St. Pierre Team Files Response with NSAC
Georges St.
Pierreâs team is treating allegations of improprieties as
seriously as it takes its training duties.
The UFC welterweight championâs training staff filed a thorough 17-page written response and video on Wednesday to a letter filed by B.J. Pennâs attorney on Feb. 3 with the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
Pennâs letter, which could be deemed a step shy of a formal complaint, requested that the regulatory body investigate accusations that St. Pierreâs two cornermen, Phil Nurse and Greg Jackson, had improperly applied Vaseline to the fighterâs shoulders and back after the one-minute break between the first and second rounds.
Cornerman are allowed to spread Vaseline on a fighterâs facial area surrounding the eyes between rounds under commission observation. St. Pierre, Jackson, and Nurse have publicly denied the allegations, stating that the hand placement had been part of a breathing technique originated by holistic therapist Dr. Steven Friend. Friend has worked with former UFC champions Matt Hughes, Randy Couture and Sean Sherk, as well.
St. Pierre wore down, then brutalized the grounded UFC lightweight champion over four rounds before Pennâs corner signaled to an attending physician that their fighter could not continue into the final round. St. Pierre was also victorious against Penn via a close split decision in their first bout at UFC 58 in March 2006.
However, the popular Hawaiianâs team cried foul play after they learned that NSAC officials had allegedly observed the French Canadianâs two cornermen applying the lubricant to the fighterâs shoulders and back. Pennâs reps claim the action gave St. Pierre an unfair advantage against Penn, the first non-Brazilian to win the black belt division of the World Jiu-Jitsu Championships.
Last week, Pennâs group distributed a video that showed the Hawaiianâs legs slide down St. Pierreâs back when Penn tried to establish a high guard.
In their response, St. Pierreâs corner fired back with their recollection of the events surrounding the night in question, which included signed affidavits from Nurse, Jackson, Friend, and the fighterâs grappling instructor John Danaher.
A joint opening letter signed by Jackson and Nurse refuted the claim that there had been a pre-conceived intention to apply the Vaseline to create an unfair advantage for St. Pierre, as Nurse had been given the responsibility only a few minutes before the team entered the cage. The letter also stated that âat no time was more than a small amount of Vaseline being used between the first and second rounds,â so it couldnât have effected the outcome of the bout.
âIf any Vaseline was left on [Nurseâs] hands⌠it could have only been a miniscule amount and clearly within the limitations of [statute] NAC 467.598,â read the document.
Of particular interest was Danaherâs affidavit. The well-known Brazilian jiu-jitsu coach tackled the allegations from numerous angles.
Danaher, a highly sought after instructor at Renzo Gracieâs famed academy in New York City, argued that St. Pierre stood to lose just as much positional control from the alleged lubricant application as Penn did.
âIn the course of the match Mr. St. Pierre scored with numerous sophisticated grappling techniques, takedowns, pins, guard passes etc. Lubricant doesnât discriminate,â wrote Danaher. âIf lubricant made Pennâs grappling ineffective, it should have also made St. Pierreâs grappling technique ineffective.â
Danaher explicitly described St. Pierreâs team assessment of Pennâs ground technique and their game plan to combat it, and noted that Penn has never won an MMA contest from his own guard position, but from top and back control.
Danaher also stated his belief that a lubricantâs spreading is unavoidable in any fight.
âOnce Vaseline is applied to the face, itâs only a matter of time before it âmigratesâ to every other part of the body,â he wrote.
Complimenting the written documents, a two-minute video demonstrated Friendâs breathing technique used on St. Pierre at UFC 83 in April 2008, at UFC 87 in August 2008, and in B-roll footage captured during St. Pierreâs warm-up in his locker room at UFC 94, as well as its application on Sean Sherk during his fight with Penn at UFC 84 in May 2008.
NSAC Executive Director Keith Kizer, who began his own review of events a few days following the Jan. 31 event, will present both fightersâ submissions to commission members at a future meeting for possible action. The NSAC could vote to change the fight's outcome to a âno contestâ based on findings of wrongdoing.
And those who think the saga of âGrease Gateâ is nearing its slippery conclusion should be prepared for a few more twists and turns.
J.D. Penn, the fighterâs older brother and manager, told Sherdog.com on Monday that a formal complaint is currently being drafted and will be submitted to the NSAC shortly.
The UFC welterweight championâs training staff filed a thorough 17-page written response and video on Wednesday to a letter filed by B.J. Pennâs attorney on Feb. 3 with the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
Pennâs letter, which could be deemed a step shy of a formal complaint, requested that the regulatory body investigate accusations that St. Pierreâs two cornermen, Phil Nurse and Greg Jackson, had improperly applied Vaseline to the fighterâs shoulders and back after the one-minute break between the first and second rounds.
Cornerman are allowed to spread Vaseline on a fighterâs facial area surrounding the eyes between rounds under commission observation. St. Pierre, Jackson, and Nurse have publicly denied the allegations, stating that the hand placement had been part of a breathing technique originated by holistic therapist Dr. Steven Friend. Friend has worked with former UFC champions Matt Hughes, Randy Couture and Sean Sherk, as well.
St. Pierre wore down, then brutalized the grounded UFC lightweight champion over four rounds before Pennâs corner signaled to an attending physician that their fighter could not continue into the final round. St. Pierre was also victorious against Penn via a close split decision in their first bout at UFC 58 in March 2006.
However, the popular Hawaiianâs team cried foul play after they learned that NSAC officials had allegedly observed the French Canadianâs two cornermen applying the lubricant to the fighterâs shoulders and back. Pennâs reps claim the action gave St. Pierre an unfair advantage against Penn, the first non-Brazilian to win the black belt division of the World Jiu-Jitsu Championships.
Last week, Pennâs group distributed a video that showed the Hawaiianâs legs slide down St. Pierreâs back when Penn tried to establish a high guard.
In their response, St. Pierreâs corner fired back with their recollection of the events surrounding the night in question, which included signed affidavits from Nurse, Jackson, Friend, and the fighterâs grappling instructor John Danaher.
A joint opening letter signed by Jackson and Nurse refuted the claim that there had been a pre-conceived intention to apply the Vaseline to create an unfair advantage for St. Pierre, as Nurse had been given the responsibility only a few minutes before the team entered the cage. The letter also stated that âat no time was more than a small amount of Vaseline being used between the first and second rounds,â so it couldnât have effected the outcome of the bout.
âIf any Vaseline was left on [Nurseâs] hands⌠it could have only been a miniscule amount and clearly within the limitations of [statute] NAC 467.598,â read the document.
Of particular interest was Danaherâs affidavit. The well-known Brazilian jiu-jitsu coach tackled the allegations from numerous angles.
Danaher, a highly sought after instructor at Renzo Gracieâs famed academy in New York City, argued that St. Pierre stood to lose just as much positional control from the alleged lubricant application as Penn did.
âIn the course of the match Mr. St. Pierre scored with numerous sophisticated grappling techniques, takedowns, pins, guard passes etc. Lubricant doesnât discriminate,â wrote Danaher. âIf lubricant made Pennâs grappling ineffective, it should have also made St. Pierreâs grappling technique ineffective.â
Danaher explicitly described St. Pierreâs team assessment of Pennâs ground technique and their game plan to combat it, and noted that Penn has never won an MMA contest from his own guard position, but from top and back control.
Danaher also stated his belief that a lubricantâs spreading is unavoidable in any fight.
âOnce Vaseline is applied to the face, itâs only a matter of time before it âmigratesâ to every other part of the body,â he wrote.
Complimenting the written documents, a two-minute video demonstrated Friendâs breathing technique used on St. Pierre at UFC 83 in April 2008, at UFC 87 in August 2008, and in B-roll footage captured during St. Pierreâs warm-up in his locker room at UFC 94, as well as its application on Sean Sherk during his fight with Penn at UFC 84 in May 2008.
NSAC Executive Director Keith Kizer, who began his own review of events a few days following the Jan. 31 event, will present both fightersâ submissions to commission members at a future meeting for possible action. The NSAC could vote to change the fight's outcome to a âno contestâ based on findings of wrongdoing.
And those who think the saga of âGrease Gateâ is nearing its slippery conclusion should be prepared for a few more twists and turns.
J.D. Penn, the fighterâs older brother and manager, told Sherdog.com on Monday that a formal complaint is currently being drafted and will be submitted to the NSAC shortly.

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