
Sonnen was initially suspended after failing a post-fight drug test at UFC 117. He successfully appealed that suspension and got his original one-year sentence cut in half. Shortly thereafter he pled guilty on a federal felony money laundering charge coming out of his real estate business. It also came out that statements Sonnen made to the CSAC regarding his conversations with the Nevada State Athletic Commission were false.
For the most comprehensive recap of the entire Sonnen idiodyssey see Cage Side Seats.
Josh Gross was at the hearing:
CSAC executive officer George Dodd said the action was taken because the panel's legal counsel felt Sonnen may have perjured himself during testimony at an appeal hearing in December related to his ban for elevated levels of testosterone, which at 16.9 was four times higher than the state's allowable testosterone-to-epitestosterone ratio.
The suspension, issued two weeks ago by the CSAC, puts Sonnen on the national database used by regulators to monitor medical and administrative bans, and asks North American regulatory bodies to contact California before issuing the UFC middleweight contender a license to compete, corner, promote or act as a manager.
MMA Junkie has more:The suspension, issued two weeks ago by the CSAC, puts Sonnen on the national database used by regulators to monitor medical and administrative bans, and asks North American regulatory bodies to contact California before issuing the UFC middleweight contender a license to compete, corner, promote or act as a manager.
During today's testimony, Sonnen revealed the UFC was targeting him as a potential coach on the soon-to-film 14th season of "The Ultimate Fighter." Sonnen said the UFC planned to pit him against outspoken British striker Michael Bisping, and the two would meet in a No. 1 contender matchup at the end of the season.
Today's ruling likely nixes that option, as the Nevada State Athletic Commission - which holds jurisdiction over the participants in "TUF," which films in Las Vegas - generally upholds the rulings of other prominent commissions. Sonnen suggested during testimony that a failure to secure a license at today's hearing would likely lead to his retirement.
Sonnen also told the commission that Dana White told him he might as well retire if he wasn't licensed today.Today's ruling likely nixes that option, as the Nevada State Athletic Commission - which holds jurisdiction over the participants in "TUF," which films in Las Vegas - generally upholds the rulings of other prominent commissions. Sonnen suggested during testimony that a failure to secure a license at today's hearing would likely lead to his retirement.
Sonnen dug his own grave here. He went before the CSAC and made a string of obviously false statements that he attributed to their colleagues in Nevada. Keith Kizer at the NSAC is one of the most important men in the sport of MMA. There is no way either commission can afford to let Sonnen mock their proceedings with his blatant lies.
It's a bum deal to because as a fan I could care less about Sonnen's antics. I want to see him in the cage. He served his time on the testosterone suspension and I see the white collar crime as irrelevant.
But there's no way he can display such blatant contempt for the commissions that govern the sport and expect to be licensed to fight. Too bad, the UFC middleweight division could desperately use Sonnen's blend of over-the-top fight promotion and athletic skill.