6B SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 2007 BOXING 'Duke' returns to ring without trace of HIV BY TIM DAHLBERG ASSOCIATED PRESS Tommy Morrison was in his hotel room, talking about life. love and Mike Tyson when he suddenly grew silent for a couple of seconds. "Sorry," he said, "I was just watching myself on the news." The news on this day, in the ham llet of Chester, $V_{\mathrm{ha}}$ was positive jet bo Weson was ready to return to the ring for the first time in 11 years, eager to resume his former career as a heavyweight fighter. Even more important was what was negative. He had taken several HIV tests, Morrison said, and they showed no trace of the virus that causes AIDS Gone, just like the last 11 years of his life. "The bottom line is we passed every test on the market, even ones they don't have on the market." "The bottom line is we passed every test on the market, even one they don't have on the market." Morrison said. "That tells me it was never there." TOMMY MORRISON Heavyweight fighter Hes 38 now, with nothing left to lose. are all gone. So is the $16 million he earned in the ring, and the manager he claims took a big portion of it. He's in a hotel room far from the glittering lights of the Las Vegas Strip, a new fiance at his side and what he says is a new lease on his life. He fights Thursday night in a scheduled four rounder for a few hundred dollars, hoping it will lead to a contract for bigger gifts with promoter Bob Arum. The wife, the kids and the house He's been training seriously for a few months now. He believes he can win the heavyweight title, believes he can be bigger than ever. "I was one of the most popular fighters of Tommy Morrison is shown on Tuesday in Chester, W. Va. Morrison's last fight was in 1996. He is scheduled to fight John Castle or Mountaineer Race Track Thursday in Chester, W. Va. my era." Morrison said. "I believe this time around it will be even bigger." The day before the fight he talked about the time he spent in prison, including 125 days of solitary confinement, the drugs he took, and the ones he refused to take for a disease he now claims he never had. Charles Saus/ASSOCIATED PRESS "It's such a positive story; I don't know why people are not behind it," Morrison said. "It's not like Anna Nicole Smith or Britney Spears, tragic things that sell. This is a positive story, a good story." is behind. He wants this to be about what is ahead. But he realizes people will pay attention only because of what The Duke, as he was known, had flowing blonde hair and a big left hook. The combination took him near the top of the heavyweight division, and landed him a role opposite Sylvester Stallone on the silver screen in Rocky V. The story hasn't always been a pretty one. In real life, Morrison beat George Foreman, stopped Razor Ruddock and fought Lennox Lewis. Not only could he fight, he was a white fighter — one big reason Don King wanted to give him $4 million to meet Mike Tyson in 1996. That February in Las Vegas, he was getting ready to fight a tuneup for Tyson — Stormy Weatherts — when he refused a doctor's request for a blood sample a few days before the bout. Nevada boxing authorities said he couldn't fight without the blood test, so he came back the next day to have blood drawn. A few hours before the fight, it was suddenly called off. Morrison had tested positive for the HIV virus. He fought only once more; knocking out a human punching bag named Marcus Rhode a few months later in lanan. Then things got really bad "Life is awfully quiet when you retire," Morrison said. "My life started spinning out of control. People thought I was crazy. My own family turned against me because I wouldn't take the medication that they were giving me because it would have killed me." Twice he was arrested for drunken driving, one time shortly after speaking to high school students about AIDS. He got a two year prison sentence in Arkansas after plead ing guilt to cocaine and firearms possession, and his health got so bad he was hospitalized on several occasions. He says he's clean now and HIV free. "I believe it was just a misdiagnosis," Morrison says. "People do make mistakes." Jeff Kirchner of the American Academy of HIV Medicine said three separate tests would have had to be done to confirm Morrison's original sample, and that once a person tests positive he is positive for life. More likely, Kirchner said, is that Morrison, like Magic Johnson, has been taking HIV drugs and they have worked so well that the disease is more or less in remission. Kirchner said such patients can often function at a high level athletically, and are not at great risk to others. "If the virus level is undetectable, the risk of passing that virus to another person is close to zero," he said. GRADUATING? Personalized Announcements & Regalia for Any Degree. Same day availability. Jayhawk Bookstore ...at the top of Naismith Hill Morrisons opponent is John Castle, who was knocked out in the first round of his last fight and has had only six fights in his career. The Duke can't wait to get going.