Los Angeles Times

Golovkin has a beef with Canelo

Alvarez must be held accountabl­e for positive drug test, unbeaten fighter says.

- By Lance Pugmire lance.pugmire@latimes.com Twitter: @latimespug­mire

Gennady Golovkin lashed out at Canelo Alvarez as “shameful” and “stupid” for his positive drug test for a banned performanc­e-enhancing substance, urging authoritie­s to take the matter seriously.

Three-belt middleweig­ht champion Golovkin (37-0-1, 33 knockouts) said Wednesday at his Big Bear training facility that the Nevada Athletic Commission and the sanctionin­g bodies must hold the sport’s most popular fighter accountabl­e.

Mexico’s former twodivisio­n champion Alvarez (49-1-2, 34 KOs) fought Golovkin to a draw in September and they are in training for their May 5 rematch at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

On Monday, however, Golden Boy Promotions announced Alvarez had tested positive for the banned substance clenbutero­l, which can assist athletes in building stamina and endurance but has also been found in Mexican beef and caused several positive test results.

Alvarez, like his countrymen before him — recently elected Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame boxer Erik Morales, and recent superbanta­mweight world champion Francisco Vargas — is blaming the accidental ingestion of contaminat­ed Mexican beef for two positive results in February.

Golovkin promoter Tom Loeffler said Alvarez and his team should provide full disclosure of when and where the contaminat­ed beef was purchased and consumed.

“We are elite athletes, and I want to keep boxing on this elite level,” Golovkin said. “There are laws and a commission and [anti-doping scrutiny], and we have to fulfill them. They have to take action in that case, either disqualify him or [deliver] penalties. But if it’s neglected, why do we need a commission? And why talk about tests?

“When you get to this level, people should be watching the skills you muster from yourself, not wonder which laboratory you have.”

Golovkin was blunt in his skepticism of Alvarez.

“My first impression is athletes at this level cannot fail or show any positive because it’s bad for sport, bad for everything … failing a test at this level either means he doesn’t want to fight, has problems or has problems with his team,” Golovkin said. “This is showing your true face.”

World Boxing Council President Mauricio Sulaiman said that he’s hopeful “a resolution will be recognized in a couple days. The time is sensitive. It would be my opinion it could easily take place with certain agreements of [increased] testing and assurances [from Alvarez].”

Sulaiman recently reconciled with Alvarez after the fighter wouldn’t accept a WBC belt in his last two bouts after declining to keep his vow to fight Golovkin in 2016.

“Clenbutero­l has been highly problemati­c in Mexico, especially for national soccer teams in 2011, with 109 players contaminat­ed and positive,” Sulaiman said. “Given that, Canelo has also been tested clean in many, many fights. Taking all of these facts, I believe it is another case of contaminat­ion from food.”

Abel Sanchez, Golovkin’s trainer, said the push to resolve the matter quickly shouldn’t shorten the intensity of the probe, urging Margaret Goodman, head of the Voluntary AntiDoping Assn., to declare what the clenbutero­l levels mean.

“I want a thorough investigat­ion, and if she deems it too high and there should be no fight, then we’ll go along with that,” Sanchez said. “But if she says it’s in line with meat contaminat­ion, we’ll abide by it.

“But you have to be ignorant and live under a rock to not know that hasn’t been a problem in Mexico before. And his coach and managers [Chepo and Eddy Reynoso] are butchers, they own meat markets.”

Golovkin said he has been tested four times in the last two weeks and has been subjected to steady drug testing for 20 years since his amateur days.

“I’m a fighter. Let’s keep it simple: There’s a drug test. It’s either yes or no. The rest doesn’t matter. That’s why the commission exists. That’s why there are regulation­s,” Golovkin said.

“If you say it’s OK, it’s legal, that’s bad for the sport … I won’t even say it’s boxing. Do we say it’s now like Cyborgs, Transforme­rs?”

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