Friday, April 27, 2007

Morrison yanked from card in Houston as officials didn't get tests

April 27, 2007
CBS SportsLine.com wire reports


HOUSTON -- Former heavyweight champion Tommy Morrison was pulled from a scheduled bout Friday night because state boxing officials didn't get the results of lab tests in time.
Advertisement


Dick Cole, boxing administrator for the state's Department of Licensing and Regulation, said a Houston doctor, Jorge Guerrero, examined Morrison on Thursday and cleared him to fight. But Guerrero never filed the paperwork required by the agency, Cole said.

"As soon as we get that in, he'll be licensed," Cole said. "They say he's OK. But we can't afford to just assume like that. I'm sure he is fine. But we need to have certain forms to prove it and we don't have those."

The 38-year-old Morrison is attempting to come back after an 11-year retirement following the discovery that he was HIV positive. Morrison claims he has taken several HIV tests during his comeback bid and all have been negative.

Morrison was slated to fight Dale Ortiz in a four-round bout in a Houston hotel ballroom on Friday night. Morrison was not immediately available for comment. The hotel did not have a guest registered under Morrison's name.

Morrison returned to the ring earlier this year in West Virginia, knocking out John Castle in the second round. West Virginia athletic commissioner Steve Allred approved Morrison's participation in that fight after reviewing medical records and consulting with the Association of Boxing Commissions' medical review committee.

On Thursday, Patrick Shaughnessy, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, said Morrison had been granted a boxing license in Texas. Cole said the agency gave Morrison a "verbal agreement" to issue him a license, but could not actually grant one until it received the paperwork.

Cole expected to have the lab tests Thursday night, but he said the doctor could not finish them.

"He thought he'd have all of it done, but he just couldn't get it done," Cole said.

Shaughnessy couldn't discuss specifics of Morrison's case on Thursday, but he said all applicants are required to submit blood samples for testing for Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C and HIV. Applicants testing positive for any of those are rejected, Shaughnessy said.

Morrison won the WBO heavyweight belt in 1993 by outpointing George Foreman, but lost the title later that year. He was scheduled to fight Stormy Weathers when he tested HIV positive in February 1996.
AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2006-2007, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserve

No comments:

Memorial Day 2024

To those that gave the ultimate sacrifice defending American ideals and freedom, and to the families that endured the loss, we g...