Former super middleweight titleholder Lucan Butes B sample came back on Friday just like his A sample did in late May: positive for the banned substance ostarine.Bute initially tested positive for ostarine, also called enobosarm, in the wake of his majority draw challenging super middleweight world titleholder Badou Jack on April 30 at the DC Armory in Washington, D.C.Ostarine, which is supposed to increase stamina and recovery ability, has been on the World Anti-Doping Agency banned list since 2008.Yvon Michel, Butes promoter, as well as the DC Boxing and Wrestling Commission, confirmed the positive B sample result.Bute, however, claimed that he tested positive because of a tainted supplement he was taking during his training camp. He maintained that he has never knowingly used illegal products during his 13-year professional boxing career.Bute said he retained Los Angeles-based lawyer Howard Jacobs to help him figure out how the banned substance got into his body. Jacobs collected all of the nutrition supplements Bute used in camp and had Korval Labs, an accredited laboratory in California specializing in sports, analyze each product.According to Michel, the analysis of a product called Dynamite, a recovery aid, contained trace amounts of ostarine contamination.Bute, 36, of Montreal, who held a 168-pound world title from 2007 to 2012 and made nine successful defenses, said the supplement was given to him by strength and conditioning coach Angel Memo Heredia, who has significant links to performance-enhancing drugs. He wriggled free of being prosecuted in the BALCO steroids scandal by testifying for the U.S. government, and several of his clients have been suspected of using PEDs.Bute said he and his attorney intend to pursue legal proceedings against the laboratory that has caused irreparable harm to (his) integrity and reputation.Michel said details of their investigation would be sent to the DC Boxing and Wrestling Commission, which is expected to give Bute a hearing.Bute is likely to face a fine and suspension, although according to DC Boxing and Wrestling chairman Adam Weers, there are no specific parameters in its regulations in terms of a maximum or minimum fine or suspension length. The result of the fight with Jack is also likely to be changed to a no decision.The announcement of Butes positive B sample came only one day after Bute (32-3-1, 25 KOs) became of one of four Michel-promoted, world-ranked fighters to enroll in the WBCs new Clean Boxing Program.By enrolling in the program, Bute and fellow Montreal fighters Adonis Stevenson, the light heavyweight world champion, and Eleider Storm Alvarez and Artur Beterbiev, both light heavyweight contenders, can be randomly drug tested -- blood and/or urine -- at any time 365 days per year. They must be available at all times for any testing, which is being conducted by the well-respected Voluntary Anti-Doping Association on behalf of the WBC. Chad Green Jersey . -- Arizona knocked off some quality opponents, rolled over a few overmatched ones and grinded out victories even when things didnt go so well. Stephen Tarpley Jersey . Vaives lawyer Trevor Whiffen claims the former 50-goal man wasnt provided with a copy of the claim beforehand and that he would not have agreed to the allegations made against the NHL had he been asked to review its contents. http://www.customyankeesjersey.com/custom-paul-oneill-jersey-large-534i.html . -- Claudio Bieler hadnt scored since early September, and not from the run of play since mid-July. Lou Gehrig Jersey . During the athletes parade, the 23-strong Ukrainian team was represented by a lone flagbearer in an apparent protest at the presence of Russian troops in Ukraines Crimean peninsula. Miguel Andujar Jersey .Y. -- The Buffalo Sabres have placed centre Cody Hodgson on injured reserve and recalled two players from their AHL affiliate in Rochester. The respective international federations for boxing and gymnastics say they will make individual rulings on the eligibility of Russian athletes for next months Rio Olympic Games.The International Olympic Committee opted against a blanket ban on Russia for running a state-sponsored doping programme, and asked each sport to vet their own proposed Russian competitors.Russia has qualified 11 boxers for Rio, including reigning amateur world champions Vitaly Dunaytsev and Evgeny Tishchenko.An International Boxing Association [AIBA] statement said: AIBA has taken note and supports the decision of the IOC Executive Board concerning the participation of Russian athletes in the Olympic Games Rio 2016.We are reviewing and analysing, on a case by case basis, the anti-doping record of the 11 Russian boxers currently qualified for Rio 2016. This information and the decision of AIBA in respect of the athletes eligibility will be submitted to the IOC for confirmation in due course.AIBA remains committed to the WADA Code and will deal with any breach of the AIBA Anti-Doping Regulations.And the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique also said it will fully adhere to the IOCs ruling, adding: The FIG will -- as soon as possible -- establish the Pool of Russian eligible athletes ... and will have it verified as requested... then forward it to all concerned parties.The International Tennis Federation has already said the Russian players nominated for Rio have been subject to a total of 205 drugs tests since 2014, and will be allowed to play.Cyclings world governing body may follow suit, with president Brian Cookson saying it would be difficult for us to ban an entire team.Last month athleticcs world governing body the IAAF banned all Russian track and field athletes from international competition unless they could prove they had been comprehensively tested outside Russia -- a decision supported by the IAAF.ddddddddddddWeightlifting is the other sport most likely to issue a blanket ban on Russian competitors in Rio following a significant number of confirmed positive doping tests.The IOCs decision to pass the decision on to the individual sports federations has been widely criticised by anti-doping agencies and athletes.The United States Anti-Doping Agency [USADA] chief executive Travis Tygart said the IOC had missed a chance to assert its leadership and left behind a confusing mess.And World Anti-Doping Agency president Sir Craig Reedie said he was disappointed the IOC did not heed his organisations call for a blanket ban.However, archery has become the latest sport to confirm Russian athletes will be allowed to compete in Rio.World Archery, the sports international governing body, said Russias three qualified archers, Tuiana Dashidorzhieva, Ksenia Perova and Inna Stepanova, have all been tested extensively and never previously committed a doping offence.In a statement, World Archery expressed its shock and concern over recent doping revelations but added: The IOC executive board should be congratulated on its courageous decision not to put a blanket ban on the Russian Federation, which would have been extremely unfair to any clean Russian athlete, who had no part in any of the alleged activities mentioned in the McLaren Report. 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