SUPPORT IS GROWING for Nick Diaz after the notorious UFC fighter was hit with a hefty ban earlier this week.
Diaz was suspended for five years by the Nevada Athletic Commission, following a failed drug test in January as a result of marijuana use.
Itโs the third time Diaz has been found guilty of the same offence, but thereโs been widespread criticism of the severity of the ban from across the MMA community.
Many UFC stars have taken to social media to show their support for their fellow athlete, but one fighter has decided to take things a step further.
Undefeated UFC flyweight Henry Cejudo, who won an Olympic gold medal in freestyle wrestling for the USA in 2008, is now refusing to compete in the state of Nevada in protest at the NACโs decision.
Cejudo, who fights Jussier Da Silva in Mexico on 21 November, expressed his feelings in a letter to MMAFighting.com today, which was written by his manager, Bill McFarlane:
โI am absolutely appalled at how the NAC handled the Nick Diaz matter. The issue here is not the magnitude of the penalties assessed to Nick Diaz, it is the process, or lack thereof, in determining Nick Diazโs guilt or innocence. Significant discrepancies existed between the test samples, and the NAC has an absolute obligation to resolve those discrepancies before the penalty phase of the disciplinary hearing was heard. What the NAC did was ignore due process and go straight to the penalty phase.
โForget the facts and existence of evidence, letโs get down to the business of punishment. For the NAC to ignore the negative test results from Sports Medicine Research and Testing Laboratories (SMRTL), a WADA-approved testing facility specializing in the detection of performance enhancing drugs (PEDs), in favor of a โquestionableโ result from a non-approved and non-specialized PED facility is simply astonishing. For Chairman Aguilar to also state, โI think we do have a positive test today,โ is an appalling disregard of the full and careful consideration of all the facts.
โI believe it is an abuse of power under the color of authority, and a direct affront to the very concept and practice of due process. For NAC to further justify their decision based on the assertion that they donโt have the budget to use a WADA-approved testing facility is like saying, justice and due process only applies if it comes at a deep discount and is affordable. The NAC decision does not appear to be based on fact or evidence, but on emotional arrogance.
โI sincerely hope that the UFC enters the dialogue on this issue. If not publicly, then privately. It is very unfortunate, but I feel itโs prudent to let the UFC know that Henry Cejudo will not be fighting in Nevada. I simply have no confidence that the NAC can manage a fair and credible testing process, or will act in a fair and unbiased manner.
โHenry has been tested well over a hundred times under the USOC/USADA program and never had a positive test result. That is because he has never used a banned substance, but also because, in each and every case, the testing was done by competent and unbiased personnel under a credible program utilizing WADA accredited labs.
โI personally applauded the UFC for imposition of their anti-doping policy, as it comes with the legacy and credibility of USADA, as well as appropriate protocols and processes to ensure fair and credible testing. The opposite appears true with respect to the NAC. Until the NAC testing process can be independently reviewed, its findings made public, and corrective action taken, I personally do not believe it is a safe or credible place to conduct business. That includes a review of the recent actions and competencies of Commission members.
โOthers may want to roll the dice in Nevada, but I for one do not feel the NAC is capable of conducting itself in a manner consistent with their mission statement, appropriate enforcement of existing regulations, conducting business in a fair and unbiased manner, or the exercise of due process in their enforcement actions.โ
Should other fighters opt to follow Cejudoโs lead, it could cause a major headache for the UFC, who have already held six events in Nevada this year, with three more to come โ including UFC 194 on 12 December, which will be headlined by the meeting of Conor McGregor and Jose Aldo.
In his exclusive column here on The42, McGregorโs coach John Kavanagh said Nick Diaz only has himself to blame for his lengthy suspension.
Makes me feel better about the odd double digit holes on my scorecards!
He better turn things around quick or Els heโs out
Heโll Ernies par next hole
Although the big eeejit hashtag is a witty take on ernies big easy nickname, to use it in circumstances like this shows you know nothing about golf as no true golfer or golf fan would ever mock or make fun of someone who has the yips. And no, it doesnt matter that ernie will never see it or be offended by it, i find it classless in the extreme.
What yips? Any blue ghosts?
He 3 putted the next for par aswell
You should hit the range Barry. Get it all out.
Barry, Iโd say youโre mighty craic on a night out
I feel his struggle
Barry, youโre some gimp
Does anyone here know Barney Carroll?
Video shows 6 putts.
Wonโt take long till someone puts Benny Hill music to that!!!
Just tap tap tap it in!
It was a 9
Inexcusable. Can he see????
He has the yips, has had them for a few years. Basically means his wrists jerk uncontrollably on short putts, he said after he might consider retiring because of it.
Look at his right wrist closely in video above. It has a mind of its own. Horrible feeling Iโm sure. Iโd nearly rather have a dose of the davey crocketts