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We live in a society where marijuana is becoming increasingly destigmatized. It has been completely legalized for recreational used in four states, decriminalized in 17 states and the District of Columbia, and allowed for medicinal purposes in 23 states. Even the Texas House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee passed a marijuana legalization bill on Wednesday. However, the NFL still has it on the banned substances list, which is why marijuana arrests or positive tests can still affect players' careers, as it did for Shane Ray and Randy Gregory.
According to former NFL linebacker Scott Fujita, though, NFL teams don't particularly care much about whether players smoke pot, and only really worry about them getting caught. "The way I always saw it, and the way coaches see it, is if you're dumb enough to get caught at the one time of year they're testing, that's a problem," Fujita said on Jim Rome on Showtime. (This would presumably be why Gregory's marijuana issue was considered a problem for many teams, in addition to whatever other personal issues he may have.) "The rest of the year, you've got open season to do whatever you want to do. So just be smart about it."
Asked to estimate the percentage of players in the NFL who smoke, Fujita put the number somewhere between 30 and 50 percent. Back in 2012, former NFL player Lomas Brown stated that at least 50 percent of players smoke pot. Meanwhile, an NFL GM told Bleacher Report's Mike Freeman that 30 to 40 percent of the players in this year's draft smoke regularly, which is "right in line with our league."
mike freeman ✔@mikefreemanNFL
GM to me: "My estimate is 30 to 40 percent of players in this draft class use marijuana regularly. That's right in line with our league."
mike freeman ✔@mikefreemanNFL
More from GM: "Publicly teams act shocked, disappointed about marijuana. Privately we know a lot of guys smoke and we're far from shocked."
mike freeman ✔@mikefreemanNFL
Last from GM: "In five years, maybe less, we'll have a league that allows smoking pot. It's best recourse. What we're doing now is stupid."
Whether that happens or not remains to be seen, but for now, Fujita says many coaches consider marijuana the lesser of possible evils. "A coach worries that a guy might get popped one too many times and end up missing games," Fujita said. "But I've had coaches tell me they'd rather have guys go home at night, smoke a bowl, sit your ass on the couch, play some X-Box and eat some Cheetos, rather than being out at night, drinking and getting in trouble. I've heard coaches actually say that to me."
http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/eye-on...-fujita-30-to-50-percent-of-players-smoke-pot