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I'm innocent: 'Big Daddy' Browne

Boxer Lucas Browne says he is innocent after testing positive to a banned drug but he doesn't know if he can clear his name.

Australia's Lucas Browne.
Boxer Lucas Browne says he is innocent after testing positive to a banned drug. (AAP)

Australia's first heavyweight boxing world titleholder Lucas Browne says he is not a drug cheat but accepts he may be banned after testing positive to clenbuterol.

The 36-year-old nicknamed Big Daddy, who is undefeated as a professional, was tested the same week he made history last month by stopping local hero Ruslan Chagaev in the 10th round in war-ravaged Chechnya.

Browne told reporters on Wednesday he was shocked, disappointed and could not speculate on how he could have tested positive for the banned drug.

His team say privately they fear food contamination may have taken place in Chechnya as they were under armed guard throughout their stay in Grozny and ordered not to leave their accommodation without a bodyguard for safety reasons.

Plans are in place to have Browne's B sample analysed by the Las Vegas-based Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) and he's hopeful the matter can be resolved.

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He said while he avoided drinking local water it was not feasible for him to bring in his own food as he was in the country for 12 days.

Browne said while he would do everything to clear his name, the decision was out of his hands. Meanwhile, he would keep training for his next fight.

"I have no idea about the 'cleared' aspect of it ... I am confident where I stand, I am completely innocent and the team and everyone else has the right intentions with everything that's going," he told reporters.

"Unfortunately social media runs wild with things like this. A lot of people I thought were friends are now jumping on the bandwagon, saying I'm a cheat and everything else when they don't really know the story.

"I would like to assure all my fans, the whole of the boxing world and all of Australia that I am not a drug user or a drug cheat."

Clenbuterol is commonly used as a performance enhancing drug to build muscle because it boosts metabolism and burns fat, with athletes caught including cyclist Alberto Contador, sprinter Katrin Krabbe and AFL players Lachlan Keeffe and Josh Thomas.

Browne argues a heavyweight boxer would not use a weight-stripping drug.

He also says his team organised themselves for two VADA tests several days before the fight and after because they didn't want to use the local Russian testers.

"We outsourced it ourselves so again it would be completely stupid for me to take something knowing we're going to be tested ... it doesn't make sense."

Such was the interest in the fight, Chechynan leader Ramzan Kadyrov, a one-time rebel war lord, sat ringside on a specially elevated throne-like seat fully expecting to see a comfortable Chagaev victory.

Browne's promoter British boxing great Ricky Hatton has thrown his support behind Browne, saying he has no doubt the Sydney-born former bouncer is not a drug cheat.


3 min read

Published

Source: AAP



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