http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/sp ... 5868411656
a great read this story from an AFL jurno
sums it up nicely
the egomaniacal AFL is out to protect its image .. with no regard for its players
who'd know how many AFL players are on 1 & 2 strikes already .... but as long as none make the press .. thats all the AFL cares about
it is disgusting.
for shame .. for shame
THE AFL seems hooked on illicit drugs. Or at least bad news about them. Recovering addict Ben Cousins tells all, Mathew Stokes returns to the Geelong side after a court appearance over drug possession and Fremantle's Michael Johnson has been stood down by his club indefinitely.
In the middle of all this is the AFL's own illicit drug policy and the results of its testing over the past 12 months. If you are sympathetic to the controversial three-strike policy then the results are good. The percentage of players testing positive continues to fall.
If you want to take a whack at the AFL then the fact that 12 players returned a positive - and two of them twice is a significant indicator that the millions spent on player education are hardly producing value for money.
The AFL has not punished any player for drug use who has been caught in its unique system. Cousins, Stokes and Johnson have been humiliated in the media because of police intervention.
The AFL heavies speak glowingly about their policy. It was a world first, it is founded on the best advice and it is thought to be quite wonderful by other sports, both locally and internationally. But the praise mostly stops there and the policy draws scorn from those outside AFL House. Not everybody is critical, but there are enough who are for the policy to have become more burden than breakthrough.
From the outside it would appear the police are doing more to stop drug use in the AFL than the league itself. At least the police are seen to be doing something where the AFL actually conceals players it knows use drugs.
The fact that footballers using marijuana has dropped significantly does not necessarily mean fewer players are using drugs but maybe have turned to ones that clear the system more quickly than a joint. There is more evidence that illicit drugs are a problem in the AFL than not.
The Victorian Government is uncomfortable with the AFL policy. Victorian Police Minister Bob Cameron wants players breaking the law held to account. "This is ultimately going to be a matter for the AFL, but where people are involved in crime it's important that they're dealt with," Cameron said yesterday.
AFL boss Andrew Demetriou saw a more positive side to Johnson's woes. Demetriou said rather than harming the league's image, Johnson's case just strengthened its existing knowledge and resolve.
"It just again reaffirms, you heard last week our results, we had 14 positives," Demetriou said yesterday. "I think you also heard last week that cocaine seemed to be a drug that was on the up in numbers, so it confirms what we know. "We know that there are players out there who for whatever reason aren't getting the message or have got another issue."
While Demetriou's administration is committed to its three-strike protocols, its unhealthy weakness is that the policy invites experimentation among footballers because they are exposed only when they have returned a third positive test. This is balanced by the AFL reporting that it has saved players from addiction because those who return positive tests are counselled by experts.
But the AFL's commitment to helping guide players away from drugs is conditional.
The AFL encourages clubs to take some stern action with players who are publicly caught on drug issues. It all but hurls them aside. This appears to be an outrageous double standard when compared to its three-strike policy. The illicit drug code reads in part: "The AFL has been advised and accepts that a more rehabilitative model of management including education, counselling and monitoring treatment is appropriate in deterring the use of illicit drugs.
"For habitual offenders, however, the AFL proposes to protect the vast majority of its playing group and others in the community who are influenced and affected by the behaviour of players by administering strict and severe sanctions."
The AFL has said it has the best advice from people working in drug rehabilitation that naming a player for a drug breach makes it far more difficult to rehabilitate, so players who test positive with the AFL are not named.
Yet players who are found out by people other than AFL testers are thrown aside. For Stokes it was two months, for Johnson it is indefinitely. You are protected by the AFL provided you have not embarrassed them. Just when the drug experts say a player is at his most vulnerable they are shunned by the league.
If nurturing, protecting, embracing, counselling and education are considered the best way to ensure players do not fall into drug use, why is the consideration not given to a player caught by police? Stokes was banned for having one gram of cocaine in his possession. The AFL openly admits it has 10 players who have twice tested positive to ingesting illegal drugs. The unfairness is manifest. Not only is Johnson put on a strike, he is also stood down by the club. At every level.
The Stokes and Johnson cases lead to the inevitable conclusion that the drug policy has been put in place by the AFL to protect the image of the league and to hell with the players.
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