The new CBA

FuzzyLumpkins

The Boognish
Messages
36,566
Reaction score
27,854
I have never seen that....teams knowingly let players play drunk

It was widely reported that Kyle Orton was drunk most of the time as a Cowboy. Then there was Meriweather.

http://patriotswire.usatoday.com/20...says-nfl-players-get-dead-drunk-for-pro-bowl/

“It was just something to warm me up before the game,” he said.

He recounted his first trip to Hawaii.

“I went to [my first Pro Bowl after the 2009 season] and some people were like, ‘Look, man. I’m playing dead serious. I’m finna win this,’” Meriweather said. “And a lot — most players are like, ‘Man, I’m finna get dead drunk before the game, man.’ They ain’t playing nothing.”

Meriweather said his mentality about the Pro Bowl changed significantly after just a few plays on the field.

“My first year going, I didn’t know what to expect,” he said. “The first couple of plays I was in, players were like, ‘Hey, chill out. What are you doing, man?’ After that, the next year I was like, ‘Man, I’m chilling. Ain’t nobody going to be playing hard. I’m chilling.’”
 

conner01

Well-Known Member
Messages
28,960
Reaction score
26,604
I don't think a new CBA will affect the cap numbers that much.

They'll haggle over weed, possible 18 game seasons, and a bunch of details.

The cap numbers are primarily affected by the TV deals, not the CBA.
The only thing that could affect the cap would be how much of revenue goes to salaries and teams probably won't be eager to give up a bigger pies of the pie
I would love to see some type of exemption for drafted vets of a team so you don't end up having to cut a guy who you drafted and plays so long with you.
 

guag

Tertiary Adjunct of Unimatrix 01
Messages
21,173
Reaction score
18,170
The owners and a significant portion of the players union have had, what I believe is, a shared opinion on the topic of marijuana. I think that common opinion is shaped by two considerations primarily. One, they feel there isn't a necessity making recreational marijuana exempt from the currently lax testing provisions (e.g. fellow players allow themselves to be penalized by not avoiding fairly easily avoidable penalties). Two, they see the National Football League's stance as a positive public relations standard above that governing other major team sports leagues.

Granted, my assumptions are based on what I see are owners, who do not wish to buck the status quo, and the majority of players, who have done little in the past towards minimizing or eliminating penalties on recreational marijuana use by their peers--despite evidence of the contrary in other sports leagues, such as the NBA in particular.

This leads to my question. What motivational factor has or will change the opinion of the owners and a large enough portion of the players union to ratify a new CBA, that embraces a more tolerant recreational marijuana policy, when a small fraction of affected players have been or shall be annually "victimized" by the league's contemporary drug policy? Why? Because it's feels like the "right thing to do?" Because increasing numbers of states are themselves becoming more legally tolerant towards recreational or medical marijuana use?

I'm simply curious to read what others think will serve as "the push" that compels a private business entity (along with a good number of its employees' acceptance) to revamp current drug policy. It's probably just me but I don't see neither some sort of inner grass roots (lol. I said grass :p ) campaign by the players union to eliminate weed penalties nor see how general public philosophy on the topic will significantly strong-arm the league into an assumed compliance.

/rant
In my opinion, if marijuana eventually does become accepted by the NFL, it will be due to the fact that opioid abuse is reaching epidemic proportions in this country, and marijuana can serve as a much less addictive (and almost impossible to overdose from) pain management substitute for those who wish to have an alternative to opioid pain meds.
 

LocimusPrime

Well-Known Member
Messages
34,091
Reaction score
92,903
In my opinion, if marijuana eventually does become accepted by the NFL, it will be due to the fact that opioid abuse is reaching epidemic proportions in this country, and marijuana can serve as a much less addictive (and almost impossible to overdone from) pain management substitute for those who wish to have an alternative to opioid pain meds.
Good point! Didn't consider this, thanks for bringing it up brother!
 

DallasEast

Cowboys 24/7/365
Staff member
Messages
62,291
Reaction score
63,974
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
In my opinion, if marijuana eventually does become accepted by the NFL, it will be due to the fact that opioid abuse is reaching epidemic proportions in this country, and marijuana can serve as a much less addictive (and almost impossible to overdose from) pain management substitute for those who wish to have an alternative to opioid pain meds.
I can envision that happening if negative side stories like CHS do not grow larger in scope than at present:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/mysteri...na-use-on-the-rise-in-states-with-legal-weed/

I think the league would embrace the topic more if there aren't any significant detractions.
 

Carl23

Active Member
Messages
495
Reaction score
191
Until marijuana is legal, nation-wide, it should not be allowed to be used by players in the league. To allow it would condone breaking the law for some teams and would/might provide a competitive advantage for those teams that live in states that allow it.
 

fishspill

Well-Known Member
Messages
4,783
Reaction score
3,583
In my opinion, if marijuana eventually does become accepted by the NFL, it will be due to the fact that opioid abuse is reaching epidemic proportions in this country, and marijuana can serve as a much less addictive (and almost impossible to overdose from) pain management substitute for those who wish to have an alternative to opioid pain meds.
I think it's the league's nightmare is for a more permissive policy to turn into a problem with players becoming big investors in the weed game. It's illegal in most places and young men with a big, new wad of money might think it's a good investment or be talked into illegal trade. The media will have them spun into being urban thugs in no time and that's a headache the owners want to dodge. Nobody wants to appear in front of the Senate.
 
Top