Marquez to fight doping claims
Mexican fighter Juan Manuel Marquez defended himself on Wednesday as doping clouds arose after his strength coach was revealed to be among those involved in a major doping scandal that stung US athletics.
“Whatever doping they want to do – blood, Olympian – whatever they want to do, I’ll do it, as long as he does it too,” Marquez said through a translator.
From Sport24.co.za:
Victor Conte, whose BALCO products were at the centre of a major doping scandal, revealed in a Twitter posting on Monday that Marquez’s strength and conditioning coach was Angel Heredia, who testified in a doping investigation.
Heredia admitted providing banned performance-enhancing substances to Trevor Graham, former coach of disgraced former stars Marion Jones and Tim Montgomery among others.
Alex Ariza, Pacquiao’s strength and conditioning coach, commented about Marquez looking bigger and stronger as well. Together with Heredia’s past links to doping, Marquez found himself on the defensive about his fit physique.
“It’s a shame all the work I’ve done has been trashed by these guys, Conte and Ariza,” Marquez said.


The strength and conditioning coach of Juan Manuel Marquez, Angel “Memo” Hernandez, recently threatened to sue Alex Ariza, his counterpart in the camp of Manny Pacquiao.
Bob Arum, top rank chief executive officer, has defended world lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez for hiring nutritionist Angel Hernandez, who has admitted to being a
Juan Manuel Marquez, the World lightweight champion, is defending his new strength and conditioning coach, Angel Hernandez, after reports came out revealing shady past of Hernandez.
Founder of the designer drugs pharmacy BALCO, Victor Conte, has disclosed that Marion Jones, the greatest female athlete of her generation, was provided with insulin,
Marion Jones, the triple Olympics champion in 2000, tested positive for erythropoietin at the US championships in Indianapolis.
The disgraced sprinter, Marion Jones, has signed for Tulsa Shock,
The Court of arbitration for sport has overruled a decision of IOC that stripped seven members of the US relay team that won medals at the Sydney Olympics.
The Commonwealth 400m champion from Sydney, John Steffensen, has parted ways with controversial coach Larry Wade in the lead-up to his first international race of the Olympic year.
Victor Conte, the former
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