The Day

AP source: Red Sox to hire Bloom as top exec CBD company to advertise at doorstep of Gillette

- By JIMMY GOLEN By JIMMY GOLEN

Boston — A person with knowledge of the decision tells The Associated Press the Boston Red Sox have hired Tampa Bay Rays executive Chaim Bloom as chief baseball officer.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity Friday because Major League Baseball doesn’t like teams to make announceme­nts during the World Series.

The move was first reported by the New York Post.

Bloom was the No. 2 to Tampa Bay general manager Erik Neander. The 36-year-old Yale graduate replaces Dave Dombrowski, who was let go less than a year after the team he built set a franchise record for victories and won the World Series.

This year’s team finished 84-78 despite the highest payroll in baseball and missed the playoffs for the first time since 2015.

Foxborough, Mass. — Cannabis is knocking at the NFL’s door, but it can’t get in. Not yet, at least. The home of the New England Patriots has a new sponsorshi­p deal that will put a cannabidio­l company’s hemp leaf logo on a water tower looming over the stadium and on a sign overlookin­g an entrance.

Former Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski was on hand to announce the deal with Gillette Stadium and Patriot Place, a mall also controlled by Patriots owner Robert Kraft, that brings the banned substance to the doorstep of the NFL without violating league policies against it.

“We are not allowed to be within the stadium itself,” said Perry Antelman, the CEO of Rhode Island-based Abacus Health Products. “This is up to the NFL. I know that they are working with and studying alternativ­e medication­s to help the athletes.”

The NFL drug policy, which is negotiated with the players’ union, bans teams and active players from sponsorshi­p deals with cannabinoi­ds, which include marijuana but also hemp-based products like CBD that don’t include the high-inducing THC. The league tests for THC and advises players not to take CBD products because they might contain it.

But as states begin to lift or loosen their prohibitio­ns on marijuana, major sports leagues are reconsider­ing their bans on therapeuti­c and even recreation­al cannabis use. An NFL committee formed in May is hoping to establish policies on the use of prescripti­on medication and on pain management, including alternativ­e therapies that could free players to use CBD.

“We hear that it is coming around. Whether that’s six months, nine months, 12 months or 18 months, we don’t know yet,” Antelman said. “When it does come around, we’re hoping that will be one of the first to be in the stadium.”

Gronkowski, who retired last spring at 29, is free to endorse the product, CBDMEDIC. But unless the rules change he could not make a much-rumored comeback without severing ties with the company.

“I don’t want to be banned from playing the sport I love because I’m using a product that I can buy, or anyone can buy, at their local pharmacy right off the shelf. It’s that simple. I also want to have the option to get back into the game and if I’m banned next year, I can’t,” he said, reading off a teleprompt­er before going off script and pointing at members of the audience. “You know you want to see me out there . ... I know you do.”

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