By Matt Larkin
Guest Writer
Sigh.
I case you haven’t heard yet, UFC star and former Olympic wrestling alternate Chael Sonnen has been busted for using performance-enhancing drugs. The results came back from a drug test he took before his middleweight title bout versus Anderson Silva: positive for steroids.
This isn’t a Shane Carwin type of bust. In Carwin’s case, his name simply appeared on a list of purchasers from several years ago. For Sonnen, it’s a cold, hard bust in the “now.” The test said he had steroids in his body while fighting Anderson Silva.
Sonnen has a right to appeal and prove his innocence. If he can, all the power to him. But the fact that the sport’s mouthiest fighter hasn’t said a word since the news broke is a very bad sign.
The news really hurts MMA fans – breaks our hearts – for several reasons. First off, Sonnen was perceived as great for the sport. He was a jerk but a hilarious jerk who never minced words and gave dozens of outstanding quotes any time he showed up at a press conference or did an interview. Now, he’s no longer a charismatic fighter who exudes confidence. If his guilt is confirmed, he’ll become a cheater, a fraud, a guy who talked a big game and deceived the fans. As much as Sonnen talked up his own game, he apparently never believed in himself after all if he felt the need to use PEDs.
Secondly, it probably cancels what would’ve been a highly anticipated rematch. Sonnen was expected to face Silva on New Year’s Day in Vegas. Now, he could be suspended from the UFC for a year. That would mean The Spider would likely face the winner of boxing master Vitor Belfort versus Yushin Okami; those two are slated to fight in November.
Lastly, it’s just one more black eye for mixed martial arts’ public image. Every time we take a step forward, it seems something else pushes us backward. The layman fan or detractor is now even more likely to view fighters as juiced-up monsters and compare them to WWE wrestlers.
We can hope Sonnen somehow proves that he didn’t use steroids. But the news feels like a gut punch right now and it’s likely to remain that way.
