The Declining Integrity of Professional Sports
GREEN
BAY - The problem was focus. Not the lack wholesale
mlb jerseysof focus that you can fight
with discipline, but the lack of focus that comes from a busy, stressed mind.
Adderall is a prescription medicine used to combat Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder, helping people focus. It’s also a drug that is banned
in the NFL, unless you get approval from the league.
Packers defensive lineman Mike Neal had a
prescription for the medicine, but he lacked permission from the league.
“I was
completely honest,” said Neal. “They asked me mlb
baseball jerseysif I take it, I was like,
'yeah.' They asked me do I have a prescription for it, I told them,
‘yeah.’"
Neal is not alone. In recent weeks, more
and more players have received suspensions from the NFL for testing positive
for a banned substance. Many of those players, notably two players from
Seattle, one from Tampa Bay and another from Washington either blame Adderall
or reports have linked them to the drug.
he took his medicine, so to speak, with a
suspension. He doesn’t feel Adderall, however, is a drug that can help you on
the field.
“I mean if you tell me you've seen a guy
take Adderall and run a 40-yard dash faster, it don't do any of that,”
said Neal. “As far as I'm concerned, performance enhancing drug, that's going a
little over the board with it."
The NFL, for their part, claims the drug
can aid players on the field. Prevea sports medicine Dr. Jeremy Metzler agrees,
though sides with Neal, in saying it won’t make you faster or stronger.
“There's actually a couple studies that
show in higher temperatures, your body doesn't get affected by the heat as
much, so you can actually perform better at higher temperatures,” said Metzler.
“There is a physical benefit as well as a psychological benefit with it."
Another question raised by the rash of
Adderall-related suspensions: what are the players really testing positive for?
The NFL does not release the specifics of what causes players to fail the drug
tests. Players could, in theory, test positive for anything, then just claim
they used Adderall to try and lessen the public relations hit.
“If they blame a positive drug test on
Adderall, a type of drug many people use day to day to attack AHD, perhaps the
stigma's not there among the general public,” said Miami-based sports and
entertainment attorney Darren Heitner.
Neal was asked if players could lie, and
claim they used Adderall when, in fact, they had tested positive for another
substance.
“Could they do it, yeah,” said Neal. “But,
honestly, ESPN can get their hands on whatever they want to, they know the
truth about it. If guys say they tested positive for Adderall, something
else, they can call them out on it, but I think some of those guys are telling
the truth about it."
The NFL is pushing for more transparency in
the process, hoping to be able to say exactly what a player tests positive for.
“We've pushed for that for a number of
years because we think, not only does it insure that the information that is
publicly disclosed is accurate... but I think it also has an important
deterrent value,” said NFL senior vice president of law and labor policy
Adolpho Birch on a recent conference call. “Unfortunately, this is one of those
cases in which the union doesn't share our view on that at this point. We're
trying to work with them on that.”
Neal, for his part, has moved on from his
suspension. He goes so far as to call the suspension a blessing, saying he’s
playing the best football of his career right now.
“I can thank the NFL for suspending me, making
me hungry and motivating me for something I didn't do,” said Neal.
Neal and the Packers host the Detroit Lions
Sunday night. Kickoff is set for 7:20 p.m.

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