NFL suspends player for using marijuana to treat Crohn's disease

People aren't happy about the decision.
 By 
Jacob Lauing
 on 
NFL suspends player for using marijuana to treat Crohn's disease
Seantrel Henderson has faced marijuana suspensions before. Credit: Leon Halip/Getty Images

The NFL handed Buffalo Bills lineman Seantrel Henderson a 10-game suspension on Tuesday for violating the league's controlled substance policy.

Henderson was diagnosed with Crohn's disease last year, and uses marijuana to cope with the effects. His 10-game suspension comes after serving an additional four-game suspension at the beginning of the 2016 season for marijuana use.

Henderson's suspension provides even more fuel to the heated debate on the NFL's arguably overbearing policy on marijuana use.


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“There is zero allowable medical exemption for this per the NFL," Henderson's agent Brian Fetter said after his first suspension, per Deadspin, "however, there clearly should be.”

Fetter isn't the only one who thinks the NFL is too tough on weed, particularly when it comes to players like Henderson who rely on the drug to manage pain.

Opponents of the NFL's drug policy deal much of their criticism with comparisons to the league's domestic violence policy. When the NFL handed Ray Rice a mere two-game suspension for punching his fiancée in 2014, fans erupted.

Reactions to Henderson's suspension are similar.

The NFL's suspiciously inconsistent approach to discipline was exposed again last month when letters revealed Giants kicker Josh Brown had been abusing his wife long before the one-game suspension he earned in December.

That punishment looks particularly soft now, given the recent revelations.

If you're interested in playing the sympathy card, just read about Henderson's life after he had sections of his large and small intestines removed in surgery earlier this year.

"For nearly four months he had to wear an ileostomy bag that was attached through a hole near his waist," the Democrat & Chronicle's Sai Maiorana writes, "and every hour the bag had to be emptied, meaning Henderson was never able to get a good night’s sleep."

“I was depressed, I was down, I was insecure about myself,” Henderson told Maiorana. “I had the bag, not being able to use the bathroom for three or four months. I couldn’t do anything I wanted to do, I lost all that weight, I was very unhealthy. I had no appetite like it used to be, so it really had my mind not all the way together.”

Original image replaced with Mashable logo
Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Henderson's suspension, which he will appeal, comes a few weeks after the NFL Player's Association announced it would research marijuana as a pain management tool for players, an alternative to the highly addictive opiates that trainers rely on.

The case for a change in the NFL's drug policy is coming from every angle.

Henderson's might be the strongest yet.

Topics Cannabis

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Jacob Lauing

Jacob is Mashable's Sports Intern. He graduated from Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, where he studied journalism and served as editor-in-chief of Mustang News, Cal Poly's student newspaper. Some of Jacob's favorite activities include watching baseball, playing music and eating bagels.

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