News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: League Side Aim To Drug Test Own Players |
Title: | New Zealand: League Side Aim To Drug Test Own Players |
Published On: | 2003-10-06 |
Source: | New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 10:27:34 |
LEAGUE SIDE AIM TO DRUG TEST OWN PLAYERS
Hawkes Bay's representative rugby league team are trying to raise money so
they can be drug-tested.
The Unicorns have pledged to turn their back on taking the drug P - crystal
methamphetamine - and to show their commitment they have agreed to be
randomly tested before games.
The trouble is the New Zealand Sports Drug Agency does not normally test
second-division teams and a methamphetamine test costs about $500 a player.
The Unicorns find it hard enough raising money just to play in the
competition, but team manager Denis O'Reilly says the drug tests will be
worth it because they will help to keep league free of P, which will help
to isolate P manufacturers.
"We've been applying to funding agencies and to the pokies and god knows
what," said Mr O'Reilly, a life member of Black Power who has lobbied hard
against P for several years.
The drug tests would give players a reason to say no to P, he said.
"Like many districts, league tends to be a younger-male activity here and
it's one of the P-using demographics. It's just around our communities
everywhere.
"Say there's someone who's at a party and the P pipe's going around - and
there's a huge amount of peer pressure - and the dude that doesn't smoke
can say, 'Look bro, I'm not smoking P. I want to play representative
football and we have a testing protocol and don't put me in this position'."
Mr O'Reilly said the P available in Hawkes Bay was often poor-quality
home-bake.
"They tend to binge it. They deal with it like they deal with alcohol and
any other recreational drug and they just binge it and then you get these
psychoses and acute psychoses."
NZ Rugby League chairman Selwyn Pearson is all for the drug-testing.
"It's not that we're recognising a P problem in rugby league - it's a
problem for the whole country," he said.
"In this initiative Hawkes Bay are saying to their players, 'We're going to
test you and if you want to smoke that stuff you can't play rugby league',
and we're hoping like hell anyone involved will say, 'I'd rather play rugby
league'.
"What we're hoping is, even if it's one person who says, 'Well, I would
rather play rugby league than smoke P', then that's mission accomplished,
isn't it?"
Hawkes Bay's representative rugby league team are trying to raise money so
they can be drug-tested.
The Unicorns have pledged to turn their back on taking the drug P - crystal
methamphetamine - and to show their commitment they have agreed to be
randomly tested before games.
The trouble is the New Zealand Sports Drug Agency does not normally test
second-division teams and a methamphetamine test costs about $500 a player.
The Unicorns find it hard enough raising money just to play in the
competition, but team manager Denis O'Reilly says the drug tests will be
worth it because they will help to keep league free of P, which will help
to isolate P manufacturers.
"We've been applying to funding agencies and to the pokies and god knows
what," said Mr O'Reilly, a life member of Black Power who has lobbied hard
against P for several years.
The drug tests would give players a reason to say no to P, he said.
"Like many districts, league tends to be a younger-male activity here and
it's one of the P-using demographics. It's just around our communities
everywhere.
"Say there's someone who's at a party and the P pipe's going around - and
there's a huge amount of peer pressure - and the dude that doesn't smoke
can say, 'Look bro, I'm not smoking P. I want to play representative
football and we have a testing protocol and don't put me in this position'."
Mr O'Reilly said the P available in Hawkes Bay was often poor-quality
home-bake.
"They tend to binge it. They deal with it like they deal with alcohol and
any other recreational drug and they just binge it and then you get these
psychoses and acute psychoses."
NZ Rugby League chairman Selwyn Pearson is all for the drug-testing.
"It's not that we're recognising a P problem in rugby league - it's a
problem for the whole country," he said.
"In this initiative Hawkes Bay are saying to their players, 'We're going to
test you and if you want to smoke that stuff you can't play rugby league',
and we're hoping like hell anyone involved will say, 'I'd rather play rugby
league'.
"What we're hoping is, even if it's one person who says, 'Well, I would
rather play rugby league than smoke P', then that's mission accomplished,
isn't it?"
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