New York Post

McMahon wants NFL to make pot legal

- By JACK KASKEY

A group of former NFL players is using the Super Bowl to push for a new policy on marijuana, saying the substance should be more widely available as an alternativ­e to opioid painkiller­s.

Former Bears quarterbac­k Jim McMahon said pot has helped him numb lingering pain from injuries sustained during 15 seasons in the league. And it has done so, he said, without the side effects he experience­d from the opioid Percocet.

“This is something that has got to get into the mainstream,” he said this week at Cannabis in Profession­al Sports, a public forum in Houston, days before the city hosts the Super Bowl on Feb. 5.

Greater acceptance by the NFL of the federally banned substance would mark a big step in support of legal pot, said Sue Sisley, an Arizona psychiatri­st who helped organize the event. Legal weed has grown into a $6.7 billion industry as eight states and the District of Columbia allow recreation­al consumptio­n. More than half of states permit medical use.

“If we can persuade the wealthiest most powerful organizati­on in the country, the NFL, to reevaluate their policy, we all know that is going to have a giant ripple effect,” said Sisley, who sits on the board of Doctors for Cannabis Regulation, which advocates marijuana legalizati­on.

The NFL Players Associatio­n is drafting a proposal to change how the NFL handles marijuana use, union spokesman George Atallah said Friday. It would need to be approved by union representa­tives and then presented to the league for collective bargaining, he said.

NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell told reporters this week that while the current labor agreement has worked well for players and the teams, the league “would love to engage” the union on drug policy. NFL players who test positive for marijuana can be fined or suspended.

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