Derrick Morgan joins Eugene Monroe’s marijuana cause

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Tackle Eugene Monroe isn’t alone in his advocacy for the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes in the NFL. Titans linebacker Derrick Morgan has joined Monroe.

In an interview with Katie Couric of Yahoo News, Morgan and Monroe explained their position regarding the value of marijuana for football players — and regarding the NFL’s reluctance to consider it.

“I feel like the NFL has a responsibility to look into it, to delegate time and money to research this for its players,” Morgan said. “Given how much influence that the NFL has on society, I think it would help the greater good.  There’s a lot of people suffering and a lot of people that can benefit from cannabis as a medical treatment.”

The league nevertheless has resisted the question of whether marijuana would benefit players, clinging to the reality that marijuana is banned under the substance abuse policy.

“I think for the NFL to say that cannabis does not benefit the long-term health of its players without actually having gone and done the research,” Morgan said. “I don’t think that’s an accurate statement.”

Still, the league seems to be willing to learn more about the issue, and maybe what they learn will result in a change in the NFL’s attitude toward marijuana.

The biggest impediment to change could be the concept of collective bargaining. The league will want a concession in return for modifying the longstanding marijuana ban. The NFL Players Association may take the position that it’s in the mutual interests of labor and management to make changes.

Hopefully, both sides will set the back-and-forth of labor negotiations aside and do the right thing for all players, if the right thing is allowing them to use marijuana as a way to treat pain and other football-related afflictions.

The good news is that, under the current policy, most players can (and many players do) use marijuana. Every player not already in the program takes one substance abuse test per year, at some point from April to August. This means that players not in the program can use marijuana throughout most of training camp, the preseason, the regular season, and the postseason.

Still, players shouldn’t have to shut it down for a month (or more) in the offseason, and players in the substance abuse program shouldn’t have to avoid it completely until they exit from the program. The sooner the NFL gets to that point, the better off the NFL’s players (and in turn the NFL) will be.

15 responses to “Derrick Morgan joins Eugene Monroe’s marijuana cause

  1. Its very simple. Even if they don’t approve general medical marijuana they should approve use of the CBD products.

    CBD is the actual pain killing compound in marijuana and has no psychoactive side effects, ie it does not get you high.

    Of course the would mean that the science deniers in the league office would have to accept actual science facts, well as facts instead of some sort of voodoo.

    They also don’t have the common sense to realize this.

    Goodell and his cronies are vile and must go.

  2. Watch out… the evil, corrupt sheriff who is reluctant to step into the 21st century would prefer his players become addicted to pain killers than find relief with marijuana…this is the same guy who refutes scientific principles, cares little about domestic violence and will use any means possible to live up to his self acclaimed moniker “The Enforcer”

  3. If the players want change, they need to lobby their congressional representatives. Asking the NFL to do something is a waste of time. The NFL has no desire to stick its neck out and contradict federal law, which currently classifies marijuana as a Schedule I drug (worst of the worst). Nothing will change until the Schedule I designation is changed.

  4. The biggest impediment to change could be the concept of collective bargaining. The league will want a concession in return for modifying the longstanding marijuana ban.

    ——————————–

    That right there. They KNOW it can be beneficial to the players. But they care way more about getting concessions (MONEY) than they do about taking care of their players. It’s 2016 already. Why can’t we have a real conversation about this? Why can’t we actually study it? Because a bunch of people stuck in the ancient ways of thinking won’t allow it even though it has no impact on them.

  5. Progress on this issue is sure, but slow.

    I wish people wouldn’t need relief from any physical or emotional pain. But in reality, people medicate.

    Ask any cop, ER nurse, family or friend of an addict, which substance causes the most social harm? Alcohol, opiates, amphetamines, or cannabis.

  6. So a substance that is illegal in most states (45 – 47 out of 50) is banned by the collective bargaining agreement.

    The players feel that there is a benefit to them to be able to smoke. (Personally I’d like to see the studies that show this, and see how smoking marijuana is better than isolating THC in a pill form – but i digress)

    This is simple. Assuming the research exists that shows the benefits of marijuana for the athletes – it is still illegal in most states. So, i don’t think the league should freely give this to the players without the NFLPA giving up something at the negotiation table.

    Once you introduce a union into the labor management discussion, the days of management giving up anything for free are over.

  7. It’s not the ‘evil corrupt sheriff’. It’s big business. Pharma companies can’t make money off of weed and so it goes.

    I am that retired sheriff (minus the evil and corrupt part) and fighting weed is the biggest waste of money in the history of wasting tax payers dollars.

    Weed is a painkiller to some, viagra to others. Anti-anxiety and anti-anorexia to even more. That is off the top of my head.

    But let’s get people addicted to pills so they can die or kill someone while Big Pharma makes big money. Many billions are at stake.

    It is so painfully obvious how corrupt this world is and it starts at the top. All about the cash flow…

  8. There’s a lot of people suffering and a lot of people that can benefit from cannabis as a medical treatment.”
    ==================================
    fine, get your doctor to prescribe it and the NFL to allow that. No driving around or clubbing though while using it.

    Bell & Blount getting stoned going to the airport is not medical treatment.

  9. nyfootballgiants says:
    Jun 23, 2016 11:38 AM
    So a substance that is illegal in most states (45 – 47 out of 50) is banned by the collective bargaining agreement.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    For recreational use, that is an accurate statement, however Ohio just became the 25th state to decriminalize medical marijuana.

  10. (Personally I’d like to see the studies that show this, and see how smoking marijuana is better than isolating THC in a pill form – but i digress)

    —————————————

    Why? Honestly, why do you care if they also get a high from it? Does it impact you? No. No one is advocating that they be able to drive or operate heavy machinery. Why do you care if someone only wants to smoke to get high? Why does there need to be a medical benefit? It has zero impact on you.

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