing confusion among fighters and managers. He also noted that USADA has been difficult to work with throughout their relationship.

Not only for athletes, apparently, but for commissions as well. The UFC claims CSAC head Andy Foster reached out to them after USADA’s press release to congratulate them on moving away from USADA.

USADA and UFC anti-doping program logo

USADA defiant, not retracting their statement

ESPN’s Marc Raimondi reported that the UFC gave USADA a deadline to retract their statements:

“UFC chief business officer Hunter Campbell said at a news conference Thursday that he sent a legal letter to USADA on Wednesday night accusing it of defamation and demanding that it issue a retraction and apology by 5 p.m. Thursday.”

Also per Raimondi, USADA is not retracting their statement.

Promotion claims they paid USADA for better tech and didn’t get it

One of the major battles in the anti-doping industry is the constantly shifting landscape. Not just of doping strategies and new drugs, but also of potential technologies both for masking and for testing. Agencies in the field need to be constantly adaptive. Something the UFC now claims that USADA failed to maintain.

Interestingly, alongside these claims that USADA had failed to provide necessary technical improvements, Campbell also claimed he was audience to hearings by the agency that he felt were “unethical.” What exactly those might have been and what the UFC did to combat them at the time is unclear.

All told, it appears the UFC’s relationship with USADA is well and truly broken. The two companies say they’ll continue working side by side until the end of the year, but after statements like these, even that feels like a stretch.


USADA on UFC split: They want control over drug testing, without transparency and independence

The UFC’s relationship with USADA seemingly went from fine to fractured in a real hurry. The organization that has been handling drug testing for the world’s largest MMA promotion stretching back to 2015 is now set to part ways with the UFC, stating their intention in a recent press release posted on the agency’s website.

That call, it seems, came after months of wrangling between the Endeavor-owned company and USADA over the fighting future of combat sports superstar Conor McGregor. McGregor had announced a hiatus from competition following a broken leg suffered in a 2021 bout against Dustin Poirier. Although the specifics of the Irishman’s recovery have never been made public, McGregor himself sparked rumors of possible PED use in a social media rant back in 2022, noting that removing himself from the USADA testing pool allowed him to “heal/return to a normal way of life.”

From that point forward questions about how/if McGregor could make a clean re-entry to MMA via USADA testing protocols have been continuous. If it seemed bad from the outside, apparently it wasn’t any better behind the scenes.

LAS VEGAS, NV - March 4: (L) Conor McGregor and Dana White share a laugh dayside at T-Mobile Arena for UFC 285 -Jones vs Gane : Event on March 4, 2023 in Las Vegas, NV, United States.(Photo by Louis Grasse PxImages) (Louis Grasse SPP) PUBLICATIONxNOTxINxBRAxMEX Copyright: xLouisxGrassex xSPPx SPP_157548
Louis Grasse / PxImages / SPP / IMAGO

USADA CEO Travis Tygart explains end of UFC relationship

Following a recent USADA press release that the company would no longer be doing business with the UFC in 2024, promotion CEO Dana White was quick to label the announcement a “dirty move” and “straight up scumbag-ism.” Speaking to MMA Fighting earlier this week, however, USADA CEO Travis Tygart gave some background on what lead to their decision make the rift between themselves and the world’s largest MMA promotion public.

“They said something about their own tailored program—or flexible program—set costs,” Tygart told Fighting, recalling a recent conversation with UFC executives where the promotion apparently revealed they would not be renewing their contract with USADA. “And I pressed them on the cost, because we gave them one number that was very consistent with the past eight years’ numbers—including inflation and pool size, athlete size increases and that kind of stuff. And we never heard another peep about the number. Never a question about, ‘Can we cut some here? This seems too high.’

“It was now financial, suddenly. And I said that, ‘That rings very hollow. Because this is the first you’ve ever—you know—the day we have a scheduled call about it, you tell me that costs are an issue, when they’ve never been before. And you all are now valued at $12 billion, and $7 million dollars to a $12 billion company is frankly peanuts. So what’s really going on here?’”

In Tygart’s opinion, it seems that the bulk of the problem lays squarely with the amount of control an independent organization like USADA can exercise over some of the UFC’s most high value talent. With the recent formation of TKO (the UFC & WWE merged sports-entertainment brand) making the UFC a publicly traded company “you’re most concerned now about your bottom line,” Tygart explained—adding that he hopes the UFC still honors the six-month window on McGregor’s return.

USADA and UFC anti-doping program logo

Tygart believes UFC wants a system they can manipulate

In the meantime, Tygart believes that the UFC will move over to a private company that can be better molded to what the promotion feels it needs; who needs to be tested, for what, and when.

“[Drug Free Sport International], for example,” Tygart noted, stating the kind of company that’s “willing to run any kind of program, whether it has credibility or not.” “And then they’ll probably try to subcontract out with a laboratory, and then UFC likely will handle all the results will be my guess. So they’ll bring it in-house and control every aspect to it: Who’s tested, what’s tested for, at what times they’re tested, send out collectors to go test it. I don’t know, but that’s my prediction for sure.

“That’s not a model that comes close, probability-wise and effectiveness-wise. But that’s the model you can control and get the results that you want when you want them, without the same level of openness and transparency and independence that our program provides.”

In a recent press event held by the UFC, promotion ‘Drug Czar’ Jeff Novitzky and Business Officer Hunter Campbell announced that the promotion would, in fact, be working in partnership with Drug Free Sport International going forward.

Whether or not the UFC’s new program will, in fact be less effective or comprehensive than their previous USADA deal still remains to be seen. At the same press event, Novitzky claimed that UFC drug testing would increase “right off the bat with the new program,” and that he would “never be involved in a program that isn’t the gold, and now platinum, standard.” Time will tell.

‘Dirty move’ – Dana White issues first statement on UFC-USADA split

News of the UFC’s apparent upcoming split with drug testing agency USADA has sent ripples through the MMA world. The promotion’s drug testing partner seemingly dropped a bomb on Wednesday, when they revealed that they would no longer be partnering with the UFC come January 1st, 2024.

What’s more, USADA laid the cause of the separation squarely at the feet of the UFC and their treatment of Conor McGregor, stating that reactions from key UFC figures to USADA’s insistence on a 6-month testing window for the combat sports superstar had made it clear that the business partnership between the two companies could not continue.

“The relationship between USADA and UFC became untenable given the statements made by UFC leaders and others questioning USADA’s principled stance that McGregor not be allowed to fight without being in the testing pool for at least six months,” an official press release posted on the USADA website reads.

USADA and UFC anti-doping program logo

UFC CEO Dana White responds

Never one to take it lying down, UFC CEO Dana White unsurprisingly had a brief, but strong response to USADA’s willingness to air their grievances with the UFC’s business out in public in a recent appearance on The Pat McAfee Show. For White, it sounds like whatever differences of opinion there were on the UFC’s handling of McGregor, it should have stayed behind closed doors.

“Well, let me just start with this,” Dana White hedged, when asked if the UFC was preparing to find a new drug testing partner. “It wasn’t an announcement [by the UFC]. It was a dirty move by [USADA]. There was no announcement yesterday. That was straight up scumbag-ism, what happened yesterday.”

“So, that will all be addressed today,” White added. “Not by me. I’ll let [UFC ‘drug czar’ Jeff Novitzky] and our lawyer Hunter Campbell handle that. The you-know-what is about to hit the fan on that one.”

What exactly that latter, cryptic message means remains to be seen. Could the UFC be getting ready to sue USADA over their press release? From USADA’s standpoint, it appears their decision to make this kind of bold public statement was kicked off by a recent episode of Joe Rogan’s podcast, where the UFC commentator had some not so glowing thoughts about the agency’s work.

Is this all Joe Rogan’s fault?

While he may have got his first jolt of fame as a TV actor and his second as the go-to play-by-play man for the Ultimate Fighting Championship, Joe Rogan has reached astronomic levels of notoriety and fortune for his work as the host of the Joe Rogan Experience, podcast. A long-winded, long-running show that features Rogan diving into any and every topic imaginable with the knowledge base of a self-confessed “****ing moron.”

It’s no surprise then that he had a strong take about USADA recentlym and their position as a potential roadblock for Conor McGregor.

“Then there’s a six-month period USADA has to test them randomly, which I think the USADA thing’s a mistake,” Rogan said in a September episode of his show (transcript via Sports Illustrated). “I really think [the UFC] should do all that in-house, ’cause USADA does stuff like—well they don’t do it anymore—but they were doing stuff like waking guys up at 6:30 in the morning like the day of the weigh-ins and testing them. It was ****ing insane, for world title fights, ****ing insane.”

USADA’s press release didn’t mention Rogan’s name, but it did seem to specifically point to his statements as a key point of contention.

“One UFC commentator echoed this,” USADA stated, speaking of perceived distrust of the agency from UFC brass, “recently declaring that USADA should not oversee the UFC program since we held firm to the six-month rule involving McGregor, and since we do not allow fighters without an approved medical basis to use performance-enhancing drugs like experimental, unapproved peptides or testosterone for healing of injuries simply to get back in the Octagon.”

I’m sure Dana White doesn’t feel Rogan’s opinion and USADA’s response are at all equivalent, given that the longtime UFC commentator isn’t in any way a decision maker for the promotion and didn’t make his statements while performing on a UFC broadcast. However, as the company’s most noted contractor, the man’s words carry an obvious amount of heft within the UFC community and the potential to shape opinion and reputation.

Clearly USADA felt a need to push back against a potential narrative that they were stopping what a more fair/levelheaded process would allow. The result of their decision to respond publicly, however, appears to have kicked up one hell of a hornet’s nest. What the eventual fallout will be is anyone’s guess.

Champ Islam Makhachev uses mosque to hide from USADA, claims UFC headliner

When the UFC first announced its partnership with USADA the news was welcomed by fighters with open arms. Finally, they felt, PEDS would be driven out of MMA. All those other cheaters out there would get what’s coming to them.

The relationship hasn’t exactly soured in the years since, but the bloom is definitely off the rose. Not only are fighters finding themselves suspended for things like tainted supplements and prescription medication, but there’s a growing contingent that don’t believe that USADA is all that effective at catching cheaters.

Recently, bantamweight contender Marlon Vera claimed that beating USADA’s random testing was fairly simple, mostly because of the set schedule he calims the program keeps. In a recent appearance on the JAXXON podcast, Bobby Green revealed his own suspicions about fighters escaping drug tests.

Islam Makhachev Accused of Cheating by Bobby Green

Bobby Green is getting set to take on Grant Dawson in the main event of this week’s UFC card at the Apex facility in Las Vegas, NV. In the buildup to the event, Green took some time to hang out with former UFC champion and PRIDE star Rampage Jackson.

During the interview Green was asked about the upcoming lightweight title fight rematch at UFC 294 between Islam Makhachev and Charles Oliveira. When asked who he thought would win the bout, Green said he had to pick the Dagestani. But not because of his technical wrestling game or fantastic grappling chops.

“Khabib and Islam, they go to a mosque, you know? They train at some place where they can’t be, you can’t go to, USADA can’t come in here,” said Green (ht Sportskeeda). “For months, they can do whatever they wanna do. Actually, Islam got caught for drugs, you know what I mean, when he first came. But he was like ‘Oh, I didn’t know. This is all the stuff that Russia was giving us as we were kids. We were training, and these were naturally part of the training, these were vitamins.”

“He got suspended. I don’t know the full details of how long or whatnot, but yeah, when he first came over. And so he was like ‘This is what they gave us at school. They said it was vitamins, you know? So this is what they do. In our country, we’re a little bit different, where we wanna take everything from everybody. In their country, they wanna make you big, strong, tougher, harder. And so, it’s a little murky.”

Bobby Green and Islam Makhachev Have History

Of course, Bobby Green also has the experience of having fought Islam Makhachev before. The two men met back in 2022 when Green stepped in to replace Beneil Dariush on just 10 days notice for a Fight Night headliner. The result was Green’s first stoppage loss in six years.

Despite the entirely onesided nature of the fight, however, Green still felt like he had what it takes to beat the now-champion, if only given a little more time to prepare.

“Yes, I’ll beat his ***,” Green stated, flatly, when asked if he’d have performed better against Makhachev on a full camp.

Alongside that statement, however, ‘King’ covered a lot of the same ground he brought up in his appearance on Rampage’s podcast. It seems like Makhachev’s drug test failure for Meldonium in 2016 has been a real sore spot for the California native.

“We’re going to keep it all real. If we’re going to do this, let’s just do it,” Bobby Green told Inside Fighting in a 2022 interview. “Y’all talk about all this ****, but y’all don’t talk about Islam… He had a little situation with the drugs, when he first kinda came in. Nobody knows about that shit… He got a video on YouTube saying he got popped for [meldonium] or some **** like that. That’s when all the European guys were getting popped for this shit, you know?

“They asked him and he said, ‘Hey, listen, I got this stuff while I was in Russia, from the school that gave us all vitamins. They just gave us this stuff as part of the training regimen. So all these guys take these supplements since they were kids. They been taking drugs and stuff since they were kids.

“Everybody wondering how he’s so strong, why he’s so [weird noise]? They’ve been taking drugs since they were kids! Russia ain’t always been cool. Nothing against my Russian brothers, but they got banned from the Olympics for cheating. They got banned for cheating.

“We don’t got the same thing in America, it’s more strenuous over here. Over there, that country thinks it’s okay. They’re gonna get behidn their fighters for doing those things. Matter of fact, their school is giving it to them, you know what I’m sayin’?”

As to whether Green thinks that Makhachev was still cheating? At least back at the time of this interview, Green wasn’t willing to go that far.

“No no no, I’m not saying, ‘Now.’ Green backtracked, when asked if he thought Makhachev was a “cheater.” “What I’m saying is, if you gave me steroids from the age of 9, what do you think I’d be? If you gave me steroids from the age of 9, how strong do you think I’d be—just to retain that strength. Everybody talks about cycling and cycling off. These guys just did it and did it and did it and did it.”

Bobby Green Failed a Drug Test in 2022

Of course, it wouldn’t be MMA if there weren’t a great deal of irony at play. In his appearance on the JAXXON podcast, Green talked about his recent drug test failure for DHEA and how that put him in an awkward position as the guy who calls out other people for cheating.

“I’m number one, I’m number one for that **** too,” Green said when Jackson mentoined that he was against fighters doing steroids. “So, when I got popped? Oh, I knew everybody was comin’. Because why? I’m the guy to be like, ‘Awww, you’re a cheater! **** you, you need to cheat.’ Now I’m the guy, and they’re like ‘Ahh, we knew the whole time. That’s why you look like—and that’s why you fast like.’ I’m like, ‘Bro, I don’t need to cheat this ****.'”

Dawson vs. Green takes place this Saturday, October 7th. Alongside the lightweight headliner the card is expected to feature a middleweight bout between Joe Pyfer & Abdul Razak Alhassan, as well as a welterweight bout between Alex Morono & Joaquin Buckley.



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USADA suspends former UFC title challenger, flyweight vet

These days, USADA suspensions seem to come in two flavors: Newcomers getting slammed with years-long suspensions for undeclared prohibited substance use on their way into the promotion, or longtime UFC fighters getting suspended a few months for protocol violations and tainted supplements.

This time around we’ve got two of the latter. One, a longtime light heavyweight veteran who once fought for an interim version of UFC gold. The other, a noted women’s flyweight action fighter who has struggled to find consistency inside the Octagon.

UFC LHW Ovince St. Preux suspended for tainted supplements

On September 18th, USADA announced in a press release that light heavyweight fighter Ovince St. Preux had been handed a six-month suspension by the UFC’s drug testing partner after finding Androsterone in a recent sample collection. The agency reports that they were able to confirm that the substance entered the athlete’s body through contaminated supplement use.

During an investigation into the circumstances of the positive test, Saint Preux provided a container of a product he was using for analysis at the World Anti-Doping Agency-accredited laboratory in Salt Lake City, Utah. Although no prohibited substances were listed on the supplement label, the analysis revealed that the product contained 1-Androstenedione, consistent with the metabolite for which Saint Preux tested positive. USADA was able to independently obtain a sealed container of the product from the same lot number and confirmed it was also contaminated. This product has been added to the High Risk List.

St. Preux had been set to take on Ion Cutelaba on an August 5th UFC event at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, TN. However, the 40-year-old was removed from the bout in late July for unknown reasons. It would appear this failed drug test was the culprit.

Despite the fighter’s ability to prove that the drug test failure resulted from a tainted supplement, USADA noted that OSP still received a six-month suspension because this was his second failed drug test. The Knoxville Martial Arts Academy standout previously received a 3-month suspension for Ostarine back in 2019, after also providing evidence of tainted supplement use. USADA has stated that they do not believe the levels of banned substances in found in OSP’s drug tests would have been performance enhancing.

St. Preux will be eligible to compete again on December 17, 2023.

Cortney Casey suspended for banned prescription

Unlike Ovince St. Preux, UFC flyweight Cortney Casey’s suspension didn’t stem from a failed drug test at all. Announced on Thursday, September 14th, ‘Cast Iron’ reportedly found herself on the wrong side of USADA policy after discovering that a recent prescription contained a banned substance. Casey self-reported the error and was handed a four-month suspension as a result.

Casey immediately provided documentation confirming that she was prescribed and provided BPC-157 by a doctor to help treat a medical condition. After using the substance for a short period of time, she learned that BPC-157 is a prohibited substance and came forward about her use to the UFC. A Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE) was not applicable to this Non-Approved Substance. Casey was eligible for a reduction to the period of ineligibility based on her forthright declaration and for her Full and Complete Cooperation.

BPC-157 is a pentadecapeptide most commonly used to treat ulcerative colitis and multiple sclerosis on a trial basis. Despite the drug seemingly having shown no performance enhancing effects, it has been placed on the WADA list of prohibited substances (which USADA uses as the baseline for their testing). To quote the USADA website in its caution over BPC-157 use:

“Because BPC-157 has not been extensively studied in humans, no one knows if there is a safe dose, or if there is any way to use this compound safely to treat specific medical conditions.”

That likely also explains why Casey was not eligible to obtain a TUE for the substance. The 36-year-old will be cleared to return for competition on October 1st, 2023.

Top ranked UFC title contender fails drug test

Back in July, the women’s bantamweight division got a badly needed wake-up call. The class that had been ruled over by Amanda Nunes for the bulk of the last half decade seemed bereft of fresh title challengers in the wake of her departure, with a battle between Julianna Pena and Raquel Pennington seeming the most likely bout to decide whose head would next wear the crown.

That made Mayra Bueno Silva’s win over Holly Holm in the main event of their ESPN card feel like a bit of a revelation. Here was a woman, competing against a former champion, at the highest levels of the sport, and she put together a dominant win. How quickly could we get her in a fight with Pena for the belt?

Not that quickly, apparently.

UFC title contender Mayra Bueno Silva reveals drug test failure

In a recent post to her Instagram account, Mayra Bueno Silva delivered an unfortunate announcement. The Brazilian had failed a drug test in connection with her fight against Holly Holm and likely faces at least a temporary suspension.

“To all my fans, it is with deep regret that I have to announce I failed a drug test that I took the week of my fight against Holly Holm. I want to begin by saying I have never in my life taken a substance to enhance my ability in or outside the cage. I have tested positive for a substance that is consistent with the prescription medication I take for my ADHD. I have been dealing with this disorder my entire life and it affects me in a multitude of ways.

“I have provided a plethora of documents and explanations to USADA and the Nevada State Commission detailing the disorder, the effects of the disorder on my daily life and my decision making in the ingestion of the prescription medicine. I am fully cooperating with USADA, the Nevada State Athletic Commission and the UFC to make sure that all information is available and I fully acknowledge the presence of the substance in my system. I discontinued this medication at the beginning of fight week, like I always have in the past. So while it appeared in a small amount in my system, I am told by experts that it would not have an effect on my in-competition performance at that level.

“Please before you make any judgements understand that I have been dealing with this my whole life and I am devastated that this has happened in my career. I look forward to coming to a resolution and putting this behind me. I look forward to fighting again for the best organization in the world. I am the next champion and I am ready to fight!”

Fortunately for fans of ‘Sheetara’ this kind of failed drug test is unlikely to result in her sitting on the sidelines for too much time. But, it might just be enough to keep her from fighting for the title next. It’s also unclear at this time whether the failed drug test will result in her most recent victory being overturned—something that could derail her title shot entirely.

A similar case

Mayra Bueno Silva isn’t the first fighter to fail a drug test for ADHD meds inside the UFC. Kevin Lee faced a similar problem back in 2021, when he tested positive for Adderall surrounding his loss to Daniel Rodriguez at UFC on ESPN: Barboza vs. Chikadze. In Lee’s case, there was no discussion of overturning his bout, since he lost. However, Lee was suspended for six months by the Nevada State Athletic Commission and fined $19,526.

Lee explained at the time why he didn’t apply for a ‘Theraputic Use Exemption’ for his medication, something it seems Bueno Silva also failed to do.

“It wouldn’t have been an issue, but I got a little arrogant in it,” Lee said in an MMA Hour interview. “I thought that I would be fine without it, and that it just would get out of my system much faster. But I think not cutting as much weight – I should have applied for the TUE. I’m still kind of kicking myself in the ass over it because it’s a legit prescription, it’s a legit diagnosis and I think I just went about it in an unprofessional way to get that done.”

Hopefully Bueno Silva won’t lose out too heavily based on what, by all accounts, doesn’t seem like it was any kind of performance enhancement for her fight. The bantamweight division badly needs a contender of her caliber in the running as soon as possible.