News

News Flash: Memory Shop and Anime Zakka to Open in Harvard Square

News

Harvard Researchers Develop AI-Driven Framework To Study Social Interactions, A Step Forward for Autism Research

News

Harvard Innovation Labs Announces 25 President’s Innovation Challenge Finalists

News

Graduate Student Council To Vote on Meeting Attendance Policy

News

Pop Hits and Politics: At Yardfest, Students Dance to Bedingfield and a Student Band Condemns Trump

NFL Denies Charges of Drug Use by QBs

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

NEW ORLEANS--The orchestration of Super Bowl week collapsed yesterday with the NFL angrily challenging a Washington television station's report that the league had covered up positive drug tests for three star white quarterbacks.

Programmed news conferences became a stage for opposing quarterbacks Joe Montana and John Elway to say it wasn't them and NFL spokesman Joe Browne demanded that ABC affiliate WJLA "name names."

"Where is the proof?" Browne said after the station aired a 14-minute report on the league's drug policy Wednesday night. "If there are no names, there is no story."

Frank Herzog, the station's sports director, said the names of the players were not released because of confidentiality, a policy the league itself follows in drug cases. "The names are not the issue," he said. "The central issue is the faulty testing."

Asked if he knew the names, Herzog said, "I may know or I may not. That's not the point. The question is what happens when the [testing] bottle leaves the player."

Browne said a player who tests positive for drugs is offered treatment and counseling. "We can't force players to accept that treatment," he said. "Some players take us up. Some play golf."

Treatment

That was an obvious reference to New York Giants linebacker Lawrence Taylor, who said in his autobiography that golf helped him kick a drug habit. Taylor subsequently tested positive a second time and was suspended for 30 days. A third positive test, like Washington's Dexter Manley's last season, results in a lifetime suspension.

In the WJLA segment, consumer reporter Roberta Baskin charged that NFL testing does not follow the league's official drug policy and that there is "selective punishment," with some players disciplined while others are not.

Baskin said that in the last four years, three star quarterbacks who tested positive for cocaine were not sent for counseling. In each case, the station said, the quarterback was white, adding that either agents or the players themselves confirmed information that the league had ignored positive tests.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags