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No, it's tantamount to accepting that this is a societal issue and expecting football players to be somehow different to the rest of their cohort would lead to constant headlines of players failing drug tests.

The AFL had a spate of drug test breaches that was creating a whole lot of negative publicity for the game, and they came up with this approach in concert with the AFL version of the RLPA.

The ARLC then copied it (from what I've heard).

And WADA also turn a blind eye to it.
So are we seriously saying that the interests of the game and the sponsors effectively comes before the interests of the players?
If that is correct, then the whole thing stinks.
If the game is turning a blind eye to drugs while maintaining a veneer of a clean game, how on earth is this in the best short, medium and long term interests of the players?
I may be old fashioned, but I say test them often and randomly and if testing positive, suspend offenders for as long as it takes to stamp it out.
All other things being equal, if a player appears unfit and below form and overweight, I suspect alcohol abuse.
Otherwise I often suspect some other abuse.
Again I accept that so many other factors come into play too.
However, what I have said above is purely my opinion and to be honest, I dont really care if any of you disagree. We will just have to beg to differ on this one.
 
I may be old fashioned, but

Yep. :)

Seriously though, it does seem that since they defined the windows for testing, more white powder incidents have occurred.

But when they weren’t defined, you had more instances of prescription med and alcohol cocktail stories.

We had two of our own almost die misusing oxycodone.

Young people will find a way to enjoy themselves and kids don’t want to sink 20 beers at the pub in search of a release these days the way every single player we idolise did back in the day.

Externally it might seem more nefarious, but I don’t believe it’s viewed that way at ground level.
 

NRL 2024: Ezra Mam’s fall from Brisbane Broncos grand final hero to rehabilitation clinic following the Las Vegas racism scandal​

Broncos star Ezra Mam had the world at his feet after starring in an NRL grand final and securing a $4 million contract. Now he is in a rehabilitation clinic and fighting for his future, a decline which stems from the infamous Vegas racism saga.
Travis Meyn, Peter Badel, Brent Read and Michael Carayannis

5 min read
October 23, 2024 - 6:00AM


dailytelegraph.com.au04:32

NRL’s Decision Looms: What’s Next for Mam After Crash?​



NRL

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A Las Vegas racism scandal triggered the fall of Broncos star Ezra Mam from NRL grand final hero to a Brisbane rehabilitation clinic.
Mam has sought professional help following a car crash in Brisbane last week that has left him fighting for his $4 million Broncos contract.
Mam was allegedly driving unlicensed and returned a positive roadside drug test after his Ford Ranger utility collided with a Toyota Camry in Brisbane’s west last Friday night.
Police are still investigating the incident and are awaiting the results of a secondary drug test.
No charges have been laid.
Mam, 21, was in the process of moving house, having recently purchased a property closer to the Broncos’ club headquarters at Red Hill, than his hometown Ipswich.
His possessions are still lying in the tray of the ute in a Brisbane wreckers’ yard.

Ezra Mam was minutes away from grand final glory in 2023 after his solo heroics. Picture: Adam Head

Penrith’s comeback sent Mam and the Broncos crashing back down to earth. Picture: Adam Head
A little more than a year ago, Mam announced himself as one of the NRL’s emerging superstars following a remarkable individual performance in the 2023 grand final.
His second half hat-trick blitz against Penrith took Brisbane to the cusp of clinching the club’s first NRL title since 2006.
At age 20, Mam was 15 minutes away from winning the prestigious Clive Churchill Medal for being the best player in the grand final.
Instead, Panthers maestro Nathan Cleary orchestrated a stunning comeback to deliver Penrith a third straight premiership and himself the CC Medal.
A shattered Mam wept in the arms of family in Brisbane’s dressing rooms that night after the Broncos lost the seemingly unlosable grand final.
But a star had been born – perhaps too quickly for what Mam was able to handle.

THE INCIDENT

Mam plays rugby league with the instinctive brilliance that has made many Indigenous players some of the game’s greatest.
He also marches to the beat of his own drum, having python snakes as pets and rocking his own dress and fashion sense, which regularly includes painted nails.
When he fronted for Brisbane’s presentation ball last year, a few days after the grand final loss, Mam was the only person at the venue wearing shorts.

Ezra Mam at Brisbane’s presentation night in 2023. Picture: David Clark
He was singled out by Broncos CEO Dave Donaghy and modelled his unique look to the applause of 700 people.
Now he has been isolated from the outside world after surrendering his mobile phone at the clinic and deactivating the Instagram account that boasts more than 100,000 followers.
One of the NRL’s most popular players has vanished in a haze of sirens following the head-on crash with an Uber carrying a mother and her four-year-old daughter.
The seat belt bruises of the mother and daughter, along with a reported fractured hip for the child, suggests this was no minor bingle after Mam’s car allegedly veered on to the wrong side of Simpsons Road in Bardon.

A distraught Ezra Mam lying on a nature strip after the car crash. Picture: 9 News Queensland
Photographers captured a distraught Mam lying on the grass of Accor Stadium after Brisbane’s grand final defeat.
Last Friday night he lay on a nature strip, being tended to by members of the public, police and paramedics after his life had been tipped on its head.
How did it come to this for one of Queensland’s brightest young prospects?

THE STORM

Mam celebrated his 21st birthday with a party on Saturday, February 3, the same weekend Queensland’s top players were in Brisbane for a State of Origin bonding camp.
He was given a leave pass by Maroons coach Billy Slater to attend his own party, where he sported a $2300 Gucci shirt, and some of his potential future Queensland teammates made an impromptu appearance at the soiree.
A few days later, the Broncos announced they had signed Mam to a bumper five-year contract extension keeping him at Red Hill until at least 2029.

Ezra Mam committed his future to the Broncos in a bumper five-year contract. Picture: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images
Rival clubs that were chasing Mam’s signature reckon the deal is worth more than $1 million-a-season – a figure that has been refuted by Brisbane’s top brass.
That contract, conservatively worth more than $4 million, is now under threat following the incident that has rocked numerous lives and left Mam fighting for his NRL future.
In the eight months since that announcement, Mam has “lost his way”, according to Donaghy.
And it started with the racism saga that triggered a firestorm during the NRL’s inaugural Las Vegas venture in March.
Roosters prop Spencer Leniu received an eight-match suspension from the NRL judiciary after calling Mam a “monkey” during the historic United States season-opener.

Spencer Leniu stole the headlines from Vegas after his racial comment towards Ezra Mam. Picture: NRL Photos

The Vegas incident had a big impact on Ezra Mam. Picture: Ezra Shaw/Getty Images/AFP
Mam made an official on-field complaint about the slur which was followed by an ugly hotel corridor confrontation between Roosters and Broncos players later that night.
He returned to Australia to a barrage of controversy as the incident divided opinions and clubs, with Mam declining Leniu’s offer to apologise face-to-face.
Some close to Mam believe the proud Indigenous man didn’t envisage the storm the incident would create.
He received influential support from figures like South Sydney superstar Latrell Mitchell but was also attacked by online trolls and Indigenous icon Anthony Mundine. It was a lot for a 21-year-old to digest.

Ezra Mam is a proud Indigenous man. Picture: Steve Pohlner
Mam was shielded from the media for six weeks after Vegas before admitting the incident took a toll but he had no regrets about how he handled it.
“I just stuck to what my beliefs are and how I was brought up as a strong cultural man,” Mam said at the time.
“If there’s anything I’m proud of, it’s my culture and that’s what I’m going to stick up for. It’s my identity and that’s the reason why I am here.
“It was definitely a huge thing for other players to come out on behalf of me and reach out to me. It lifted me up and lifted my spirits up.”

THE BALI TRIP

While Mam claimed to have moved on from the saga, it may have taken a larger toll than he realised.
He struggled for consistency in an ever-changing spine due to constant injuries to key Broncos players Adam Reynolds and Reece Walsh and his form never reached the heights of 2023, scoring nine tries compared to 18 last year.

The Broncos crashed from beaten grand finalists to 12th, culminating in the departure of coach Kevin Walters.
An ankle injury which required surgery brought a premature end to Mam’s 2024 season with a month to go.
After recovering from surgery, Mam travelled to Bali for a holiday with Walsh which wasn’t without incident.
The NRL Integrity Unit received a complaint from a disgruntled parent after their son’s phone was damaged at a Bali nightclub. Mam paid for a new phone for the third party.
Days later, Mam was photographed in a Bali hospital holding two drinks as Walsh lay on a bed being tended to for a graze on his back sustained in a surfing accident.

Mam returned from Bali in time for Brisbane’s presentation ceremony a fortnight ago.
This time he wore pants, but removed the sleeves from his shirt and jacket.
A week later he was being removed from the wreckage of a Ford Ranger utility with his career on the line.
 
Few things that annoy me about that article.

Who are they to say the racism thing had anything to do with a player allegedly taking drugs and crashing a car unlicensed 7 months later?

Why do they keep talking about what clothes he wears? Amateur pscyhcology from old ****wits?

Also, victim shaming is still ****ing rife in this country -

He returned to Australia to a barrage of controversy as the incident divided opinions and clubs, with Mam declining Leniu’s offer to apologise face-to-face.
 

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