Brock Lesnar’s anti-doping attorney claimed an eye medication and foot cream were being tested for banned substances, but the former heavyweight champion’s pre-fight paperwork does not indicate he used any.
On the part of the Nevada questionnaire that asks a licensee to list whether he or she has taken “any medication, drug, cream, inhalant, intravenous infusions, or injection, whether prescription, over-the-counter, from anyone or anyplace, in the last month,” Lesnar wrote, “No.”
Lesnar did disclose the use of multivitamins, creatine and protein powder in a subsequent question about his use of nutritional supplements and vitamins. But his omission could present a hurdle in his effort to resolve his disciplinary proceedings.
The NSAC considers the pre-fight questionnaire a legal document that must be answered truthfully. If Lesnar was taking medications or supplements and didn’t disclose them to the commission, it could expose him to disciplinary action for making “false or misleading” statements on the document.
In a letter to the commission obtained by MMAjunkie, Howard Jacobs, Lesnar’s noted anti-doping attorney, confirmed that multiple supplement tests had failed to find the presence of the banned substance, which can help kickstart a person’s testosterone production.
http://mmajunkie.com/2016/10/brock-...aire-didnt-disclose-eye-medication-foot-cream
On the part of the Nevada questionnaire that asks a licensee to list whether he or she has taken “any medication, drug, cream, inhalant, intravenous infusions, or injection, whether prescription, over-the-counter, from anyone or anyplace, in the last month,” Lesnar wrote, “No.”
Lesnar did disclose the use of multivitamins, creatine and protein powder in a subsequent question about his use of nutritional supplements and vitamins. But his omission could present a hurdle in his effort to resolve his disciplinary proceedings.
The NSAC considers the pre-fight questionnaire a legal document that must be answered truthfully. If Lesnar was taking medications or supplements and didn’t disclose them to the commission, it could expose him to disciplinary action for making “false or misleading” statements on the document.
In a letter to the commission obtained by MMAjunkie, Howard Jacobs, Lesnar’s noted anti-doping attorney, confirmed that multiple supplement tests had failed to find the presence of the banned substance, which can help kickstart a person’s testosterone production.
http://mmajunkie.com/2016/10/brock-...aire-didnt-disclose-eye-medication-foot-cream