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johnsmith
10-04-2007, 11:47 AM
Denver group stirs the pot
Billboard encourages Broncos to court Ricky Williams
Posted: Tuesday October 2, 2007 10:23PM; Updated: Tuesday October 2, 2007 10:23PM




DENVER (AP) -- A group that led a campaign to legalize marijuana possession in Denver is posting a billboard advertisement encouraging suspended running back Ricky Williams and the Broncos to get together.

Williams applied for NFL reinstatement this week, his agent said. Williams has played in only 12 NFL games since the start of the 2004 season, but rushed for 3,225 yards in 2002-03. His current suspension began in April 2006 after he violated the league's drug policy for the fourth time. He tested positive for marijuana this April, again delaying his return.

Williams remains under contract with Miami, where he won the NFL rushing title in 2002. But new coach Cam Cameron has not indicated whether he wants Williams to stay with the Dolphins, who fell to 0-4 Sunday.

The billboard, across the street from Invesco Field, where the Broncos play, will be unveiled Wednesday and will stay up for a month. At a cost of $3,000, it features a player with dreadlocks in a blue and orange jersey and reads, "Ricky, come to Denver... Where the people support your SAFER choice."

In 2005, Denver residents passed an initiative removing all penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana by adults. The campaign was run on the message that marijuana is less harmful than alcohol. Police have continued prosecuting people under state law, however. Federal law also prohibits possession.

"The National Football League's marijuana policy is just as irrational as our federal government's marijuana policy," said Mason Tvert of the group Safer Alternative For Enjoyable Recreation. "In both cases, authorities are steering adults toward using alcohol and punishing them for making the safer choice to use marijuana instead.

"If (commissioner) Roger Goodell and every NFL player over 21 can go home after a game and have a drink, there is no reason why Ricky Williams should not be allowed to go home and use a less harmful drug."

The initiative Denver voters approved two years ago allows adults to carry up to an ounce of marijuana. No other state allows pot possession for anything other than medical use.

"Ricky Williams would feel right at home here," Tvert said.


I've said it for years, Colorado has the world's most hilarious hippy's.

Whisky Dog
10-04-2007, 05:24 PM
I think a move to Denver may be in my future...

TheSanityAnnex
10-04-2007, 09:02 PM
Looks like Travis Henry may have been a member :lmao

samikeyp
10-06-2007, 09:56 PM
Replace one pothead with another! :tu

:lol

J.T.
10-07-2007, 12:31 AM
If Roger Goodell got caught smoking weed and had to serve a 4 game suspension, would it be 4 weeks long or would he be back at work before the 3PM games came on?

Because I'm sure he's a hippy in disguise.

Mr.Bottomtooth
10-07-2007, 12:40 PM
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=3053022

Sources: Broncos' Henry wants to hand over hair sample, take lie detector test
By Chris Mortensen
ESPN.com

Updated: October 7, 2007, 1:02 PM ET

Denver Broncos running back Travis Henry wants to submit a hair sample and also take a lie detector test to prove that a league administered drug test gave a false positive that could lead to a year-long suspension, sources close to the Broncos and the player told ESPN's Chris Mortensen.

Henry has been adamant that he has been clean and he has filed a lawsuit in a New York state court to prevent the league from suspending him as a three-time violator of league's drug policy.

Henry's attorneys want the court to intervene for a number of reasons and hope that a hair sample will prove his innocence. However, the NFL wants the case moved to a federal jurisdiction because the drug policy is collectively bargained with the players union with federal court approval. The policy also does not allow hair samples.

The lie detector's test would be for the club's discretion. The Broncos have routinely asked players to submit to the test and Henry plans to do so this coming week, sources said.

Henry also wants his own handpicked expert to observe the testing of the "B" bottle, a split of the urine that was collected by the league. Under the policy, though, the B sample needs only to confirm that the banned substance is present -- even if the levels of the substance are lower than the A sample, it won't change the result of a positive test.

Chris Mortensen covers the NFL for ESPN.

ShoogarBear
10-07-2007, 06:58 PM
Denver's whole team apparently was high today.

mikejones99
10-08-2007, 12:57 PM
Rockies are on fire. This will be the worse home year for Broncos in 20 years

johnsmith
10-08-2007, 12:58 PM
Rockies are on fire. This will be the worse home year for Broncos in 20 years

Buddy of mine said the fans were chanting "Go Rockies" during the Broncos game yesterday.