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| Seasoned Activist ![]() Join Date: Jan 2004
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| Run Ricky Run - Football, Pot and Pain By FRED GARDNER | CounterPunch | August 7 / 8, 2004 In the autumn of 1995, the 49ers fullback, William Floyd, had a knee destroyed by tacklers. Management had been overworking him mercilessly. On the play before his injury, Floyd had carried four men for about two yards. The TV replay of his leg going one way above the knee and another way below the knee ended what was left of my mild football addiction. So it was only peripherally that I followed the career of a running back named Ricky Williams, who in '95 was a freshman at the University of Texas. He had speed, power, and dreadlocks (before they were fashionable). He broke conference records that had endured since the days of Doak Walker. The New Orleans Saints drafted him in 1999; Mike Ditka gave up eight players to get him. Williams's first agent had experience in the world of rap music, not football, and the contract he negotiated with the Saints owners' was not as lucrative as it could have been. Williams injured a shoulder in his second NFL season and missed six games, but still gained 1000 yards. As he was recovering, he was induced by Glaxo SmithKline to be the celebrity patient in a campaign to sell Paxil to the12 million Americans who allegedly suffer from "Social Anxiety Disorder." Glaxo had to sell the concept that shyness is actually a medical condition * "a chemical imbalance in the brain"- that can be corrected by a pill. Williams gave interviews in which he praised the therapist who told him that his reluctance to be accosted by strangers at airports could be overcome by medication. Williams was traded to the Miami Dolphins in 2002. That season he led the league in yards gained rushing (1853) and number of carries (383). In 2003 his yardage dropped slightly but again he had the most carries (393). Williams won't be playing in 2004. In late July he made two related statements: that he was retiring from football, and that he found marijuana to be "10 times more helpful than Paxil" as a confidence builder. (Glaxo promptly purged him from the Paxil website.) Retiring isn't an easy step. Williams's love for football is expressed in the pages of a journal he's been posting sporadically at runrickyrun.com. He has a clear, colloquial writing style -straight ahead, like his running style. If we're lucky, he'll soon explain his decision to leave the game, and keep us informed of his whereabouts. Williams was facing a four-game suspension after testing positive for marijuana on two occasions, and he knew he had tested positive a third time. "I didn't quit football because I failed a drug test. I failed a drug test because I was ready to quit football," Williams told a writer he trusts, Dan Le Batard of the Miami Herald, on July 28. "Williams said there were 'a hundred reasons' for his retirement and that his desire to continue smoking marijuana without inhibition was merely one of them," Le Batard reported. "He said he was not addicted to the drug, but merely that he didn't believe in government and NFL laws banning it. He said he had already decided to quit football even before testing positive a second time for marijuana use last season and incurring a $650,000 fine. He appealed that fine, flying to New York to argue his case before an arbiter with his attorney, but received word last week that his appeal had been denied.The Associated Press reports that the Dolphins "will attempt to recoup about $4.7 million in bonus money that Williams has collected due to reaching rushing incentives in his new contract... Miami still believes there is a chance that Williams will reconsider and decide to play football, once he realizes he will have a financial fight on his hands and once real contact begins." Williams's current agent, Leigh Steinberg, who also thinks his client might change his mind, made some sensible comments on his behalf. The Dolphins had been using Williams as a "battering ram," Steinberg said. "In so many of his carries he was running straight into the line. It took a heavy physical toll. Maybe it took an emotional toll... Running a football into the waiting arms of 300-pound defensive tackles whose goal is to fling one to the turf time after time requires an extraordinary degree of passion, and commitment, and he found it lacking." "All NFL players get hurt," says veteran AP football reporter Dave Goldberg. "The beating you take is horrendous." Goldberg calls Williams "a throwback to the '60s, a free spirit, very bright. When he was at Texas he decided he wanted to get to know Doak Walker, the old SMU halfback, and they became friends. It was an interesting pairing... Ricky is really atypical. The professional football environment is -let's not call it fascist, but it's the military mindset, and the players buy into it." Goldberg recalls an NFL executive he admired, George Young, deciding to shock everybody at an owners' meeting by announcing that he was a Democrat. When he heard about Williams's retirement, Goldberg says, he recalled a comment by Young, who was the Giants' general manager: "Never draft a guy who's too smart." Here are some excerpts from Williams's journal:Attorney David Cornwell has been helping Steinberg represent Williams. A former assistant general counsel for the NFL, he sometimes sounds as if he was speaking for management: "My recollection is we began testing for marijuana sometime in the '87-89 contract. The players association said it was not appropriate. We believed that not only was it appropriate under the law, it was necessary." Your correspondent opined that drug testing is an assault on a person's dignity and that by refusing to put himself through it, Williams was doing what millions of Americans wish they could afford to do. Cornwell responded, "I think, there is a place for it, if for no other reason than the stature that professional athletes enjoy." Cornwell expressed concern that the NFL program "tends to devolve into a process where they focus more on catching the guy than treating him * if, in fact, there is a substance abuse problem or some other underlying issue. When it comes to education and treatment, there's a substantial breakdown." Cornwell acknowledged that NFL team owners use the drug-testing policy to reduce players' earning power. "There have been players that I represented who have had multiple violations of league-sponsored substance abuse policy and were facing some level of suspension. That certainly had a chilling effect on their marketability * finding teams to sign them, and then once a team is willing to sign them, the structure of the contract. Because the next violation could result in either another suspension, a ban, or something in between. As a result, teams are reluctant to put in up-front money or guaranteed money into a deal if they might lose the guy." Fred Gardner can be reached at fred@plebesite.com
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| Your correspondent opined that drug testing is an assault on a person's dignity and that by refusing to put himself through it, Williams was doing what millions of Americans wish they could afford to do. Cornwell responded, "I think, there is a place for it, if for no other reason than the stature that professional athletes enjoy." More support for the idea that money lets you circumvent the stigma of drug use. At any rate rate, go Ricky! I have been hearing alot about this guy lately, hopefully more players will speak up about marijuana testing. America loves its football right? |
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| Just a casual observation.......this is the THIRD seperate thread about this issue. http://cheaptalk.marijuana.com/420/s...ad.php?t=31557 http://cheaptalk.marijuana.com/420/s...ad.php?t=31549
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| 1. I heard a rumor on ESPN that Ricky Williams is considering coming out of retirement to play for.............the OAKLAND RAIDERS!!! 2. Meanwhile, QB Quincy Carter is canned down in Big D by the Tuna for testing positive for an ilegal substance and Smarty Jones retires to stud. 3. If you understand #2 you probably watch too much sports 4. Yo, Niteshift! I believe you are correct. This is at least the third Ricky Williams story. Now for something REALLY important. Think that former pro wresler Brock Lesner will make it in the NFL? |
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I think we need to teach professional athletes what the word "retire" means. ![]()
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| Now for something REALLY important. Think that former pro wresler Brock Lesner will make it in the NFL? I dunno. I suspect he will, but IIRC, he didn't play football in college, only wrestled (and won the NCAA championship). I think we need to teach professional athletes what the word "retire" means. No sh*t! They can start with Michael Jordan, then move to the boxers. |
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