NutraBio Denies Supplying Ryan Garcia with Ostarine-Contaminated Supplement

  • Ilene Schowalter
  • June 3, 2024 02:03am
  • 304

NutraBio, the manufacturer of a supplement purportedly linked to Ryan Garcia's positive drug test, vehemently refutes any connection to banned substances, asserting unwavering adherence to quality production standards.

NutraBio Denies Supplying Ryan Garcia with Ostarine-Contaminated Supplement

NutraBio, a prominent sports supplement company, has vehemently refuted allegations that one of its products, Super Carb, contained traces of a banned performance-enhancing substance, ostarine, as claimed by the legal team of boxer Ryan Garcia.

Garcia's legal team presented test results for two supplements, including NutraBio's Super Carb, which Garcia had declared on Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) Doping Control forms prior to his controversial fight with Devin Haney. A and B samples from Garcia's initial tests came back positive for ostarine.

NutraBio Denies Supplying Ryan Garcia with Ostarine-Contaminated Supplement

According to the test results provided to Fox News Digital, ostarine was detected in Super Carb within the range of 70-2,200 picograms per gram of powder. However, NutraBio CEO and founder Mark Glazier flatly denies any intentional inclusion of banned substances in their manufacturing process.

"NutraBio has never manufactured a supplement with Ostarine, and has never brought Ostarine into our manufacturing facility," Glazier asserted in a statement. "We have a long-standing commitment to producing the highest-quality supplements, trusted by athletes worldwide."

NutraBio Denies Supplying Ryan Garcia with Ostarine-Contaminated Supplement

Glazier emphasizes NutraBio's rigorous adherence to quality control measures, including full-label disclosure and production within their GMP-compliant facility. He expresses unwavering confidence in the company's quality assurance procedures.

Garcia's legal team maintains his innocence, attributing the positive test results to supplement contamination rather than intentional ingestion. The team cites the ultra-low levels of ostarine detected in Garcia's samples and his negative hair sample as evidence of contamination.

Concurrent tests conducted on another supplement, BodyHealth's Perfect Amino, also revealed the presence of ostarine at approximately 660-830 picograms per gram of powder.

Despite Garcia's initial social media outburst sarcastically expressing his love for steroids, his team firmly believes in his clean record, citing numerous negative tests throughout his career.

Garcia's team plans to hold a press conference this week to provide further clarification and address lingering questions surrounding the test results.

NutraBio remains steadfast in its commitment to quality and safety, vowing to thoroughly investigate the allegations and aggressively defend its reputation. The company values the trust placed in its products by athletes and consumers alike and remains confident in the integrity of its production processes.

The ongoing saga surrounding the positive test results for ostarine in supplements linked to Garcia's name continues to raise questions about the stringent adherence to anti-doping regulations within the boxing community. As the investigation unfolds, all parties involved will strive to determine the source of the contamination and ensure the integrity of the sport.

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