update September 19, 2013 – After writing the below short article Ontario’s Office of the Athletics Commissioner advises me that “UFC’s contract with fighters offers for random drug testing at events.  At UFC 165, an OAC physician will oversee the collection of samples for the tests.”  I have asked the AC’s office for a copy of the contractual clause triggering the commission’s best to test but they are not prepared to release this.

Perhaps much more interestingly, I asked which drugs will be against the guidelines for UFC 165 to which the OAC responds “The OAC does not require drug testing of fighters, and does not have a list of prohibited drugs.  information concerning the drugs that the UFC is testing for would have to be obtained from the promoter.”

Update September 20, 2013 – I contacted the UFC’s pr department for clarification of what PED’s will be prohibited.  They recommend as follows “We would test for the same prohibited Camiseta Olympique Lyonnais substances as we always do which are based on the list prohibited under the WADA guidelines.”  You can find the WADA prohibited list here.

__________________________________________________________________________________________

On September 21 the UFC Camiseta Selección de fútbol de Japón will host its fourth event in Ontario with UFC 165.

Although there are occasional drug test controversies in the sport, when the UFC concerns Ontario the most significant debate may be the lack of mandatory drug tests.  Why is this the case?  In Ontario the Athletics control Act policy which governs the sport of professional MMA does not require mandatory drug testing.  Instead, section 17.1 of the policy only requires drug tests to be carried out by the commission if the contract between the fighter and the promoter “requires the participant to undergo a drug test“.  The full section reads as follows:

17.1  If a contract between a participant in a professional contest or exhibition and the person holding the contest or exhibition requires the participant to undergo a drug test on the day of the contest or exhibition, the Commissioner shall, on request, oversee the administering of the test and the person holding the contest or exhibition shall pay for the costs of administering the test. O. Reg. 465/10, s. 16.

If the terms of the leaked Eddie Alvarez contract are uniform for all UFC fighters there is no mandatory drug testing clause.   short article VIII of the contract talks to drug testing and only requires fighters to agree to “submit to any pre-Bout or Camiseta Juventus post-Bout drug test as required by an athletic Commission“.

So, the Ontario commission can only require a fighter to have a drug test if their contract requires it and the contract only requires a fighter to be drug evaluated if the athletic commission requires it.  Unless there are particular contractual requirements between a promoter and their athletes compelling testing professional MMA bouts in Ontario can slip through the cracks when it concerns PED abuse.

Share this:
Twitter
Facebook

Like this:
Like Loading…

Related

Ontario Softens Up Their “Cleanly Shaven” MMA RequirementSeptember 13, 2013In “Athletics Commissioner of Ontario”
Just a friendly pointer that Ontario Turns a Blind Eye to Doping in combat SportsSeptember 25, 2015In “Athletics Commissioner of Ontario”
UFC 174 drug test ResultsJuly 10, 2014In “BC athletic Commission”