Weekend Herald

Hunt honours UFC contract while lashing out at them

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Mark Hunt will step into the Octagon tomorrow in Las Vegas while still in the midst of a lawsuit against the UFC, president Dana White and former heavyweigh­t champion Brock Lesnar.

The lawsuit was filed after Hunt lost to Lesnar last July at UFC 200 before it was later revealed that his opponent had failed a pre- fight drug test when his sample showed that he had used a banned substance.

Lesnar was later suspended for a year and issued a fine for the infraction but Hunt was clearly not satisfied with the punishment.

While the lawsuit is still pending in court, Hunt was booked for his next fight at UFC 209 this weekend against Alistair Overeem, who has come under scrutiny in the past when he tested positive for elevated levels of testostero­ne ahead of his bout against Junior Dos Santos in 2012.

Hunt was clearly apprehensi­ve about accepting a fight with Overeem due to his past but says he didn’t have much choice.

“I was forced to be here. I wasn’t supposed to be here and they said if you don’t take this fight, it’s against your contract,” Hunt said.

“Why should my family suffer and miss out on my hard work? They should deserve to have the better things in life because I’ve gotten beaten up to get here.

“I haven’t done nothing wrong, so why should I be feeling like the outsider here? That other guy is the guy that cheated. All these guys that cheat should be the ones that should be put out on a pedestal like ‘ that guy’s a cheat.’ He shouldn’t be here. Why do I feel like that?”

Hunt says he’s been treated well by UFC staff all week leading up to his return to action but hasn’t spoken to White and doesn’t expect to speak to him except through his attorney regarding the lawsuit.

The 42- year- old former K- 1 Grand Prix champion has been pounding the drum for a year asking the UFC to hand out much stiffer punishment­s for fighters caught cheating due to performanc­e enhancing drugs.

Hunt lobbied to get a clause put into his contract that stated if his opponent was caught cheating, their entire purse would go to him.

While Hunt is preparing for battle just a day away, the only subject any- body can talk about is the pending lawsuit and while that’s not what he wanted, he just couldn’t sit around and take it any more.

“I didn’t want to be in this position. They gave me no choice. What am I supposed to do? Keep coming to work and fighting steroid cheaters? If you lose against a guy that’s cheating, you lose. You don’t get no benefits from it.

“This is supposed to be the best fighters in the world, not the best cheaters in the world, the best guys who can hide it with doctors.

“It’s been a pattern of things that’s happened and it’s come to a point where I lost against Brock [ Lesnar] and I did lose and he did beat me up and I just couldn’t compete.

“It really irritates me that I have to share the Octagon with guys that have cheated to get here. It took me that loss against Brock Lesnar to realise that. It’s not fair. I’m not going to put up with it. I’m sick of it.”

While Hunt i s committed to his battle against the UFC regarding the situation with Lesnar from last year, he won’t be fighting anywhere else any time soon either.

Hunt still has five fights remaining on his UFC contract, including the bout against Overeem tomorrow, but even if it irritates his employers, he refuses to stay silent any longer.

“I have five fights left on my contract but who knows these days? I didn’t know I’d be in this position. I didn’t want to be in this position. But what am I going to do? Shut my mouth and get to the back of the bus and go to work?

“That would have been the good thing to do, right? I would have got my new contract, everything is rosy, it would have been good for me, good for my family, but it’s not the right thing to do.

“I feel these guys don’t deserve to be here and until someone loses their life, that’s when people are going to look differentl­y at it.”

Hunt believes it will take a fighter’s death to send the ultimate wake- up call to the promoters and competitor­s in the sport to understand the threat performanc­e enhancing drug users pose to the sport.

“Someone could die,” Hunt said. “If someone dies, that guy who’s using steroids should be held liable for premeditat­ed murder, I feel. I didn’t sign a contract to fight no juiced up [ expletive].

“I think there should be a criminal proceeding if the guy’s caught doping and he really hurts the person. If he kills someone and the guy’s caught doping, how would you feel? What would you think about that? He should go to jail.”

As far as his feelings on Lesnar, who informed the UFC that he was again retiring from the sport after his unceremoni­ous exit from the organi sation after his last win was overturned to a no contest, Hunt clearly has no love lost for the former heavyweigh­t champion and current WWE superstar.

“To be honest, I think he’s a coward and he’s a cheat. That’s all he is,” Hunt said about Lesnar. “Cowards that enhance themselves to hurt someone else, they shouldn’t be at the top anyway.

“I don’t want to be coming to work and losing, and that’s a high chance of doing, or losing my life because some guy months and months ago was preparing to kill me. Premeditat­ed murder, man, it’s no joke.”

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