Australia's Sam Goodman targeted by anti-doping authorities in lead up to his world-title blockbuster against defending champion Nick Ball
Goodman (20-0) faces the biggest test of his career on Sunday morning (AEST) when the Albion Park pugilist takes on Englishman Nick Ball (22-0-1) for the WBC featherweight world title in Saudi Arabia.
But there are concerns from the Goodman camp that he has been a victim of sabotage after the Aussie sensation was relentlessly drug-tested by authorities in the lead-up to the Ball bout.
Australian fighters are no strangers to offshore mind games and political trickery.
Goodman recalls Queensland's former world champion Jeff Horn being woken up at 2am to be drug tested by anti-doping officials on the day of his title defence against Terence Crawford. It was viewed as a tactic to unsettle Horn. It worked. He was sliced-and-diced by Crawford in a ninth-round stoppage in Las Vegas.
It is understood Goodman has been randomly drug-tested at least six or seven times in recent weeks, fuelling conspiracy theories promoters are trying to mess with his mind.
But the classy super bantamweight, who is going up one weight division for his world-title baptism against Ball, says nothing will distract him, declaring he's as clean as his pristine win-loss record.
'For this fight, the drug testing has been going late which is a bit average,' said Goodman, who was also heavily tested before his proposed world-title bout against Naoya Inoue last year, which never eventuated after he suffered two head cuts in sparring.
'Before Inoue, I got drug tested six or seven times 10 days out from the fight and there would have been another test if I got to Japan.
'When you fight away from home, you have to expect these things.
'You hear these horror stories and that sort of s*** (boxers failing drug tests) can happen.
'There's cheaters who cheat, I get it,' Goodman added on The Punch podcast as he prepares to face Ball.
'A lot of fighters could cheat their way right up to a world-title shot.
'I'm fighting in their territory, but I'm doing everything I can control to get to the ring in the best shape possible.
'I won't let it get to me. We (the Goodman team) are in a fortress here.
'If I don't win, it's because I'm not good enough, which won't be the case.'
Intriguingly, Goodman has taken inspiration from two Little Masters in another sport.
Two of rugby league's greatest halfbacks, Broncos legend Allan Langer and current Brisbane skipper Adam Reynolds, are surprise motivating forces in Goodman's bid to conquer the world.
The 'Wrecking' Ball is England's only current world champion and underlining his pint-sized stature, he stands a tiny 157cm — eight centimetres shorter than 'Alfie' Langer.
Growing up on the NSW south coast, Goodman's first dream was to play NRL. He was a St George Illawarra fan and marvelled at vision of Langer and Reynolds, inspiring Goodman with their ability to punch above their weight as cheeky halfbacks in the NRL's land of giants.
When Goodman suffered an arm injury playing league as a 10-year-old, it was the moment that convinced him to take up boxing and the 'Ghost' quickly found his niche.
Now unbeaten after seven years in the professional ranks, Goodman makes his world-title debut and is being driven by two of rugby league's little champions to break down Ball in a middle-eastern mauling.
Reynolds is a massive boxing fan and enjoys Goodman's high-octane style.
'The critics always underestimate us smaller guys,' said Goodman, who at 169cm has a major size advantage over Ball.
'I loved rugby league growing up and there was a time when I hoped I would be good enough to play in the NRL, but I've found success in boxing.
'Blokes like 'Alfie' Langer, Geoff Toovey (Manly great) and Adam Reynolds made a career out of proving people wrong.
'That's exactly what I will do this weekend.
'He (Ball) has a wild and frantic style. He is unique and it works for him, but there's many ways I can win this fight.
'It's a hit-and-run mission, I'll go over there, get the belt and come home.'
Ball has been accused of underestimating Goodman, with the Briton admitting he hasn't watched the Australian at all.
'I don't know much about him and I don't really care,' he told this masthead.
'I won't know (about his style) until the bell goes. I just focus on me.
'My coaches do the research, I let them do it while I focus on myself and they tell me what's going to work on the night.
'I will beat him because I'm an all-round better fighter. I want it more. I'm hungrier than him. I'm more powerful.
'The best version of me beats his best and that's what I will be.
'It's going to be tough for sure, but he won't handle me.'
It's understood there is a rematch clause in the deal and Goodman has no qualms about beating Ball twice in his eventual dream of fighting undisputed king 'The Monster' Inoue.
'I think there's a rematch clause so I might have to fight this guy twice,' he said.
'I'm pretty sure there is (a two-fight clause), so we'll wait and see.
'If I beat him the first time well enough, we'll see if we come to Australia.
'I've bled for this, I've sacrificed everything for this moment.
'I'm not flying halfway around the world to come home empty-handed.
'Once the bell rings there's no teammates to back me up — it's all on me.
'Come Sunday, he's going to find out exactly what I'm about ... I'm not leaving the desert without that world title.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
3 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
LIVE: Australia bowl first against South Africa in T20 series decider
Latest posts Latest posts 6.52pm Toss time: Australia to bowl first Customarily, Australia like to chase a target and Mitch Marsh has chosen to do so again despite the defeat to the Proteas after bowling first in game two. Aiden Markram, South Africa's kipper, say he would have batted first in any case. Josh Inglis is back in the side for Australia at the expense of Alex Carey, while Nathan Ellis ha come back for Sean Abbott and Aaron Hardie slots in for Mitch Owen. Teams Australia Travis Head, Mitchell Marsh (capt), Josh Inglis, Cameron Green, Tim David, Glenn Maxwell, Aaron Hardie, Ben Dwarshuis, Nathan Ellis, Adam Zampa, Josh Hazlewood South Africa: Aiden Markram (capt), Ryan Rickelton, Lhuan-dre Pretorius, Dewald Brevis, Tristan Stubbs, Rassie van der Dussen, Corbin Bosch, Senuran Muthusamy, Kagiso Rabada Kwena Maphaka, Lungi Ngidi 6.52pm Tributes for Australian cricket giant Bob Simpson Saturday began with news that Bob Simpson, the former Test captain and then influential coach of the Australian side, had died in Sydney aged 89. Simpson's two Test captains while coach, Allan Border and Mark Taylor, plus David Boon and his former opening partner Bill Lawry all took time out to recall a cricket life that spanned multiple eras and left Australian cricket set-up for another decade of world domination after he bowed out as coach in 1996. A minute's silence will take place before tonight's game out of respect for Simpson, and the Australian team will wear black armbands. 6.52pm Welcome to Cairns for the series decider Hello and welcome to our coverage of the series-deciding T20 international between Australia and South Africa in Cairns. The two games in Darwin were split between the Australians and the Proteas, who prospered in game two thanks to a sublime century by Dewald 'Baby AB de Villiers' Brevis. Tim David has been a standout for the hosts, but there has not been anywhere near enough top order performance against a strong South African pace attack - they need more contributors tonight. In particular, captain Mitch Marsh and Travis Head are expected to lead the way. Australia have lost the services of Mitch Owen due to a delayed concussion suffered after he was struck on the helmet by Kagiso Rabada in game two.

The Age
3 minutes ago
- The Age
LIVE: Australia bowl first against South Africa in T20 series decider
Latest posts Latest posts 6.52pm Toss time: Australia to bowl first Customarily, Australia like to chase a target and Mitch Marsh has chosen to do so again despite the defeat to the Proteas after bowling first in game two. Aiden Markram, South Africa's kipper, say he would have batted first in any case. Josh Inglis is back in the side for Australia at the expense of Alex Carey, while Nathan Ellis ha come back for Sean Abbott and Aaron Hardie slots in for Mitch Owen. Teams Australia Travis Head, Mitchell Marsh (capt), Josh Inglis, Cameron Green, Tim David, Glenn Maxwell, Aaron Hardie, Ben Dwarshuis, Nathan Ellis, Adam Zampa, Josh Hazlewood South Africa: Aiden Markram (capt), Ryan Rickelton, Lhuan-dre Pretorius, Dewald Brevis, Tristan Stubbs, Rassie van der Dussen, Corbin Bosch, Senuran Muthusamy, Kagiso Rabada Kwena Maphaka, Lungi Ngidi 6.52pm Tributes for Australian cricket giant Bob Simpson Saturday began with news that Bob Simpson, the former Test captain and then influential coach of the Australian side, had died in Sydney aged 89. Simpson's two Test captains while coach, Allan Border and Mark Taylor, plus David Boon and his former opening partner Bill Lawry all took time out to recall a cricket life that spanned multiple eras and left Australian cricket set-up for another decade of world domination after he bowed out as coach in 1996. A minute's silence will take place before tonight's game out of respect for Simpson, and the Australian team will wear black armbands. 6.52pm Welcome to Cairns for the series decider Hello and welcome to our coverage of the series-deciding T20 international between Australia and South Africa in Cairns. The two games in Darwin were split between the Australians and the Proteas, who prospered in game two thanks to a sublime century by Dewald 'Baby AB de Villiers' Brevis. Tim David has been a standout for the hosts, but there has not been anywhere near enough top order performance against a strong South African pace attack - they need more contributors tonight. In particular, captain Mitch Marsh and Travis Head are expected to lead the way. Australia have lost the services of Mitch Owen due to a delayed concussion suffered after he was struck on the helmet by Kagiso Rabada in game two.

ABC News
3 minutes ago
- ABC News
Blaithin Bogue slots miraculous soccer goal as Kangaroos avoid major scare in AFLW season-opener
A midfield masterclass from Ash Riddell and a third-quarter blitz from Irish debutant Blaithin Bogue has fired North Melbourne to a 30-point AFLW win over Geelong. The Cats threatened to cause a Round 1 boilover against the defending premiers after closing the margin to six points with one quarter remaining in Saturday's match, before the Kangaroos ran out 8.3 (51) to 3.3 (21) winners at Kardinia Park. Heavy rain greeted the players for the start of the final quarter, and it made Gaelic star Bogue feel right at home. The 25-year-old, North's first debutant since Round 7, 2023. produced an opportunistic 20m soccer goal from around her body to get things going. A clever kick forward by Bogue set up Bella Eddey for the next goal, giving North an 18-point lead. And it was effectively game over a few minutes later when Bogue took a mark in the goal square before running on to kick truly from point-blank range, sealing the win. Riddell was also influential, racking up a game-high 28 disposals and eight clearances in a superb effort as North slammed home five goals to one in a dominant final quarter. "It was great. The first three quarters were tough, but we knew we just had to keep fighting until the end," Bogue told Fox Sports. "I honestly was just in the right place at the right time (for the goals). "The first one, the ball was just there and I just had to put the boot on it, because they put so much pressure on you if you try to bend down for the ball. I was just happy I got it away." The Cats were left with plenty of issues. Geelong ruck Kate Darby lasted mere minutes before suffering a game-ending injury to her right calf. Jacqueline Parry injured her right ankle late in the game, and Rebecca Webster could be facing a suspension for her high bump on North Melbourne's Ruby Tripodi. North went unbeaten last year on the way to the flag, Geelong the only team able to take premiership points off the powerhouse via a Round 2 draw. The Kangaroos dominated the clearances 8-3 and inside-50 entries 11-3 in the opening term, but Geelong's remarkable efficiency in attack meant scores were level at two goals apiece at the first break. North forward Kate Shierlaw kicked her first goal late in the opening term courtesy of a strong mark and a 50m penalty, and had another one to her name early in the second in what would prove to be the only major for the quarter. The Cats found their groove in the third term, but their only reward was two behinds, despite winning the inside-50 count 10-3. It meant North still had the lead heading into the final quarter, and Bogue's heroics in the wet shut the door on any hopes of a Cats victory. AAP