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Chavez vs Rubio: Team Rubio Files Official Protest, Demands No-Contest Ruling

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr isn't out of the woods just yet, as Team Rubio has filed an official protest over their February 4 fight. (Photo by Bob Levey/Getty Images)

Bob Levey - Getty Images

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr isn't out of the woods just yet, as Team Rubio has filed an official protest over their February 4 fight. (Photo by Bob Levey/Getty Images)

Marco Antonio Rubio's team has filed the official protest they promised with the WBC, claiming that the sanctioning body broke their own rules repeatedly, and demanding that the bout be annulled. Chavez defeated Rubio via decision on February 4 in San Antonio.

Jake Donovan at BoxingScene.com reports that the Rubio camp has two major concerns:

  1. They speculate that the WBC never bothered to do their safety check weigh-ins on Chavez. The 30-day weigh-in would have had Chavez at no more than 176 pounds by WBC rules. When Chavez was arrested for a DWI in California two weeks before the fight, he was listed at 175. So either he lost a pound in two weeks and then basically crashed down (which might have happened, to be fair), or the WBC never checked. The Rubio camp seems to feel they never checked -- which is also a reasonable speculation. This part will be almost impossible to prove, since why wouldn't they just lie if they didn't do it, but they're saying it anyway.
  2. The lack of post-fight drug testing. Texas, because it's a commission run by the criminally ignorant, does not require post-fight drug testing. It's 2012, and this is a commission hosting major fights, not requiring even the bullshit urinalysis that any dummy who has a shred of a clue what he's doing can cheat and beat. The WBC, however, does require post-fight drug testing for title fights. All of them. Except this one, apparently. The WBC blamed Texas, and Texas blamed themselves, but nobody's really buying any of it.

Star-divide

It is no secret that JCC Jr is coddled enormously by the WBC. The son of the greatest Mexican boxing legend of all-time, Chavez the younger is sort of like "and Son" of a father-son plumbing business. He screws up and he's really not that good of a plumber, but his dad has a great reputation in the community and everyone loves him, so he gets to do more or less as he pleases, and when dad steps down, son takes over the business and people keep going there out of habit or loyalty or whatever, even though the quality is noticeably not the same.

I have defended Chavez as a fighter in the past, and still will -- he makes for generally good fights, he works hard in the ring (if not before he gets there), and he seems to really want to be better than he is. But I will not defend the way his career has been handled, even though I "get it," because it's not the way Top Rank has promoted him or the way a large fanbase has taken to him via loyalty to his father's name. Those things are natural, and those things are not unusual in boxing.

What I cannot abide is the way "Don" Jose and his cronies have babied him throughout his career. I will never, ever forget the laughable manner in which they addressed Chavez failing a Nevada drug test in 2009 for a diuretic, by all but pleading with the public for prayer and support as they devised a strategy to get Chavez the proper care so he'd never go hungry again or whatever -- it was unbelievable. And here we are, a few years later, and supposedly he's "changed" and is "good" now, but we're dealing with the same old crap as always, and the WBC is valiantly surrounding the boy-king with their shields.

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Comments

I’m pretty sure the WBC “forgot” about the 30-day weigh-in because Chavez wouldn’t have made the cut-off, but I don’t think the DUI report contains a great deal of information. Wouldn’t the 175 number most likely just be the weight on his license?

Yea, they get your information by your license or they just ask you how much do you weigh when getting your information when being booked..

They dont throw you on a scale. ( I may be wrong because I am not a career criminal)

One thing I find curious about Rubio comments is when he stated that if Chavez was really clean he would of took it upon himself to ask the commission to test him when it became obvious they had forgotten or weren’t gonna test him. Rubio is entitled to his own opinion. Question is why didn’t Rubio follow his own advice? He himself was also not tested.

If Rubio won, he would have been tested before he got back to the dressing room.

Rubio

Read up on this subject, especially Gabe Montoys’s writing on the matter. Rubio wanted to be tested and did ask to be tested, but there was nobody to handle the samples and no lab booked. Urine was taken from Vanes and his opponent but those samples were destroyed because they didn’t have everything in order.

We know with these crooks, this won’t go anywhere.

But at least it keeps Rubio’s name out there………maybe he’ll get another title shot with someone.

Freak show continues

Considering this is the WBC we are talking about, and that the complaint is against Chavez, I wouldn’t be surprised if Rubio’s complaint ends up as paper plane material or doodling paper for the days el presidente is feeling bored in his office.

Rubio Lost, he needs to Stop Crying. I thought he said he was going to knock out Jr.

What’s so bad about wanting a post-fight drug test? He is correct in stating that they were wrong not to give one.

Just beat him in the ring

or

refuse to get in the ring.

Taking a belt from someone who backed into it by doublebacking into it is punk.

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