In light ofthe Joel Smith situation,some people have been asking if the AFL has a drug problem. As a former player,my answer to this is that AFLM players take cocaine. AFLW players take cocaine. Local footy players take cocaine. As do teachers,lawyers,doctors. According tofederal government research,more than one million Australians used cocaine in 2019. A lot of people have at some point in their lives touched cocaine. I include myself in this,both during and since my AFL career.
But the sense of scandal rolls on. Last year,Collingwood (now Hawthorn) player Jack Ginnivanadmitted to using an illicit drug on a night out. Later in the year,Carlton recruit and former Gold Coast player Elijah Hollandspleaded guilty to cocaine possession. In 2022,footage of Bulldogs player Bailey Smith holding a bag of white powder and snorting a substance emerged online. In 2019,Collingwood player Sam Murray tested positive for cocaine. In 2018,a video of GWS player Shane Mumfordsnorting the drug three years earlier emerged. This is far from a comprehensive list.
The core question of this whole thing,if there is one to inspect,is less a question and more a disappointment. This situation is of interest because people paid amounts of money to play football are expected to be role models,and in cases like this we feel that they can’t put their personal lives aside to fulfil that obligation for us. We have an unwritten social contract with the players we adore. There has been an expectation set,whether rightly or wrongly so,and it has been unmet.
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So,with sports stars,it’s the same old rollercoaster ride. A footballer is caught with an illicit substance (cocaine,it’s always cocaine),we get some glib superficial comments about zero tolerance and club culture,and hear of rehabilitation programs and off-field support that we can (and should) all roll our eyes at. We get a media frenzy and something to talk about. We eventually see a little slap on the wrist,which is all that is deserved in my mind because that is the equal to the severity of the situation.
But is there a “problem” within the AFL specifically? No. Defiantly,I will say,no. Go to a Narcotics Anonymous meeting in any local hall,and you’ll hear stories of addiction shattering a person’s life. You can hear it in their voices,the daily struggle to live with addiction. These are the impacts of areal drug problem. Their suffering is not comparably to the stupidity of a young man in the public eye being caught out consuming a drug that a vast number of Australians also indulge in from time to time.
Demons player Smith’s situation is different from the usual scandals because he tested positive to cocaine on game day,which means he could receive a four-year ban on account of the drug’s supposed performance-enhancing elements. His case also differs because there are allegations from Sports Integrity Australia,which remain unclear,that Smith “trafficked”,perhaps even to his teammates,which goes far beyond grainy iPhone footage of a player consuming drugs in a nightclub bathroom.