Do we need to know if AFL players are taking drugs?

By Glenn Mitchell / Expert

I have never drunk, smoked or used illicit drugs and when it comes to the latter I abhor the practice.

So what follows is by no means supportive of young sportspeople using drugs.

However, I do have issues with the AFL illicit drug testing policy.

It is not necessarily the alterations to the way penalties will be meted out that I question, but the concept in its entirety.

My principal issue is this – why do we need to know what is in a player’s system outside of match days when it comes to illicit drugs?

Indeed, should they even be tested for illicit drugs?

Well, on game day yes they should, for numerous illicit drugs – the likes of cocaine and amphetamines – are classified as stimulants and are banned in competition by the WADA Code.

The presence of such substances in a match day doping test will lead to a sporting ban, as Wendell Sailor learned when he received a two-year suspension for returning a positive test for cocaine while playing for the NSW Waratahs in 2006.

In the case of stimulants in your system on match days you are deemed to be cheating and as such suffer the appropriate penalties in line with the WADA Code.

However WADA has no interest in such substances in an athlete’s system on non-competition days.

But the AFL does.

Why, though, should their players be subjected to such testing on non-competition days?

Nowadays there are a growing number of corporate organisations who test for illicit drug use.

In the vast majority of cases such testing regimes are related to safety issues within the workplace – miners who are operating potentially dangerous equipment; pilots who are flying a plane with several hundred passengers on-board; or police who are handling firearms, to name a few.

Most would not argue with that philosophy as those engaged in such areas of employment while under the influence of drugs could lead to dire and deadly circumstances.

But in non-AFL workplaces those individuals are not likely to be tested on days when they are not at work.

FIFO workers who work an eight and six roster for example know they can be randomly tested before starting their shift on their eight days on site while on their six days off they also know testing will never occur.

The same goes for pilots, police officers and almost every other form of employment.

An elite sportsperson can be tested pretty much anytime when not ‘at work’ on a match day.

In the case of an AFL player the knock on the door can come anytime. And if they have an illicit drug in their system they will have a first strike recorded against their name.

It is prudent to test those who work in areas of risk like mine sites before they go in and handle dangerous equipment, but how would we feel about a mine worker who is tucked up in bed on a night off thousands of kilometres from his workplace being woken up and tested for illicit drugs?

When he gets back to work and is about to get behind the wheel of a dump truck that carries 250 tonnes of iron ore, perhaps it is fair enough. However, should it matter when he is off site for six days and back home?

Should he be open to that level of scrutiny and intrusion? I think we would all answer ‘no’.

Yet it seems the majority feel it is fine for an AFL footballer to have to go through it at any time.

“It’s because they are role models,” I hear you say.

Yes, perhaps they are but does that mean we need to know?

We only know that they are doing something outside the law – which is what illicit drug use is – as a result of being randomly tested. In other words we only know of their misdemeanours because they are tested. Otherwise they are looked upon like everyone else.

I struggle with the concept that it should only be elite sportspeople that should be tested for illicit drugs when they are away from the workplace. And, in the case of the AFL, it is one of a very small number of sports that carries out tests for illicit drugs on non-competition days.

That again raises another interesting double standard.

If you are an AFL footballer you are deemed a ‘role model’. If you are using illicit drugs out of competition you have a probability of being caught and if you do it twice you will be named publicly.

Yet if you are at the elite level in the majority of other sports, what you have in your system away from competition is of no interest at all to your governing body.

In fact, they do not even want to know. But if you are an AFL footballer it is a matter of anytime, anywhere.

The whole ‘role model’ debate is in itself a curious one.

When it comes to violence in sport we would all agree that it is not a good look. That being the case, why is there the need to replay vicious and unsavoury acts ad nauseam when they occur?

Surely that is doing little to enhance the ‘role model’ concept.

When it comes to role models they come in a lot more forms than merely sportsmen and women.

I have a ten-year-old son. At the top of the tree when it comes to role models is me and my wife.

After that, the person he is most exposed to in a week is his primary school teacher who has an enormous responsibility in shaping the development of my son.

Teachers are huge role models, especially when it comes to primary school age children.

Having said that, should they be randomly drug tested on Monday mornings to ensure they did not use illicit drugs on the weekend?

Or perhaps we should go a step further – should they be expected to receive a knock on the door at 10pm on a Saturday night and be drug tested because, to the kids in their class and for me as a parent, they are a ‘role model’?

I think we would all say no, but if you are an AFL footballer most seem to think it is a good thing.

I have to admit that I am unsure if all employees of the AFL – secretaries, operations personnel and the executive – are open to random drug testing.

If they expect the players to face such practices perhaps they should.

It is certainly what happens in many mining companies where both on-site and off-site workers of all levels are randomly tested – at work only though.

If an AFL employee other than a player was to return a positive test to an illicit substance, they would likely be counselled and supported and not immediately dismissed if it had not directly and adversely affected their work.

The same would occur for a player – he would be counselled by the club doctor who would no doubt direct him to appropriate support.

However, if he tested positive again his name would be splashed in the media.

Would the same happen with an AFL office employee? No! We would never hear about it.

And let’s hope if the AFL admin staff are being tested for illicit drug use they are also subjected to knocks on the door at 10pm any night of the week.

As they say, what’s good for the goose…

The Crowd Says:

2015-11-10T06:29:39+00:00

liam o'neill

Guest


I can never understand how people can differentiate between alcohol and drugs

2015-11-04T13:42:42+00:00

Tricky

Guest


Probably a bit late on this one, and I can't see comment on this. Another dimension if you like; it is mentioned in opinion by the author and the roarers for and against about being tested outside of game day. As a FIFO worker and as Glenn mentioned I get tested for drugs both illicit and otherwise when I fly into camp. One thing that staggers me is that we are never tested if we are UNDER THE INFLUENCE not just whether or not it is in our system to me this is an invasion of privacy; if I am NOT under the influence to carry out the tasks in my job then IMO it is none of the employers business to know as it does not affect them in any way. We get tested before the start of every shift for BAC or more accurately whether or not we are under the influence of alcohol and that is fair enough, but to be tested for something that is not influencing IMO is an invasion of privacy.

2015-11-01T23:13:22+00:00

Liam

Guest


Standards of behaviour while at work, yes. Standards of behaviour away from work, absolutely not. This should not be considered an issue for the business of the AFL, who have always and will always try to over-reach their span in order to protect their brand from fallout. This should be considered an issue of the privacy of the players, who spend so much time ensuring that their bodies are in pristine condition. To a certain extent, the discipline that the players must endure is psychologically straining; why should we expect them to let us into their private places, to take samples from their bodies? And I reject your notion of "nobody forces them to sign contracts." If the sort of contract the AFL players signed laid out this particular drugs testing regime was challenged by a court, then it would be overturned due to concerns of a precedent. And besides that, name one eighteen-year-old who would, if offered, reject a contract to play AFL football under any circumstances? Imagine what the clubs would think if they tried to take issue with specific clauses? This current system is farcical, because there is no ability for newcomers to the system to challenge the parts of their contract which they dislike; the clubs/competition will simply shrug, and move on to the players who will sign away their rights. Spying on people, for the sake of a business' brand, is outright wrong. Please do not make light of the complicity of the AFl and the players association, which locks young people into agreements that impinge on their privacy, when they formed no part of the bargaining.

2015-10-31T10:59:27+00:00

jax

Guest


By pure definition someone smoking a joint is a criminal in our country, I get that it's illegal. That doesn't mean that the laws are just which is where the injustice comes in. Many laws are stupid and unjust, just because some politicians say it's illegal doesn't automatically make it just. To put this into perspective someone drinking a glass of wine 80 years ago was a criminal. Now imagine every living human on the planet today that has drunk alcohol even just once in their lifetime being a convicted criminal. Practically every adult would be a criminal. Stupid isn't it - yet the only change is to the law. Prohibition (and most laws) are more about control (power) and money than anything else. Prohibition doesn't work, it never has and it never will. It really is stupid to continue with these draconian laws. In 20-30 years the next generation will look back at these laws we have the same way that we look back at alcohol prohibition. Most people thought the world was flat but luckily Columbus didn't believe them.

2015-10-29T22:52:51+00:00

Stewie

Guest


Yes, how dare we try and expose illegal activities by AFL players? *sarcasm sign*

2015-10-29T22:38:14+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Joey likes the "straw man" thing. He doesn't use it correctly but he seems to think it is a good insult.

2015-10-29T22:30:28+00:00

tezza

Guest


he didn`t say performance enhancing he said "illicit drugs" so perhaps you should read the whole comment or don`t call yourself a guru.

2015-10-29T14:23:10+00:00

Joey Johns

Roar Guru


Unfortunately, Marijuana stays in your system for up to 3 months, though normally it's closer to 3 weeks. Now, it's definitely not performance enhancing (I'd argue it's de-hancing for any athlete worth his weight in salt). But it's on the WADA and ASADA lists of Performance Enhancing Substances. So what Jax says is unfortunately relevant, disappointingly so considering AFL is our "national game"

2015-10-29T14:20:43+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


Agree, could easily be covered by WADA testing alone.

2015-10-29T14:18:27+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


I wonder how shirt-fronts, pack marks and running full-pelt into each other go down with your bog-standard OS&H department?

2015-10-29T11:20:54+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


He is in fact a Carlton supporter.

2015-10-29T10:32:52+00:00

Joey Johns

Roar Guru


Wiranto, I could be exceptionally ignorant... but I doubt that there is much use of stimulant drugs on the training paddock at AFL clubs. It's not viable to spend half your week "coming down". And you most definitely do need to "come down" on match day - as WADA anti-doping rules apply, not ALF illicit drug testing.

2015-10-29T10:26:47+00:00

Joey Johns

Roar Guru


No, wanting random tests scrapped for substances that aren't performance enhancing isn't being "pro-drugs". Poor straw-mans fallacies don't contribute to the discussion.

2015-10-29T08:47:09+00:00

mattyb

Guest


And so have the poor souls who attempted to watch them on a Friday night.

2015-10-29T08:33:24+00:00

sticks

Roar Rookie


Anti Freo drugs Stevic was using.

2015-10-29T07:05:48+00:00

BigAl

Guest


What you say may (or may not) be true and/or relevant ! My point is that the AFL does NOT want players detected as having used used illicit substances even if they are not performance enhancing - and this is inhibiting the recruitment of indigenous players.

2015-10-29T07:04:19+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Guest


You mean 'ignorance is bliss'? Sorry, but in this day and age of a camera on every mobile phone and social media, players would still get caught, just in a different, less controlled way. Anyone who thinks otherwise is living in fairy land.

2015-10-29T07:01:29+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Guest


Where's the injustice?

2015-10-29T07:00:15+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Guest


It doesn't! But I'm sure the thinking is that (assuming the clubs make this clear to players) these are the consequences if you take drugs. Players are always happy to reap the benefits of being rich and famous, but often not quite as enthusiastic to take on the responsibilities that go along with it.

2015-10-29T06:06:53+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


"The ‘if you don’t like it, leave’ attitude is truly pathetic." That's 'your' opinion and jax's. "How about recognizing an injustice and attempting to right it?" I don't believe it is an injustice. That's 'my' opinion.

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