UFC anti-doping policy changes stance on marijuana; positive test no longer violation

ABU DHABI – The UFC’s anti-doping policy will no longer punish athletes for positive tests for carboxy-THC, the psychoactive ingredient in cannabis.

UFC and U.S. Anti-Doping Agency officials on Thursday announced significant modifications “in the handling of cannabis and its naturally occurring cannabinoid compounds.”

In short, positive tests for carboxy-THC, regardless of levels, will no longer be considered violations to the policy “unless additional evidence exists that an athlete used it intentionally for performance-enhancing purposes.”

“While we want to continue to prevent athletes from competing under the influence of marijuana, we have learned that blood and/or urine levels of carboxy-THC have little-to-no scientific correlation to impairment,” UFC senior vice president of athlete health and performance Jeff Novitzky said in a statement. “THC is fat soluble, meaning that once ingested, it is stored in fatty tissues and organs in the body and can be released back into the blood or urine, sometimes long after ingestion.”

Novitzky said athletes will still not be allowed to compete under the influence of marijuana, but that the UFC and USADA will rely on visual evidence of impairment and cognitive behavioral tests to make such determinations rather that any sort of blood level detection, which can often indicate usage well outside of the competition window.

“The bottom line is that in regards to marijuana, we care about what an athlete consumed the day of a fight, not days or weeks before a fight, which has often been the case in our historic positive THC cases,” Novitzky said.

Novitzky said he believes the change in policy is simply the latest by the promotion to maintain anti-doping guidelines that are thorough but maintain a sense of fairness for the athletes who must abide by the policy, which was first instituted in 2015.

“Based on my informal discussion with athletes, there’s a significant number of percentage of athletes that choose to use marijuana, many for legitimate reasons outside of recreational,” Novitzky said. “Many use it for pain control, anti-anxiety, to sleep, in lieu of more dangerous, more addictive drugs, so hopefully this being the first step to opening that up so that an athlete on Wednesday night of fight week instead of going to a Vicodin because their knee hurts and they can’t sleep can use a little bit of cannabis and get to sleep and have that pain control. It has no affect whatsoever on a competition on Saturday night, so it’s the right move, and I’m really excited about this revision and that specific policy change.”

It is important to note that the change in USADA policy does not directly affect regulations by state athletic commissions, so athletes do not have carte blanche with marijuana use following the announcement. However, Novitzky is hopeful that the change to UFC policy can ultimately pave the way for similar moves at the state level.

“I would caution everybody to temper their enthusiasm about this because we still have the commission factor here, but we are actively working on that,” Novitzky told MMA Junkie. “We are educating, informing, lobbying them, and I hope not too far in the near future that we can get uniformity across all the rules as it relates to marijuana because I think it would certainly be a benefit to the athletes.”

Additional changes to the UFC’s anti-doping Policy announced include the removal of “phyto” cannabinoids often found in various CBD products, as well as the addition of Informed Choice as an approved dietary supplement certifier for UFC athletes.

Article source: https://mmajunkie.usatoday.com/2021/01/ufc-usada-declare-marijuana-no-longer-violates-anti-doping-policy

 

250-pound Jon Jones is completely jacked and ‘ready for anyone’

If you’ve had any doubts about Jon Jones’ commitment to heavyweight, forget about them. He’s all in.

On Wednesday, the former UFC light heavyweight champion shared photos on social media highlighting his physical transformation as he prepares to move up a division. And let’s just say you’ve never seen him like this:

Since relinquishing the UFC light heavyweight title last year, Jones (25-1 MMA, 20-1 UFC) has been hard at work for several months trying to add muscle mass to his lanky frame. Whatever he’s been doing, mission accomplished. He looks ready to fight the biggest and baddest.

Of course, since Jones never has fought while this heavy, it’ll be interesting to see how he performs – which an opponent and date for his heavyweight debut have yet to be determined. Whenever it happens this year, though, Jones says he’s feeling pretty good at the moment.

I feel ready to take on any challenge, this is the first time in my career that I can say that. I finally have the size to be ready for anyone

No I’m not worried about cardio, I hold myself to a very high standard,A light heavyweight standard. Some of these guys may be stronger, but they can’t possibly push as hard as I can. I’ve been able to outwork literally every LHW, i’ll do the same at heavy.. It’s called heart

Can’t wait to see it.

The Blue Corner is MMA Junkie’s blog space. We don’t take it overly serious, and neither should you. If you come complaining to us that something you read here is not hard-hitting news, expect to have the previous sentence repeated in ALL CAPS.

Article source: https://mmajunkie.usatoday.com/2021/01/ufc-jon-jones-heavyweight-photos-250-pounds

 

Max Holloway’s excited to fight in front of fans | UFC Fight Island 7

Former featherweight champion Max Holloway spoke to the media about his upcoming UFC Fight Island 7 main event bout against Calvin Kattar.

Holloway looks to rebound from back-to-back losses to current champion Alexander Volkanovski and get back in the win column. UFC Fight Island 7 marks the fight promotion’s first event of 2021 and kicks off the first of three events in eight days.

TRENDING Dana White hopes to keep Conor McGregor out of the boxing ring in 2021


Article source: https://www.mmaweekly.com/max-holloways-excited-to-fight-in-front-of-fans-ufc-fight-island-7

 

Check out Calvin Kattar’s top UFC finishes


Calvin Kattar has climbed up the featherweight ranks since joining the UFC with impressive performances and finishes in big-time matchups.

This Saturday, Kattar headlines the first UFC fight card of 2021 when he meets former featherweight champion Max Holloway at UFC Fight Island 7. Kattar (22-4) is riding a two fight winning streak while Holloway (21-6) hopes to rebound from back-to-back losses to champion Alexander Volkanovski.

(Courtesy of UFC)


TRENDING Dana White hopes to keep Conor McGregor out of the boxing ring in 2021



Article source: https://www.mmaweekly.com/check-out-calvin-kattars-top-ufc-finishes

 

We go to the scorecards: The top 10 busiest UFC judges of 2020

When the final horn sounds and the fight is about to go to the scorecards, everyone has an opinion on who won. Only three voices truly matter, though: those of the three cageside judges.

In 2020, the UFC hosted 41 events in 10 locations, which included 11 pay-per-view events. There were 220 decisions overall. Of those, 185 were unanimous and 35 were split.

Across those decisions, 11 individual judges ruled on 25 or more of these decisions, according to MMA scoring database MMA Decisions‘ year-end tally.

Sal D’Amato and Derek Cleary came in first and second place respectively, a flip-flop from 2019’s top two. Their 29 UFC events judged each broke the previous year-end record of 20.

Judges who were not in the top 10 in 2019, but joined the list in 2020 were Dave Hagen, Junichiro Kamijo, David Lethaby, Clemens Werner and Anders Ohlsson.

Dave Tirelli, Mark Collett, Guilherme Bravo, and Tony Weeks, who were all featured in the top 10 in 2019, didn’t crack the list in 2020.

Check out the 2020 busiest judges tally (via MMA Decisions) below.

  1. Sal D’Amato – 77 decisions in 29 events
  2. Derek Cleary – 65 decisions in 29 events
  3. Michael Bell – 58 decisions in 26 events
  4. Chris Lee – 44 decisions in 22 events
  5. Eric Colon – 43 decisions in 21 events
  6. Dave Hagen – 37 decisions in 22 events
  7. Ron McCarthy – 30 decisions in 16 events
  8. Junichiro Kamijo – 28 decisions in 15 events
  9. David Lethaby – 25 decisions in 7 events
    Clemens Werner – 25 decisions in 8 events
    Anders Ohlsson – 25 decisions in 7 events

Also, check out previous year-end tallies below:

Article source: https://mmajunkie.usatoday.com/2021/01/ufc-news-top-10-busiest-judges-2020

 

 

 

WELCOME


*** READ ME ***

Welcome to FightFan.net. Your home for local combat sports news and info. Be sure to set up your account for full access. Its EASY. Click the “register” link above. Fill in your name and email. We’ll send a funky password to your email. You log in to your account and set up something not so funky. Oh yeah, and when you’re ready to come back and start checking everything out, just click the “Your home for local combat sports” link at the top of the page. That's it, you’re a member! Tons of stuff to check out, so get after it.