Boxing took a hit when Oscar Valdez was allowed to fight Friday

Boxing took a hit when Oscar Valdez was allowed to fight on Friday night.

Timothy Bradley recently said that he hopes Oscar Valdez gets knocked out in light of the news he tested positive for a banned substance yet will be allowed to fight Robson Conceicao on Friday in Tucson, Arizona. I won’t go that far but I know where he’s coming from.

And I have similar feelings toward the Pascua Yaqui Tribal Athletic Commission and the World Boxing Council, which are overseeing the card at Casino Del Sol in Tucson, Ariz.

Valdez last week tested positive – both his “A” and “B” samples – for the weight-loss medication phentermine, which is also a stimulant. The drug is banned by the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association, the organization Valdez asked to do his testing.

The appropriate course of action after a blatant violation of the rules? Valdez is removed from the card, stripped of his title and suspended by the WBC, whose junior lightweight belt Valdez owns.

The Commission and sanctioning body had different ideas, which resulted in no punishment.

The former announced that it adheres to the rules of the World Anti-Doping Agency, not that of the more-stringent VADA. WADA bans phentermine only during its in-competition period, beginning at 11:59 a.m. the day before the scheduled event.

The fact the commission is on a different page from the sanctioning body and the fighters themselves is odd to say the least.

Meanwhile, WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman said that Valdez would have no advantage over Conceicao because phentermine isn’t a performance-enhancing drug, a contention that BALCO founder and noted PED expert Victor Conte believes is hogwash.

“You know why it’s a performance-enhancing drug? Because it’s a central nervous stimulant,” he told ESPN. “It accelerates your heart rate. It gives you energy. It gives you endurance. It gives you stamina. It makes it easier to breathe. Your training time to exhaustion would be much longer.”

No advantage? Yeah, right.

Even you believe that Conte is wrong, the fact is Valdez tested positive for a drug that was on VADA’s list of banned substances. It’s an obvious violation. And, again, everyone (except the commission) agreed to work with VADA, which partners with Sulaiman in his WBC Clean Boxing Program. You can’t change the rules midstream to suit your needs, at least not without taking a major hit to your reputation.

Of course, Valdez denied knowingly ingesting the drug. Ignore that. They all play ignorant.

The fact is he’s a drug cheat who shouldn’t be allowed to step through the ropes on Friday night. And both the commission and WBC decided to ignore that fact. In doing so, they failed to fulfil their responsibilities. I can’t provide a reason for their behavior with 100% certainty but you can bet it had something to do with the bottom line. It always does.

As a result, the commission looks horrible. The WBC, already sketchy by its very nature, looks horrible. Everyone associated with the event – except VADA, which did its job – looks horrible. And, sadly, the bleeding doesn’t stop there.

The sport is perpetually under fire as it is, for bad scorecards, deaths in the ring and much more. The last thing it needs are poor decisions that cast doubt (further doubt?) on its ability to prevent doping.

Make no mistake: That’s exactly what the Commission and WBC have done.

[lawrence-related id=23704,17966]

Boxing took a hit when Oscar Valdez was allowed to fight Friday

Boxing took a hit when Oscar Valdez was allowed to fight on Friday night.

Timothy Bradley recently said that he hopes Oscar Valdez gets knocked out in light of the news he tested positive for a banned substance yet will be allowed to fight Robson Conceicao on Friday in Tucson, Arizona. I won’t go that far but I know where he’s coming from.

And I have similar feelings toward the Pascua Yaqui Tribal Athletic Commission and the World Boxing Council, which are overseeing the card at Casino Del Sol in Tucson, Ariz.

Valdez last week tested positive – both his “A” and “B” samples – for the weight-loss medication phentermine, which is also a stimulant. The drug is banned by the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association, the organization Valdez asked to do his testing.

The appropriate course of action after a blatant violation of the rules? Valdez is removed from the card, stripped of his title and suspended by the WBC, whose junior lightweight belt Valdez owns.

The Commission and sanctioning body had different ideas, which resulted in no punishment.

The former announced that it adheres to the rules of the World Anti-Doping Agency, not that of the more-stringent VADA. WADA bans phentermine only during its in-competition period, beginning at 11:59 a.m. the day before the scheduled event.

The fact the commission is on a different page from the sanctioning body and the fighters themselves is odd to say the least.

Meanwhile, WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman said that Valdez would have no advantage over Conceicao because phentermine isn’t a performance-enhancing drug, a contention that BALCO founder and noted PED expert Victor Conte believes is hogwash.

“You know why it’s a performance-enhancing drug? Because it’s a central nervous stimulant,” he told ESPN. “It accelerates your heart rate. It gives you energy. It gives you endurance. It gives you stamina. It makes it easier to breathe. Your training time to exhaustion would be much longer.”

No advantage? Yeah, right.

Even you believe that Conte is wrong, the fact is Valdez tested positive for a drug that was on VADA’s list of banned substances. It’s an obvious violation. And, again, everyone (except the commission) agreed to work with VADA, which partners with Sulaiman in his WBC Clean Boxing Program. You can’t change the rules midstream to suit your needs, at least not without taking a major hit to your reputation.

Of course, Valdez denied knowingly ingesting the drug. Ignore that. They all play ignorant.

The fact is he’s a drug cheat who shouldn’t be allowed to step through the ropes on Friday night. And both the commission and WBC decided to ignore that fact. In doing so, they failed to fulfil their responsibilities. I can’t provide a reason for their behavior with 100% certainty but you can bet it had something to do with the bottom line. It always does.

As a result, the commission looks horrible. The WBC, already sketchy by its very nature, looks horrible. Everyone associated with the event – except VADA, which did its job – looks horrible. And, sadly, the bleeding doesn’t stop there.

The sport is perpetually under fire as it is, for bad scorecards, deaths in the ring and much more. The last thing it needs are poor decisions that cast doubt (further doubt?) on its ability to prevent doping.

Make no mistake: That’s exactly what the Commission and WBC have done.

[lawrence-related id=23704,17966]

Oscar Valdez vs. Robson Conceicao: date, time, weights, how to watch, background

Oscar Valdez vs. Robson Conceicao: date, time, how to watch, background.

OSCAR VALDEZ HAS BEEN ALLOWED TO DEFEND HIS 130-POUND TITLE AGAINST ROBSON CONCEICAO IN SPITE OF TESTING POSITIVE FOR A BANNED SUBSTANCE.

***

OSCAR VALDEZ (29-0, 23 KOs)
VS. ROBSON CONCEICAO (16-0, 8 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 10
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Casino Del Sol, Tucson, Ariz.
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Cost: ESPN+ subscription is $7 a month or $70 annually
  • Division: Junior lightweight (130 pounds)
  • Weights (from Thursday): Valdez 130, Conceicao 129.6
  • At stake: Valdez’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Valdez, Honorable Mention
  • Odds: 11½-1 odds (average of multiple sites)
  • Also on the card: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Luis Alberto Lopez, junior lightweights; Junto Nakatani vs. Angel Acosta, junior lightweights (for Nakatani’s WBO title)
  • Prediction: Valdez KO 8
  • Background: Valdez’s reputation soared and was floored within a seven-month span. The hard-punching Mexican recorded a career-defining victory by stopping Miguel Berchelt to win a 130-pound belt in February only to test positive for a banned substance in the week before his first defense, although he was placed on probation and allowed to defend his belt. Valdez denies he knowingly used a PED. The former featherweight champ reached new heights by putting his respected countryman Berchelt down three times and stopping him in Round 10 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, after which he climbed onto some pound-for-pound lists. Then, last Tuesday, we learned that he tested positive for the weight-loss medication phentermine, which is banned by the drug-testing outlet to which the fighters agreed, the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association. Phentermine is also a stimulant that can enhance endurance. The Pascua Yaqui Tribal Athletic Commission, which is overseeing the card, allowed the fight to go on because it adheres to World Anti-Doping Agency rules. WADA bans the drug only when it’s detected closer to the competition. And the WBC decided probation was sufficient. Conceicao, a 2016 Olympic gold medalist from Brazil, has vast amateur experience but has faced no one near Valdez’s status as a professional. He has taken part in only three scheduled 10-rounders.

Oscar Valdez vs. Robson Conceicao: date, time, weights, how to watch, background

Oscar Valdez vs. Robson Conceicao: date, time, how to watch, background.

OSCAR VALDEZ HAS BEEN ALLOWED TO DEFEND HIS 130-POUND TITLE AGAINST ROBSON CONCEICAO IN SPITE OF TESTING POSITIVE FOR A BANNED SUBSTANCE.

***

OSCAR VALDEZ (29-0, 23 KOs)
VS. ROBSON CONCEICAO (16-0, 8 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 10
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Casino Del Sol, Tucson, Ariz.
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Cost: ESPN+ subscription is $7 a month or $70 annually
  • Division: Junior lightweight (130 pounds)
  • Weights (from Thursday): Valdez 130, Conceicao 129.6
  • At stake: Valdez’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Valdez, Honorable Mention
  • Odds: 11½-1 odds (average of multiple sites)
  • Also on the card: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Luis Alberto Lopez, junior lightweights; Junto Nakatani vs. Angel Acosta, junior lightweights (for Nakatani’s WBO title)
  • Prediction: Valdez KO 8
  • Background: Valdez’s reputation soared and was floored within a seven-month span. The hard-punching Mexican recorded a career-defining victory by stopping Miguel Berchelt to win a 130-pound belt in February only to test positive for a banned substance in the week before his first defense, although he was placed on probation and allowed to defend his belt. Valdez denies he knowingly used a PED. The former featherweight champ reached new heights by putting his respected countryman Berchelt down three times and stopping him in Round 10 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, after which he climbed onto some pound-for-pound lists. Then, last Tuesday, we learned that he tested positive for the weight-loss medication phentermine, which is banned by the drug-testing outlet to which the fighters agreed, the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association. Phentermine is also a stimulant that can enhance endurance. The Pascua Yaqui Tribal Athletic Commission, which is overseeing the card, allowed the fight to go on because it adheres to World Anti-Doping Agency rules. WADA bans the drug only when it’s detected closer to the competition. And the WBC decided probation was sufficient. Conceicao, a 2016 Olympic gold medalist from Brazil, has vast amateur experience but has faced no one near Valdez’s status as a professional. He has taken part in only three scheduled 10-rounders.

Fight Week: Oscar Valdez to defend title, Evander Holyfield back at 58

Fight Week: Oscar Valdez will defend his 130-pound title against Robson Conceicao, and Evander Holyfield returns to the ring at 58.

FIGHT WEEK

OSCAR VALDEZ HAS BEEN ALLOWED TO DEFEND HIS 130-POUND TITLE IN SPITE OF TESTING POSITIVE FOR A BANNED SUBSTANCE. AND EVANDER HOLYFIELD RETURNS AT 58.

***

OSCAR VALDEZ (29-0, 23 KOs)
VS. ROBSON CONCEICAO (16-0, 8 KOs)

  • When: Friday, Sept. 10
  • Where: Casino Del Sol, Tucson, Ariz.
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior lightweight (130 pounds)
  • At stake: Valdez’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Valdez, Honorable Mention
  • Odds: 11½-1 odds (average of multiple sites)
  • Also on the card: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Luis Alberto Lopez, junior lightweights; Junto Nakatani vs. Angel Acosta, junior lightweights (for Nakatani’s WBO title)
  • Prediction: Valdez KO 8
  • Background: Valdez’s reputation soared and was floored within a seven-month span. The hard-punching Mexican recorded a career-defining victory by stopping Miguel Berchelt to win a 130-pound belt in February only to test positive for a banned substance in the week before his first defense, although he was placed on probation and allowed to defend his belt. Valdez denies he knowingly used a PED. The former featherweight champ reached new heights by putting his respected countryman Berchelt down three times and stopping him in Round 10 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, after which he climbed onto some pound-for-pound lists. Then, last Tuesday, we learned that he tested positive for the weight-loss medication phentermine, which is banned by the drug-testing outlet to which the fighters agreed, the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association. Phentermine is also a stimulant that can enhance endurance. The Pascua Yaqui Tribal Athletic Commission, which is overseeing the card, allowed the fight to go on because it adheres to World Anti-Doping Agency rules. WADA bans the drug only when it’s detected closer to the competition. And the WBC decided probation was sufficient. Conceicao, a 2016 Olympic gold medalist from Brazil, has vast amateur experience but has faced no one near Valdez’s status as a professional. He has taken part in only three scheduled 10-rounders.

***

EVANDER HOLYFIELD (44-10-2, 29 KOs)
VS. VITOR BELFORT (1-0, 1 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Sept. 11
  • Where: Seminole Hard Rock, Hollywood, Fla.
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view
  • Division: Heavyweight
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Holyfield 1½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Andy Vences vs. Jono Carroll, junior lightweights; Anderson Silva vs. Tito Ortiz, cruiserweights
  • Prediction: Holyfield KO 7
  • Background: Oscar De La Hoya, 48, was scheduled to fight Vitor Belfort in Los Angeles but had to pull out after testing positive for COVID-19. In stepped 58-year-old former heavyweight champ Evander Holyfield, who has been angling for a comeback fight over the past few years and was targeted by Belfort. Holyfield last fought in May 2011, when he stopped Brian Nielsen in 10 rounds. He was always known for his fitness but there is no telling how a man nearing his 59th birthday will perform in the ring, even one of the best fighters of his generation. That said, he’ll have a distinct advantage over Belfort in terms of experience. The 44-year-old former UFC champion has taken part in one boxing match, a first-round knockout in 2006. And Holyfield presumably will be significant bigger than Belfort. Holyfield weighed 226 for the Nielsen fight. Belfort and De La Hoya had agreed to a 185-pound weight limit, although Belfort probably will come in well over 185 without restrictions. The fight was moved to Florida after California authorities refused to sanction the bout.

***

  • Also fighting this weekend: Heavyweight contender Tony Yoka (10-0, 8 KOs) faces Petar Milas (15-0, 11 KOs) on Friday in Paris (ESPN+); Filip Hrgovic (12-0, 10 KOs) takes on Marko Radonjic (22-0, 22 KOs) in a heavyweight bout Friday in Klagenfurt, Austria (DAZN); Kerman Lejarraga (32-2, 25 KOs) vs. Dylan Charrat (20-0-1, 6 KOs) face off in a junior middleweight bout Saturday in Barcelona, Spain (DAZN); and Roxie Lam (7-4, 4 KOs) faces Carietto Santoro (5-0, 1 KO) in a featherweight bout Saturday in Grand Prarie, Canada (FITE).

Fight Week: Oscar Valdez to defend title, Evander Holyfield back at 58

Fight Week: Oscar Valdez will defend his 130-pound title against Robson Conceicao, and Evander Holyfield returns to the ring at 58.

FIGHT WEEK

OSCAR VALDEZ HAS BEEN ALLOWED TO DEFEND HIS 130-POUND TITLE IN SPITE OF TESTING POSITIVE FOR A BANNED SUBSTANCE. AND EVANDER HOLYFIELD RETURNS AT 58.

***

OSCAR VALDEZ (29-0, 23 KOs)
VS. ROBSON CONCEICAO (16-0, 8 KOs)

  • When: Friday, Sept. 10
  • Where: Casino Del Sol, Tucson, Ariz.
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior lightweight (130 pounds)
  • At stake: Valdez’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Valdez, Honorable Mention
  • Odds: 11½-1 odds (average of multiple sites)
  • Also on the card: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Luis Alberto Lopez, junior lightweights; Junto Nakatani vs. Angel Acosta, junior lightweights (for Nakatani’s WBO title)
  • Prediction: Valdez KO 8
  • Background: Valdez’s reputation soared and was floored within a seven-month span. The hard-punching Mexican recorded a career-defining victory by stopping Miguel Berchelt to win a 130-pound belt in February only to test positive for a banned substance in the week before his first defense, although he was placed on probation and allowed to defend his belt. Valdez denies he knowingly used a PED. The former featherweight champ reached new heights by putting his respected countryman Berchelt down three times and stopping him in Round 10 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, after which he climbed onto some pound-for-pound lists. Then, last Tuesday, we learned that he tested positive for the weight-loss medication phentermine, which is banned by the drug-testing outlet to which the fighters agreed, the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association. Phentermine is also a stimulant that can enhance endurance. The Pascua Yaqui Tribal Athletic Commission, which is overseeing the card, allowed the fight to go on because it adheres to World Anti-Doping Agency rules. WADA bans the drug only when it’s detected closer to the competition. And the WBC decided probation was sufficient. Conceicao, a 2016 Olympic gold medalist from Brazil, has vast amateur experience but has faced no one near Valdez’s status as a professional. He has taken part in only three scheduled 10-rounders.

***

EVANDER HOLYFIELD (44-10-2, 29 KOs)
VS. VITOR BELFORT (1-0, 1 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Sept. 11
  • Where: Seminole Hard Rock, Hollywood, Fla.
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view
  • Division: Heavyweight
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Holyfield 1½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Andy Vences vs. Jono Carroll, junior lightweights; Anderson Silva vs. Tito Ortiz, cruiserweights
  • Prediction: Holyfield KO 7
  • Background: Oscar De La Hoya, 48, was scheduled to fight Vitor Belfort in Los Angeles but had to pull out after testing positive for COVID-19. In stepped 58-year-old former heavyweight champ Evander Holyfield, who has been angling for a comeback fight over the past few years and was targeted by Belfort. Holyfield last fought in May 2011, when he stopped Brian Nielsen in 10 rounds. He was always known for his fitness but there is no telling how a man nearing his 59th birthday will perform in the ring, even one of the best fighters of his generation. That said, he’ll have a distinct advantage over Belfort in terms of experience. The 44-year-old former UFC champion has taken part in one boxing match, a first-round knockout in 2006. And Holyfield presumably will be significant bigger than Belfort. Holyfield weighed 226 for the Nielsen fight. Belfort and De La Hoya had agreed to a 185-pound weight limit, although Belfort probably will come in well over 185 without restrictions. The fight was moved to Florida after California authorities refused to sanction the bout.

***

  • Also fighting this weekend: Heavyweight contender Tony Yoka (10-0, 8 KOs) faces Petar Milas (15-0, 11 KOs) on Friday in Paris (ESPN+); Filip Hrgovic (12-0, 10 KOs) takes on Marko Radonjic (22-0, 22 KOs) in a heavyweight bout Friday in Klagenfurt, Austria (DAZN); Kerman Lejarraga (32-2, 25 KOs) vs. Dylan Charrat (20-0-1, 6 KOs) face off in a junior middleweight bout Saturday in Barcelona, Spain (DAZN); and Roxie Lam (7-4, 4 KOs) faces Carietto Santoro (5-0, 1 KO) in a featherweight bout Saturday in Grand Prarie, Canada (FITE).

Oscar Valdez test positive for banned substance, according to report

Oscar Valdez has tested positive for a banned substance, according to a report.

Junior lightweight titleholder Oscar Valdez has tested positive for a diuretic, which is a banned substance, ESPN is reporting.

Valdez’s A-sample, taken by the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association, came back positive. The results of his B-sample have yet to be determined.

The Mexican, coming off his sensational knockout of countryman Miguel Berchelt to win his belt in February, was scheduled to make his first defense against Robson Conceicao on Sept. 10 in Tucson, Ariz.

The positive test places that bout and Valdez’s immediate future in jeopardy.

Diuretics are used for weight loss and, in some cases, to mask the use of other banned substances.

***