Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jun 2006 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2006 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://thechronicleherald.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Chris Cochrane, Sports Columnist Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) GRASS IS GREENER IN CANADA How deperate does the Canadian Football League look these days -- more specifically, the Toronto Argonauts? Judging by the weak defence the league and team have offered for the signing of suspended National Football League star Ricky Williams, they're experiencing hard times. Certainly the CFL and its teams, over the years, have taken a flyer on many talented but troubled NFL rejects. Some of those moves actually turned out to benefit the league. But at a time when the drug issue is so huge in North American sport, the CFL looks foolish by luring a four-time NFL drug-policy violator into the fold with a one-year contract. There's no doubt Williams is a bona fide NFL star in terms of his running abilities and will attract plenty of interest and ticket sales in CFL cities if he stays and plays this entire season. If he's healthy and in the right frame of mind, he should dominate in the CFL this season. But this is a bad public relations move, even for a league that routinely finds creative new ways to shot itself in the foot. For starters, why is the CFL signing a player under NFL suspension? The fact that there wasn't a clear rule here, one pertaining to the CFL respecting the NFL penalties on drug offences, is bush. Yet even with the absence of such a rule, the CFL brass should show enough common sense not to be painted as a dumping ground for the failures of the NFL drug education program. Setting the rules aside for a second, there's another aspect of this signing that doesn't wash. We're in the midst of a period where professional sports are supposedly trying to clean up their act in the area of drugs. Whether the concerns are players on performance-enhancing drugs or recreational marijuana use, all leagues should be trying to present a better image to sponsors and fans, especially young fans. Yet those concerns obviously went up in smoke with such a valued prize on the line. This wasn't a case of giving Williams a second chance, the excuse so often used when teams sign players with troubled pasts. Williams had already had his second chance, and more, in the NFL. He was suspended for a reason, no doubt in the hope that the time spent on the sidelines would make him change his ways when he came back to the league. But thanks to the Argos and the CFL, he won't spend this season on the sidelines, even if it's some tropical island where he tries to forget the game. He'll still be playing football, drawing a salary and displaying the talents that may eventually get him back to the big-money NFL. Those who have objected most strenuously to Williams getting to play in the CFL, such as former Argonaut great Joe Theismann, haven't been received well in Toronto. Theismann said he was ashamed of the Argos for signing Williams. For that he was ridiculed at Toronto's game. Montreal Alouettes coach Don Matthews was reportedly fined $5,000 by the CFL on Monday for comments he made about the Williams signing. Among other shots, according to The Canadian Press, was that Matthews accused the CFL of looking "cheap and second-rate." Yet Matthews is right. Signing Williams exposes the CFL's flaws. It reminds us of the embarrassing absence of a CFL-wide drug policy, how desperate the league is for attention and the lengths it will go to sell tickets. The result is that Ricky Williams may have found his ideal football home. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin