Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Back from ban, Cowboys’ Randy Gregory thankful for extra chance.

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OXNARD, Calif. — Randy Gregory understand­s the prevailing view that repeated use of marijuana is the reason the Dallas Cowboys defensive end has been suspended for 30 of the past 32 games.

Now that he’s on the verge of playing after a year away from the NFL, the former Nebraska standout wants people to know there are deeper issues of mental health that Gregory isn’t comfortabl­e discussing in detail publicly.

“I was self-sabotaging,” Gregory said Monday in his first group session with reporters at training camp in California. “Anybody that deals with what I have to deal with and what I’ve gone through and understand­s the process of what I’ve been through, I think can understand there’s also a mental aspect to it along with emotional.”

Gregory was suspended three times in less than a year, the last a year-long ban for multiple violations of the league’s substance-abuse policy. He missed the 2017 season and waited an extra six months to apply for reinstatem­ent to try to improve his chances.

The detailed applicatio­n included letters of recommenda­tion from several teammates, most notably 2016 All-Pro linebacker Sean Lee, and won the approval of Commission­er Roger Goodell in time for Gregory to join the Cowboys at camp.

Gregory’s time away included stints in rehab and therapy, and the 25-year-old acknowledg­ed that he had to learn to take those efforts more seriously.

“It’s not just somebody walking around carelessly doing what they want,” Gregory said. “There’s obviously a mental aspect to it that plays a big part in it for me that I’ve had to try to figure out. The moment I took a more serious approach to that with my therapy and the more people around me understood what I was going through mentally, made it a lot easier for me to get right.”

The Cowboys drafted Gregory late in the second round in 2015. He was considered a first-round talent before testing positive for marijuana at the combine.

Gregory made it through his first season without getting suspended, missing four games with an ankle injury but going without a sack in his 12 appearance­s. The first suspension was announced in the offseason, followed by a 10-game ban before the fourgame suspension had expired.

He played the final two games in 2016, finally getting his first sack in the finale when the Cowboys had already wrapped up the NFC East title. The third suspension hit before Dallas lost a divisional playoff game to Green Bay.

“We try to keep our eyes wide open about what any issues a player might have coming in and we’re optimistic if we put them in the right environmen­t they can respond the right way,” Coach Jason Garrett said. “It will not be 100 percent successful. But we’ve had a lot of players who have grown a lot in our organizati­on.”

The Cowboys brought Gregory along slowly at camp, first allowing him to participat­e in pre-practice walkthroug­h sessions. Individual drills in practice were next, and finally some 11-on-11 work for the first time this week.

Owner Jerry Jones, never afraid to gamble on draft picks and equally willing to stick with them, said he thinks Gregory can be ready for the opener at Carolina on Sept. 9.

“We certainly have had players that have had challenges with dependence,” Jones said. “Now the problem is reality sets in and you have numbers and roster spots. You get the old adage of, ‘Well, he wouldn’t be doing that for a down-the-line guy or he wouldn’t be that tolerant of a down-the-line guy.’ That’s actually very true.”

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 ?? AP file photo ?? Dallas Cowboys defensive end Randy Gregory, on the verge of playing after a year away from the NFL for a drug suspension, addressed his mental health issues in his first group session with reporters at training camp Monday in Oxnard, Calif.
AP file photo Dallas Cowboys defensive end Randy Gregory, on the verge of playing after a year away from the NFL for a drug suspension, addressed his mental health issues in his first group session with reporters at training camp Monday in Oxnard, Calif.

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