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    • 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
    • Watch the Campillo-Kovalev weigh-ins live Friday on Yahoo! Sports

      Former IBF and WBA light heavyweight champion Gabriel Campillo will face Sergey Kovalev on Saturday on NBC Sports Net. In partnership with NBC Sports, the weigh-ins can be watched live right here on Yahoo! Sports on Friday.

      Read More »from Watch the Campillo-Kovalev weigh-ins live Friday on Yahoo! Sports
    • Boxing, UFC shows could help make UNLV football stadium a reality

      An artist's rendering of UNLV's proposed stadium set up for a UFC fight (UNLV Now)UNLV may have the worst Division I college football in the country. Over the last 25 years, UNLV is just 88-202, a woeful .303 winning percentage. UNLV has won two or fewer games 10 times in the last quarter century.

      And while there are a variety of reasons for the football program's ineptitude, part of it may be that it plays in arguably the worst Division I facility in the country.

      The Rebels play their home games at the dark, dingy off-campus Sam Boyd Stadium. It's about a 20-30-minute ride from UNLV's city-center campus and is located in an industrial area with little around it. It's tough for college students to get to and locals have all but sworn it off.

      UNLV quarterback Nick Sherry passes in a nearly empty stadium (Getty Images)So, for years, UNLV has been hoping to build an on-campus stadium. On Thursday, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, it asked the Las Vegas Visitors & Convention Authority for $125 million to help fund a proposed 68,000-seat facility.

      The cost of the stadium is expected to be close to $900 million, the newspaper reported. In anybody's world, that's a lot of money. The LVCVA has sponsored numerous events over the years in Las Vegas and issued a statement to the Review-Journal that acknowledged the need for the stadium.

      UNLV plays an important role in our community, and the LVCVA understands the potential of the proposed stadium project. Tourism is the lifeblood of Southern Nevada's economy, which is why the LVCVA's priority is promoting Las Vegas to attract visitors.

      With the Southern Nevada tourism industry in a gradual recovery, having the necessary resources to promote and market our No. 1 industry to the world is critical.

      Realizing the need for the facility is one thing, but getting it through the political process, raising the funds and getting it built is entirely another. Don Snyder, the point man for the proposed stadium, told the Review-Journal an economist estimated the economic impact of the stadium at $393 million with 15 additional events.

      One way for certain the stadium would generate money is by hosting boxing and mixed martial arts matches. Major fights in the venue would help it pay down its debt service.

      UFC stars like Georges St-Pierre would be important for a proposed UNLV stadium (Getty Images)UFC president Dana White has for years spoken of doing a super fight in a stadium. Much of the talk for a proposed Anderson Silva-Georges St-Pierre fight has centered around Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, because of its 100,000-seat capacity and state-of-the-art electronics.

      UNLV's long dreamed about stadium would never be complete in time to host a Silva-St-Pierre fight, but it would be the kind of event that the planned facility would be a natural for the facility to host.

      Both of boxing's major promoters, Top Rank and Golden Boy, would likely be interested in putting on a few shows a year in such a facility. Las Vegas is the Fight Capital of the World in large part because the casinos subsidize many of the costs to bring big fights that attract high-rolling gamblers.

      So a stadium that not only could help the UNLV football team resurrect itself from virtual obscurity but that would also put thousands of fight fans a year into it with big events would benefit both the university, the casinos and the overall Las Vegas economy.

      When Las Vegas-based Top Rank was trying to work on making a Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather fight a reality, it advocated use of a temporary stadium on the Strip that would seat at least 40,000.

      A UNLV football stadium with a capacity 70 percent higher than was proposed for the temporary facility would have been the perfect venue for what at the time was expected to have been the richest fight in history.

      Read More »from Boxing, UFC shows could help make UNLV football stadium a reality
    • Robert Guerrero and Andre Berto were one of 16 fights to draw more than 1 million live viewers in 2012 (AP)Larry Merchant, the former HBO Sports boxing analyst, noted when announcing his departure from the network last week that boxing is no longer a mainstream sport. There was a time in this country when the three major sports were baseball, boxing and horse racing.

      These days, boxing ranks well down the list, though for a niche sport, it retains a heavy following.

      Ratings from cable in 2012 bear that out. Both HBO and Showtime, the two heavyweights in boxing on cable television, had spectacular years. HBO, which is in roughly 30 million homes, compared to roughly 22 million for Showtime, posted the most-watched cable fight of the year and nine of the top 10, according to Nielsen Media Research.

      The Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.-Marco Antonio Rubio fight on Feb. 4 on HBO had 1.9 million viewers for the live, first-time showing, making it the year's most watched show. In all, there were 16 fights on cable whose premier viewing attracted an audience of 1.0 million or more. Of those, 14 were on HBO and two were on Showtime.

      Read More »from Boxing on cable in 2012: Lots of fights, lots of viewers and lots of love for Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.
    • Getty photographer Al Bello (red shirt) flees after being attacked (Chris Cozzone)

      The vice president/corporate counsel for Getty Images wrote via email Friday to officials of the Nevada Athletic Commission demanding that boxer Manny Pacquiao and two of his aides be suspended for an alleged attack on one of its photographers after last week's fight with Juan Manuel Marquez.

      Pacquiao was knocked cold by Marquez near the end of the sixth round of their welterweight fight at the MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas. Getty photographer Al Bello, who has shot boxing for more than 20 years, hopped onto the ring apron to shoot pictures of the fallen Pacquiao.

      After Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach asked Bello to stop photographing Pacquiao, pictures shot by other photographs appear to show Pacquiao adviser Michael Koncz and assistant trainer Buboy Fernandez physically going after Bello.

      Bello told Yahoo! Sports on Monday all he wanted was an apology, but in a letter to commissioner Skip Avansino and executive director Keith Kizer, Lizanne Vaughan, Getty's corporate counsel, asked

      Read More »from Attorney for Getty Images demands suspension of Pacquiao, aides for attacking photographer

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