News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Column: CFL Has Gone To Pot, Former Player Claims |
Title: | CN BC: Column: CFL Has Gone To Pot, Former Player Claims |
Published On: | 2007-07-11 |
Source: | Metro (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 02:22:10 |
CFL HAS GONE TO POT, FORMER PLAYER CLAIMS
A lot of players in the CFL smoke a lot of marijuana.
This is the word from Sean Millington, who spent 13 seasons as a
running back with the B.C. Lions, Edmonton Eskimos, Winnipeg Blue
Bombers and Toronto Argonauts and who has been a member of the CBC's
CFL broadcast crew off and on since 2003.
Millington's revelation, oddly enough, appears on the CFL's
website.
His most recent column is an eyebrow-raising piece where he suggests
a drug policy is not necessary for the CFL and even criticizes
commissioner Mark Cohon for planning to develop one.
"It's all about politics, which is about optics as opposed to reality
a lot of the time," Millington writes. "Mark Cohon wants the drug
policy so he can have the CFL appear to be in line with similar
policies in the NFL, NBA and MLB. This desire is birthed from a
feeling of inferiority with regards to those leagues.
Instead of recognizing that the CFL is a distinct entity with unique
challenges and advantages, once again, it is being compared to its
supposed big brothers and being found wanting.
The NFL has a drug problem and needs drug testing, so we must have a
drug problem and need drug testing."
Millington claims that, unlike NFLers, CFLers generally don't get paid
enough to be able to afford drugs -- except for marijuana.
"To be completely fair there is a large amount of marijuana use,"
Millington divulges, "but I don't think anyone is suggesting that
smoking pot is a performance enhancer or that it has a significant
negative affect (sic) on one's lifestyle."
A lot of players in the CFL smoke a lot of marijuana.
This is the word from Sean Millington, who spent 13 seasons as a
running back with the B.C. Lions, Edmonton Eskimos, Winnipeg Blue
Bombers and Toronto Argonauts and who has been a member of the CBC's
CFL broadcast crew off and on since 2003.
Millington's revelation, oddly enough, appears on the CFL's
website.
His most recent column is an eyebrow-raising piece where he suggests
a drug policy is not necessary for the CFL and even criticizes
commissioner Mark Cohon for planning to develop one.
"It's all about politics, which is about optics as opposed to reality
a lot of the time," Millington writes. "Mark Cohon wants the drug
policy so he can have the CFL appear to be in line with similar
policies in the NFL, NBA and MLB. This desire is birthed from a
feeling of inferiority with regards to those leagues.
Instead of recognizing that the CFL is a distinct entity with unique
challenges and advantages, once again, it is being compared to its
supposed big brothers and being found wanting.
The NFL has a drug problem and needs drug testing, so we must have a
drug problem and need drug testing."
Millington claims that, unlike NFLers, CFLers generally don't get paid
enough to be able to afford drugs -- except for marijuana.
"To be completely fair there is a large amount of marijuana use,"
Millington divulges, "but I don't think anyone is suggesting that
smoking pot is a performance enhancer or that it has a significant
negative affect (sic) on one's lifestyle."
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