• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

MMA Payout

The Business of Combat Sports

  • Home
  • MMA
    • UFC
    • Bellator
    • One
    • PFL
  • Boxing
  • Legal
  • Ratings
  • Payouts
  • Attendance
  • Gate

Carwin remains silent on steroid link

August 18, 2010 by Jason Cruz 2 Comments

Last week, Shane Carwin’s name was identified in a steroid distribution case in Alabama. As of this date, Carwin has not made a statement regarding this issue with the exception of a cryptic message put out on his twitter account. In response to whether or not he would put out a statement about his purchase of steroids, Carwin from his twitter account, wrote:

I am fighting that fight currently. Being told I cant I however feel like I should

From this tweet, it sounds as though Carwin has been instructed (by his management team, lawyers, the UFC or all three), not to speak out about the case. This may be due to a pending investigation or fear of implicating himself further.

In the meantime, Carwin is passing the time by entering into a twitter war with UFC Heavyweight Roy Nelson. The TUF winner has been critical of Carwin and has posted several messages on his own twitter account.

Just woke up and was reading the mma news websites and only one had real news ufc champ shane carwin steroids court case.

 I am surprised that athletes in mma do steroids ;( that explains body types.

In another tweet, Nelson pleads that the MMA media investigate the Carwin story. Bloody Elbow believes that the use of steroids is a non-story:

The unspoken assumption among many MMA insiders is that PED use is prevalent if not universal among professional mixed martial artists. There is controversy about the actual health risk of steroids and a recognition that the testing regimes currently used by even the best state athletic commissions is woefully inadequate. 

It also criticizes Carwin’s attack on Nelson as a shift from his good-guy image:

Nevertheless, Carwin is evolving from a babyface to a heel and he’s accelerating that process dramatically by taking cheapshots at Roy Nelson while dodging the steroids issue.

Payout Perspective:

Where would we be without twitter? We would not be able to see this all play out. The strain of the steroid story is causing Carwin to lash out. Roy Nelson has made himself an easy target.

Instead of coming out to the media about this story, Carwin has been advised to lay low and not speak about it. Of course, it does not stop others, like Nelson, to bait Carwin into a twitter fight. For Nelson, baiting Carwin is excellent strategy to promote a future fight down the road (perhaps we call this the “Sonnen Strategy”).  It is fair for Carwin to put out a message to his fans acknowledging the story. But responding to Nelson was not a good idea.

Almost a week has gone by and Carwin has not provided a statement about why his name appeared on a list of athletes that purchased steroids. An answer must be made sooner than later to preserve his image.

You can argue that the steroid issue does not matter. As Bloody Elbow reports, not a lot of the MMA media have pressed the issue in the past week. We will see whether Carwin waits out the media storm or heads out into it.

Filed Under: Public Relations, Twitter, UFC

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. gaaa says

    August 19, 2010 at 1:37 am

    without steroids there would be no MMA….the aggression and the build is just not natural..;but caucasians are just not that built huge and ripped combined….roy nelson and randy couture are probably the only ones that are not using substances…..

    Reply
  2. jv says

    August 19, 2010 at 9:42 am

    The SI story indicates that the prosecutors are not going to go after the athletes and the AC’s and leagues are either powerless or willingly turning a blind eye to this. So it makes a lot of sense for Shane to just lie low and wait for it to blow over. In the mean time I am sure Roy has been contacted by the UFC and told to STFU.

    Contrary to what the writers are saying I think most of the fans do care. It is the people making money that don’t.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to gaaa Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Featured

Wrestlemania 41 is the highest-grossing event in company history

UFC 314 Payout Perspective

As exclusive negotiating window closes, ESPN bullish on UFC return

UFC makes Meta sponsor deal official

Sports Lawyers Association Broadcast discussing Saudi Arabia involvement in boxing

Ryan Garcia/Golden Boy sued by Fanmio

Archives

MMA Payout Follow

MMAPayout

-30-

Twitter 1863292243685372191
Retweet on Twitter MMA Payout Retweeted

John Pollock and Brandon Thurston discuss the fallout for Conor McGregor after the conclusion of the civil case

We welcome lawyer Jason Cruz from @MMAPayout to discuss the decision, the fallout for McGregor’s business endeavors, and the UFC’s lack of response.

Twitter 1861864199543992422

Leaving soon

Twitter 1861583105230020701

Coby Bryant

Twitter 1860826101653840296
Retweet on Twitter MMA Payout Retweeted

Ticket sales information for Keyshawn Davis vs. Gustavo Lemos:
Tickets printed: 9,815
Face value of capacity: $1,069,100
Unsold tickets: 0
Tickets given away: 29
Tickets sold: 9,786
Proceeds from sold tickets: $1,067,450
Adjusted gate for taxes: $1,036,930
Do not believe! Verify.

Twitter 1860124654687728080
Load More

Copyright © 2025 · MMA Payout: The Business of Combat Sports