Townsville Bulletin

Sport’s view of cocaine waning

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JAMES Slipper’s lenient suspension for cocaine use is a sign of the times and his Queensland Reds teammates will “barely notice” he’s gone, former Wallaby Greg Martin says.

The veteran Australian and Queensland prop was slapped with a mandatory minimum two- month suspension and $ 27,500 fine by Rugby Australia on Thursday after twice testing positive for the recreation­al drug this year.

Revealing he was suffering from depression in a statement, the 28- year- old has accepted the sanctions and offered an apology and assurance he’s taking steps to improve his mental health.

It follows a series of drug indiscreti­ons from Reds star Karmichael Hunt, who is yet to play for the Reds this Super Rugby season.

That link forced Reds chairman Jeff Miller to defend the club’s culture while Rugby Australia boss Raelene Castle did the same for the code in separate news conference­s yesterday.

Miller said correlatin­g Hunt’s arrival at the club with Slipper’s drug habit was “drawing a bow” and Slipper’s circumstan­ces meant accusation­s of a drug culture at the Reds were off the mark.

Former Wallaby fullback Martin agreed, pointing to Wendell Sailor’s stiff two- year ban for cocaine use in 2006 to show how times had changed.

“When you say cocaine 10 years ago it was like ‘ whoa’, it was full- on,” he said. “Now everyone seems to be on it and the fines seem to be parallel to that ... society’s got a hands- off approach to it.”

While endorsing Slipper’s character and skill, Martin said his suspension would not trigger a Reds collapse.

“They’ll just treat it like he’s got an ankle injury. They’re in a bubble and if anyone slips out of it they barely notice, especially a prop,” he said.

Martin said the young squad had impressed this season, given out- of- favour Quade Cooper’s removal and fellow veterans George Smith and Scott Higginboth­am’s injuries and suspension.

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James Slipper

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