Rumors have become reports, as the National Football League is prepared to make concessions around its substance abuse policy in its next Collective Bargaining Agreement with players, according to NBCâs ProFootballTalk. Whispers of the NFL loosening its regulations on players using cannabis stretch back as far as two years ago, when former football player Eben Britton told The Fresh Toast his belief the league would use cannabis as a âbargaining chipâ in CBA negotiations.
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PFTâs Mike Florio reported that it remains undecided to what degree the NFL would allow players to use cannabis. He didnât rule out a âcomplete abandonmentâ of any cannabis regulation whatsoever, leaving players to their own discretion regarding marijuana usage. The biggest concern regards players in states where cannabis remains federally illegal, and how does the league respond if they received marijuana possession charges.
âA delicate balance may be required,â Florio writes. âIt the law of the land becomes âsmoke at will as long as youâre in a weed-legal state,â plenty of free agents will flock to teams in states where itâs legal. So maybe the best approach would be to simply dump marijuana from the list of banned recreational drugs, and move on.â
Part of the leagueâs leniency involves the changing culture around cannabis. The plantâs essentially mainstream now. Virtually every 2020 Democratic presidential candidate has backed federal marijuana legalization and been applauded for doing so. Quietly removing marijuana from the NFLâs banned substances list likely wonât result in serious backlash from fans. We also know owners like Jerry Jones donât care anymore, as the Dallas Cowboys owner said the NFL should âdrop its prohibition on marijuana useâ two years ago.
You might be wondering why if the NFL doesnât care anymore about cannabis, why not just drop it now? Well, as Britton mentioned, the owners donât want to give up the âbargaining chipâ they have. Sadly, giving players access to medical marijuana that could provide pain relief from addictive opioids and could possibly alleviate concussion symptoms isnât enough. This is a business decision as much as anything.
Via ProFootballTalk:
The problem is that the NFL canât start abandoning its rights without a concession from the NFL Players Association, and the NFLPA will make no concessions when it comes to a once-per-year marijuana testing procedure that most players are able to navigate successfully. Thus, the best way to back off would be to pitch the cannabis issue into the broader stew of back-and-forthing that will happen in connection with full-blown CBA discussions.
No matter what, weâre sure cannabis will be a point of discussion in the upcoming CBA negotiations. Until then, NFL players will have to continue pretending like they donât already use cannabis.
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TheFreshToast.com, a U.S. lifestyle site, that contributes lifestyle content and, with their partnership with 600,000 physicians via Skipta, medical marijuana information to The GrowthOp.
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