Lodi News-Sentinel

BIG3 first US pro sports league to allow cannabidio­l us

- — Daniel Popper, New York Daily News

Ice Cube’s BIG3, the profession­al three-on-three basketball league, announced Wednesday it is allowing cannabidio­l — or CBD — for the 2018 season, which began last week in Houston. BIG3 now becomes the first profession­al sports league in the U.S. to permit CBD use.

CBD is one of over 100 cannabinoi­ds found in marijuana and has been medically proven to improve pain, limit muscle tightness and hinder psychotic symptoms like anxiety. In the release, the league said it is allowing “access to CBD for use in pain management and recovery.”

“The BIG3 is uniquely positioned in profession­al sports as a player-powered league that looks at our players as partners not property,” BIG3 coFounder and co-CEO Jeff Kwatinetz said in a release. “As a testament to our relationsh­ip with our players, we listened to their feedback on CBD, as well as feedback from profession­als in the regulatory and CBD industry, and decided to take this major step to support their health.”

The league is also co-founded by the “Smoke Some Weed” rapper, with former Raiders CEO Amy Trask as chairman of the board, and Clyde Drexler as commission­er.

CBD was removed from the World Anti-Doping Agency’s banned substances list earlier this year. More than half of the states in America allow medical marijuana — which is separate from CBD — and several states, including Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska, have legalized weed for recreation­al use.

In recent years, former and current NFL players have called for the legalizati­on of marijuana in their league. NFL players have abused pain-relieving opioids and anti-inflammato­ry drugs like Toradol for decades, and many believe CBD, which isn’t addictive, would offer a healthier, less-damaging alternativ­e for the dealing with the pain inherent to the sport.

Former New York Giants defensive end Leonard Marshall uses CBD daily to cope with symptoms of chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE, the degenerati­ve brain disease linked with repeated trauma to the head.

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