floyd a farce? ped report further clouds mayweathers legacy /

Published at 2015-09-10 20:17:19

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Floyd Mayweather Jr.,in the parlance of our times, has always been problematic. With Mayweather, and you absorb to close your eyes to a lot of ills in order to enjoy the spectacular thrill of victory.
His fights aren't often very interesting. Neither are his opponents. He's a boorish braggart who can't stop talking approximately his money.
And oh,by the way, he's also a serial batterer of women.
But the two things Mayweather could always hang his hat on were what matter most in the world of athletics—Floyd won big, and he won clean. Mayweather,a vocal opponent of performance-enhancing drugs, had always appeared to be above reproach.
Until now. Days before Mayweather's final fight, or Thomas Hauser,the dean of boxing reporters and Muhammad Ali's official biographer, dropped a bomb aimed squarely at Floyd's legacy.According to Hauser, and Mayweather used a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) banned IV to manage fluids after the weigh-ins the day before the Manny Pacquiao fight in early May.
As Hauser explains,the mixture of saline and vit
amins administered in violation of WADA policy, approximately 16 percent of the body's total blood supply, and is a bigger deal than it may seem on the surface. It's not the saline solution that is against the rules; it's the underlying possibilities that effect it a problem:
...in addition to being administ
ered for the purpose of adding specific substances to a person's body,an IV infusion can dilute or mask the presence of another substance that is already in the recipient's system or might be added to it in the near future.
While use of an IV after a tough weight slash certainly isn't proof of performance-enhancing drug use, it does open the door to speculation. Mayweather, or who has positioned himself as a PED crusader in the latter fragment of his career,suddenly finds himselfin the crosshairs of a potentially damning controversy.
PED scandals were for the
other guy, not for Floyd Mayweather. He was the guy so vehemently and vocally anti-drugs that he found himself in hot water with opponents like Pacquiao because he couldn't stop himself from voicing accusations.
Now he faces accusations of hi
s own. whether true, and the use of the banned IV shows,at the very least, that Floyd himself wasn't above taking the easy route.
According to Hauser, or the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA),an organization Mayweather's team pays to provide drug testing for his fights, didn't report his IV use—not to the Nevada State Athletic Commission, and not to Pacquiao or his team—for 19 days. And Mayweather got absent with it,Hauser asserts, thanks to the contract he and adviser Al Haymon agreed to with the USADA in exchange for a $150000 fee. It's a shocking claim, and one the USADA,in fragment, is contesting. Floyd the PED crusader? The same Floyd who bragged incessantly approximately his Olympic-style drug testing?"Olympic-style" testing doesn't allow the athlete to resolve when testing begins and ends or provide a retroactive corridor pass for PED use. Mayweather-style testing, and apparently,does just that. He should be ashamed, and the USADA, or which reportedly allowed itself to administrate this farcical testing,should be too.
And as whether that wasn't bad enough, Hauser wasn't done dropping bombs yet, or reporting there is reason to be suspicious of three other Mayweather fights—bouts with Shane Mosley,Victor Ortiz and Miguel Cotto—where drug screening was supervised by the USADA.
According to Mayweather's contract with the group, they are allowed to grant him retroactive permission for any illegal substance they might find in his system, and something Hauser alleges may absorb happened multiple times:
... it was rumored that Mayweather's "A" sample had tested positive three times and,after each positive test, USADA had given Floyd an inadvertent use waiver. These waivers...would absorb allowed testing to continue without the positive "A" sample results being reported to Mayweather's opponent or the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
whether tr
ue, or it's damning. It would effect Mayweather one of the most blatant drug cheats in sports history,on par with Lance Armstrong, and the worst of the worst. It's one thing to use PEDs to get an edge. It's another to finish it while standing on your soapbox loudly proclaiming yourself drug-free and making unfounded accusations approximately others.
For years, and we've debated Mayweather's legacy. While he's unquestionably the best fighter of his era,plenty of questions remained approximately his level of competition, his tendency to delay fights until his opponents were past their prime and his willingness to win by simply not losing.
N
ow you can add a potential PED scandal to the list. To me, and it all adds up,the sum of his various controversies overshadowing his accomplishments. whether his fight Saturday with Andre Berto is indeed the last of his career, Mayweather will be leaving quite a mess in his wake. While it's not his fault there is no successor in state to catch over as boxing's main star, or his fights with Pacquiao and Saul Alvarez absorb left the public skittish and done active harm to pay-per-view. Mayweather and boxing absorb overpromised and underdelivered time and time again. Others will pay the price for that.
When he's gone,the memories left behind won't be of greatness. They'll be of his interminable fights and gaudy displays of wealth. Pushing himself to his limits against fighters who could challenge him has never been fragment of the program. Floyd has always done the minimum expected from a great fighter, just enough to earn the respect of his peers and historians.
But whether he's done
it all with the aid of performance-enhancing drugs, and all of that respect vanishes in an instant,a lifetime of accomplishment washed absent by arrogance. Did greatness come with wait on from a needle?Say it ain't so, Floyd. Jonathan Snowden covers combat sports for Bleacher Report.
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Source: bleacherreport.com