SASKATOON – Max Holloway and Charles Oliveira will only be required to pass a fight-night drug test in relation to Sunday’s UFC Fight Night 74 main event in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.

Both Holloway (13-3 MMA, 9-3 UFC) and Oliveira (20-4 MMA, 8-4 UFC) confirmed to MMAjunkie that they have not been subjected to any random performance-enhancing drug testing in the weeks leading up to fight night.

“I did not get tested out of competition or nothing, so I don’t know what’s up with that,” Holloway told MMAjunkie. “I would love to get tested. I think it’s great for the sport. It’s awesome and it’s crazy to see the sport finally getting cleaned up. …I think it’s good. I have nothing to hide.”

Earlier this year the UFC announced an overhaul to its drug-testing policies. The organization partnered with the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency with the mission to subject its entire roster of nearly 600 fighters to random performance-enhancing drug testing.

The Nevada State Athletic Commission, which typically sets an industry standard for regulatory bodies, followed by declaring sweeping changes to its drug testing policy, drastically increasing administrative punishments for those who found to have used banned substances.

Among the new guidelines, the minimum suspension for steroid offenders will be three years for a first offense and a fine of 40-50 percent of a fight purse. A third offense will result in a lifetime ban.

Any positive drug test will also overturn a win to a loss, rather than a no-contest, according to the new guidelines, which take effect Sept. 1.

The USADA testing program began on July 1, but USADA and the Athletic Commission of Saskatchewan did not test Holloway or Oliveira during training camp prior to their featherweight headliner at SaskTel Centre. The main card airs on FOX Sports 1 following prelims on the same channel and UFC Fight Pass.

Holloway, who said he supports the UFC’s efforts to push PED users out of the sport, expressed some disappointment in the situation.

“PEDs, at the end of the day, it’s wrong; especially in combat sports,” Holloway said. “If me and you are fighting, I can kill you. When one guy is taking PEDs and one guy is not, that’s an advantage. We’re not riding bicycles. This is a contact sport. We’re not playing volleyball. Go do something less contact if that stuff happens.

“This is where someone can actually die. You’re playing with someone’s life and that’s not cool at all. That’s super disrespectful and that’s why I get super hurt when I find out people were on drugs or steroids. That’s just cheating and I look at guys like, ‘How can you sleep at night with yourself?’ I want to get tested. They’re picking them off one by one and it’s great for the sport.”

For more on UFC Fight Night 74, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.