James’ NFL future hazy without pot exemption
Running back Mike James hurts all over. He experiences chronic pain every day, a natural byproduct of his chosen profession.
Still, he’s not yet ready to walk away from his NFL career and says he knows the key to continuing: marijuana.
James, an NFL free agent, applied for a marijuana therapeuticuse exemption( TUE) from the league recently, which he hoped would allow him to treat his pain without fear of violating the league’s substance-abuse policy.
The league denied his request last week, which James said jeopardizes his ability to sign with a team and continue his career.
“By them denying me a TUE, they’re really giving me no other options to continue playing football,” the 27-year old James said in an interview this week.
“To be able to play this violent game and deal with my chronic pain, I need an option for that.”
Even as many states around the country have made efforts to decriminalize or legalize cannabis, both medicinally and recreationally, the NFL has shown few signs of relaxing its rules regarding marijuana.
James made his TUE request hoping to change that, in the process offering fellow professional football players a safer alternative to addictive opioids, which many use to manage the pain inherent in the game.
An NFL spokesman did not respond to a request for comment on James. The league doesn’t typi- cally discuss TUE requests, citing privacy concerns.
A sixth-round pick by the Buccaneers in 2013, James was already living on the NFL’s fringe. Even if the league had granted his exemption, there’s no guarantee an NFL team would offer him a contract. Over six seasons, he’s done two stints each with the Bucs and Detroit Lions. His career total is 23 games, twice ending seasons on the injured reserve, and has four carries over the past three years.
His first injured-reserve trip came nine games into his rookie year, when James broke his ankle and required surgery. He was given prescription opioids to manage the pain and said the pills quickly became a problem, turning into a year-long dependence.
His wife Aubrey spotted the growing problem and said James needed to explore marijuana as an alternative to treat his pain. He initially balked. James wasn’t certain of the medicinal benefits and only knew marijuana as a street drug. His father had a history of drugrelated offences and James said he always steered clear of marijuana or any other illegal substances.
“I grew up in a bad neighbourhood,” said James, a native of Haines City, Fla., who played his college ball at Miami. “I’d seen people using it (and) I thought, ‘Oh, if I use marijuana, that means I was unsuccessful or I wouldn’t be living the kind of life I wanted.’ My wife kind of chuckled.”
In February 2014, he tried the drug and felt he’d finally discovered a healthy, simple way to manage his pain, if not his NFL career.
Marijuana is a banned substance in the NFL. Players are typically tested for it during organized team activities in the offseason or in training camp before the season.
If the player passes that test, he’s essentially free to use the drug, if he chooses, throughout the regular season without fear of getting caught or further testing.
But rather than continuing to slip through the drug-testing net himself, James wants the NFL to acknowledge the medicinal benefits of marijuana and to promote it to players as an alternative to addictive painkillers.
“We know how the NFL feels about marijuana,” he said. “And we know young men’s livelihoods are in the balance. They fear losing this (career) and not being able to take care of their family. What I’m trying to do is open the door, open pathways to give guys a plan.”
His doctor agrees. Sue Sisley, an Arizona-based physician, has been a major proponent of marijuana research and was eager for a football player to step forward and challenge the NF L’ s rules and norms.
The NFL cited multiple reasons for denying his TUE request, James said, noting marijuana is a banned substance in the NFL, the league’s medical advisers don’t necessarily agree with James’ doctor that it’s essential for him and chronic pain is not a sufficient diagnosis.
“They’re arguing that chronic pain is a symptom, but chronic pain syndrome is a diagnosis,” said Sisley, who serves on the board of advisers for the Korey Stringer Institute, which has partnered with the NFL on health and safety issues.
“This guy has pain everywhere. In an NFL career, these guys have been playing since they were little and have been injured over and over again. They have pain in every joint. For the NFL to say chronic pain syndrome is not a diagnosis is absurd.”
A spokesman for the NFLPA did not return a request for comment. The union formed a committee to study pain management and research marijuana in 2017, but has yet to make any recommendations public.