Ex-champ Mauricio Lara given 2-year boxing ban after failed drug test, ending drawn-out saga
Lara (26-3-2, 19 KOs) tested positive for the banned substance Betamethasone in a sample collected just one hour after his May 27, 2023 rematch loss against Leigh Wood in Manchester, U.K.
Mexico's Lara had won the championship three months earlier, knocking out Wood in the seventh round in Nottingham. Lara weighed in three-and-a-half pounds over the 126-pound featherweight limit for his rematch with Wood. That lack of fitness translated to the ring, with Wood easily outboxing Lara over the 12-round distance and regaining his belt.
Lara claimed the adverse finding was due to a dexamethasone injection administered on May 12 to treat a shoulder injury that Lara had sustained during sparring, but UKAD denied that the injection was a reasonable explanation for the presence of Betamethasone in his system.
UKAD said a more likely explanation for the presence of Betamethasone in Lara's system is an 8mg injection administered on the day of his fight with Wood.
The ban has been backdated to March 7, 2024 — when Lara was provisionally suspended. The suspension from boxing and all WADA-compliant sports will end on March 6, 2026.
Bizarrely, the process took almost two years to reach a conclusion. In the interim, Lara has been allowed to fight and has done so on three separate occasions in Mexico, winning twice and also fighting to a majority draw. Despite UKAD being aware of Lara's positive test, it did not stop him from competing.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
18 hours ago
- Yahoo
Oscar Duarte vs. Kenneth Sims Jr. live results, round-by-round updates, ring walks, start time for Chicago showdown
Uncrowned has Oscar Duarte vs. Kenneth Sims Jr. live results, round-by-round updates, highlights, ring walks and start time for the Duarte vs. Sims Jr. fight card on Saturday night at the Credit Union 1 Arena in Chicago, Illinois. Top-10 contenders Duarte and Sims clash in an eliminator for the WBA super lightweight title currently held by Gary Antuanne Russell. Duarte (29-2-1, 23 KOs) has won three fights in a row since being knocked out by Ryan Garcia in December 2023 after a competitive effort. He defeated two-time title challenger Botirzhon Akhmedov this past November and became the first man to stop Miguel Madueno in February. Sims (22-2-1, 8 KOs) fell short twice on the SHOBox development series but has remained unbeaten since 2018. Sims stopped Jonathan Romero in his Golden Boy debut in August 2024. Duarte and Sims were supposed to clash this past November, but an injury forced Sims out, and Duarte fought Akhmedov instead. The pair shared a card in February before their 50-50 clash this Saturday, with Duarte stopping Madueno and Sims defeating Kendo Castaneda. In the night's co-feature, former world champions Regis Prograis (29-3, 24 KOs) and Joseph Diaz Jr. (34-37-1, 15 KOs) collide in a super lightweight affair. Prograis is coming off back-to-back defeats, while Diaz has lost six out of his past eight bouts. Both men know that another defeat could mark the end of their careers on televised shows. Duarte vs. Sims Jr. begins at 8 p.m. ET on DAZN, with main event ring walks expected around 11 p.m. ET. Follow all of the action with Uncrowned's live results, highlights and play-by-play of the main card below. Main card (8 p.m. ET, DAZN) Super lightweight: Oscar Duarte vs. Kenneth Sims Jr. Super lightweight: Regis Prograis vs. Joseph Diaz Jr. Cruiserweight: Tristan Kalkreuth vs. Devonte Williams Heavyweight: Joshua Edwards vs. Cayman Audie Light heavyweight: Yair Gallardo vs. Quinton Rankin Prelims Super bantamweight: Gael Cabrera def. Richard Reyes Diaz via first-round KO | Watch video Lightweight: Mehki Phillips def. Joseph Ricardo Cruz Brown via second-round TKO | Watch video


New York Times
5 days ago
- New York Times
Some Kenyan Runners See Doping as a Path to Glory, and to Basic Sustenance
Thousands of feet above the Great Rift Valley that runs through East Africa, the small city of Iten, Kenya, calls itself the Home of Champions. It has long produced and attracted world-class running talent, its high altitude and red dirt roads a training ground for thousands. The town also has a far less laudatory reputation. It is a well-documented center of a doping crisis that shows little sign of being tamed. Runners come here for access to competition, coaching talent and the benefit of training in thin air, all to try to earn riches from running. Many Kenyans who try to join the elite endure cramped and dirty living conditions, little food and separation from their families in service of their ambitions. In a region where the average annual income is the equivalent of little more than $2,000 and the competition so intense, the potentially life-changing lure of banned substances, referred to locally as 'the medicine,' is obvious. A few thousand dollars in prize money or participation in a single overseas race can be the difference between runners and their families eating three meals a day and scratching around for the next bite. Ethiopia Uganda Iten Kenya Eldoret Nairobi Indian Ocean Tanzania 100 miles By The New York Times They calculate that doping is worth the risks not only of getting caught, but also of damaging their health and, in some cases, even dying. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


USA Today
6 days ago
- USA Today
Former world champion boxer Dwight Muhammad Qawi dies at 72
Hall of Fame boxer Dwight Muhammad Qawi, who took up the sport in prison and won world titles in two different weight classes, has died at age 72. Qawi's sister, Wanda King, said he died on Friday, July 25, after a five-year battle with dementia. "He was a great father, a great Pop-Pop to his grandchildren," King told BoxingScene. "He had a heart of gold, and he fought his dementia illness just like he was fighting in the ring." Born Dwight Braxton and raised in Camden, New Jersey, he learned to box at Rahway State Prison while serving a sentence for armed robbery. He turned pro after he was released in 1978 and later changed his name after converting to Islam in 1982. Nicknamed "The Camden Buzzsaw," Qawi won his first world title in 1981, defeating Matthew Saad Muhammad for the WBC light heavyweight crown. After winning a rematch with Saad Muhammad the following year, he lost to WBA champion Michael Spinks in a unification bout in March 1983. Despite being just 5-7, the compactly built Qawi moved up to cruiserweight in 1985 and dethroned champion Piet Crous before facing Evander Holyfield in what experts regard as one of the weight class's best fights of all time. Holyfield won the 15-round split decision in Atlanta on July 12, 1986, and then defeated Qawi in a rematch the following December. Qawi would have one more high-profile fight, a March 1988 loss to heavyweight George Foreman before retiring later that year with a career record of 41-11-1 and 25 knockouts. He was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2004, and spent a large part of his retirement as a youth advocate and drug and alcohol counselor in New Jersey. Contributing: Field Level Media