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    Boxing
    • Juan Manuel Lopez set to make long-awaited return following suspension

      Juan Manuel Lopez tries to get up on March 10 after being knocked down by Orlando Salido (AP)

      Juan Manuel Lopez has long been one of the game's most exciting fighters, and he's often too brave for his own good. He loves to stand toe-to-toe and slug in the hopes of bringing the fans out of their seats.

      Mostly, it's worked for him as he's compiled a 31-2 record with 28 knockouts and world titles at super bantamweight and featherweight.

      [Also: Boxer Omar Henry dies at 25, months after cancer diagnosis]

      But it nearly cost him a loss in an epic 2009 scrap with Rogers Mtagwa, when he was barely able to stand in the waning seconds. And he dropped a pair of bouts in the last year to Orlando Salido.

      Lopez was suspended after the second loss to Salido for making allegations that referee Roberto Ramirez was gambling. Lopez was clearly woozy after that March 10 loss but was interviewed within seconds after the fight's 10th-round stoppage.

      Juan Manuel Lopez (AP)Lopez's words were wrong and he had nothing to back up his accusation that Ramirez has a gambling problem. But he'd also recently been concussed and

      Read More »from Juan Manuel Lopez set to make long-awaited return following suspension
    • Boxer Omar Henry died Friday at 25 (Photo courtesy of Omar Henry Facebook Fan Page)Boxer Omar Henry craved the spotlight and hoped one day to become the undisputed super welterweight champion.

      Sadly, though, Henry only became a star in death, when he died at 25 Friday in a Chicago hospital following a short fight with gall bladder cancer.

      Henry, who was 12-0-1, was supposed to fight on Showtime on Nov. 16. But he didn't feel well a few days before the fight, went to see his doctor and was diagnosed with Stage 4 gall bladder cancer.

      He posted a series of heart-wrenching messages on his Facebook fan page in which he pleaded for prayers and support. Perhaps the most tragic was his Jan. 9 post, when he said he hoped to live to celebrate his 26th birthday on Feb. 8.

      Sadly, he fell a week short of that goal.

      I got exactly less than 1 month left until my 26th birthday February 8. Hopefully I live to see it. I really have been getting a lot of support with kind words and prayers from all over the world with this battle with cancer. Thank you and I will continue to fight for

      Read More »from Boxer Omar Henry dies at 25, not long after writing he hoped to live to his 26th birthday on Feb. 8
    • Kimbo Slice not exactly steamrolling toward the heavyweight title

      For those so inclined, it's easy to laugh at Kevin Ferguson for keeping the charade going. Ferguson, better known as Kimbo Slice, became an Internet legend almost a decade ago by starring in street fighting videos.

      He appears to have found his latest meal ticket parading around the world as a professional boxer, taking on guys who probably don't belong in the ring in the first place. For Exhibit A, let's turn to his latest win over Australian Shane Tilyard.

      In his fight with Tilyard, Ferguson was winded early – in the first round, mind you – and got hurt by a slow-motion punch from Tilyard. In the second, Ferguson stumbled into Tilyard in a move that looked as if he were remembering his MMA days and going for a takedown.

      Both men were completely gassed by the time Ferguson threw that innocent-looking hook to the midsection. Tilyard went down in obvious pain, and couldn't beat the 10-count.

      Ferguson's supporters would point to that as evidence of his punching power. Rather, it was evidence that Tilyard was completely winded and couldn't go any more.

      With the win, Ferguson raised his record to 7-0 (6 KOs) as a professional boxer.

      [Also: Alvarado-Rios to rematch after 2012 classic between two fighters]

      Read More »from Kimbo Slice not exactly steamrolling toward the heavyweight title
    • Brandon Rios-Mike Alvarado II set for March 30 in Las Vegas on HBO

      Mike Alvarado (L) and Brandon Rios will meet March 30 in a reprise of their Oct. 13 classic (Getty Images)Great news for fans of two men who stand in front of each other and throw haymakers: Top Rank vice president Carl Moretti said Wednesday that a rematch of the great 2012 fight between Brandon Rios and Mike Alvarado has been signed and is set for March 30 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas.

      Rios stopped Alvarado at 1:57 of the seventh round on Oct. 13 in Carson, Calif., in a staggeringly brutal fight. At the time, I called it the best fight I'd seen since 2000. I may have to revise that list in light of Juan Manuel Marquez's knockout of Manny Pacquiao on Dec. 8, but Rios-Alvarado I remains a classic.

      "When the bell rings, basically this picks up in Round 7," Moretti said. "That's how these guys are."

      Brandon Rios (R) cracks Mike Alvarado on Oct. 13 (Getty Images)Top Rank had groomed Rios as a potential opponent for Pacquiao for a year and after Rios stopped Alvarado, it seemed certain that Pacquiao-Rios would occur in April.

      Marquez, though, had something to say about that and altered plans when he knocked Pacquiao cold.

      "Once Manny

      Read More »from Brandon Rios-Mike Alvarado II set for March 30 in Las Vegas on HBO
    • Boxer Yuriorkis Gamboa's (R) name turned up in the records of Biogenesis (AP)

      A major flaw in the way that the use of performance-enhancing drugs is tracked in combat sports in the U.S. was exposed after the release of a Miami New Times story on a lab allegedly providing PEDs to prominent athletes.

      A series of high-profile baseball players, including the Yankees' Alex Rodriguez, were included in the records of Biogenesis, a Miami, Fla., anti-aging company that allegedly provided anabolic steroids and human growth hormone to a number of famous athletes.

      Among those included in the report was boxer Yuriorkis Gamboa, a 2004 Olympic gold medalist from Cuba and the interim WBA super featherweight champion.

      Several of the athletes mentioned, including Rodriguez and the Washington Nationals' Gio Gonzalez, have already denied the allegations. Gamboa couldn't be reached for comment and his promoter, hip hop star Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson of SMS Promotions, failed to return messages left with his publicist seeking comment.

      Gamboa hasn't been linked to PED usage previously and clearly deserves the presumption of innocence. However, the report shows the flaws in the battle to keep PED usage out of boxing and mixed martial arts, where it can literally turn deadly.

      [Also: Little girl's incredible boxing video goes viral]

      The Major League Baseball players who have been implicated could face punishment despite not having failed a drug test. Major League Baseball released a statement in which it read, in part, "We remain fully committed to following all leads and seeking the appropriate outcomes for all those who use, purchase and are involved in the distribution of banned substances, which have no place in our game."

      Gamboa, though, has no worries about action being taken against him no matter what the results of the investigation turn up. Under state athletic commission rules, a fighter can not be fined or suspended retroactively once he or she passes a drug test.

      Shane Mosley used PEDs before a 2003 fight with Oscar De La Hoya (AP)That actually happened once. Shane Mosley defeated Oscar De La Hoya in 2003 in Las Vegas and passed his drug test administered by the Nevada Athletic Commission. But then the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO) scandal broke in 2004 and it turned out that Mosley used the cream and the clear, designer steroids created by BALCO founder Victor Conte that were undetectable at the time.

      Because Mosley passed his test given following the fight by the Nevada commission, even his admission to the grand jury was not enough to allow Nevada to penalize him for his usage. He went on with his career as if the steroid usage never occurred. The same will be true of Gamboa and every other fighter who may be implicated.

      Clearly, that's not right, but that's because of the way that boxing and mixed martial arts are regulated in the U.S. States have control over the testing and each state has different requirements. The states also don't have the funds to randomly test athletes too often, which is the way they're most likely to be caught cheating. The states' limited budgets for such testing also doesn't include funds for carbon isotope ratio tests which, for now, is the only foolproof way to prove steroid usage.

      As a result, the would-be cheaters in boxing and MMA are far ahead of the game when it comes to beating the testing they face. With few exceptions, they're tested following their fights, when they know the testing will be done.

      [Also: Top Rank reportedly turns down Donaire-Mares deal]

      Read More »from Yuriorkis Gamboa linked to anti-aging clinic allegedly distributing PEDs, but he’ll face no consequences

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