Pubdate: Mon, 13 Aug 2012 Source: Times, The (Shreveport, LA) Copyright: 2012 The Times Contact: http://www.shreveporttimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1019 Author: Glenn Guilbeau THE HONEY BADGER LESSON BATON ROUGE - If anything good comes out of the expulsion of Tyrann Mathieu as far as the LSU football team is concerned, it will be this. Current athletes in any sport continuing to smoke marijuana or synthetic marijuana or partaking in any other drug use, better light up their brains with some smarts. If LSU is going to kick the Honey Badger - one of its greatest players in history - it will surely dismiss anyone else in a heartbeat. Tailback Spencer Ware and cornerback Tharold Simon were both suspended for a game last season because of positive drug tests that revealed marijuana use. They could be next, and they better know that. Marijuana is prevalent among athletes of all sports - high school, college and pro. Yes, it's prevalent in "society," too but that is one of the most pitiful excuses on record, often used by coaches. "This is society's problem." Blah, blah, blah. Many athletes love marijuana as stress relief or for recreation or for both because it does not give the hangover, the bloating or the calories that a few beers or drinks will. Marijuana also has a calming, medicinal element moreso than alcohol. Athletes like to come down from the hype and stress from a game, practice, film session or taskmaster coach. Booze can have the opposite result. And, also, many people just like marijuana. Even though it is seen by some as a healthier and even more cerebral choice than alcohol, it is against the law. And it is constantly tested for at colleges according to NCAA, conference and each school's substance abuse policy in random fashion. Mathieu was not "cerebral" enough to stop. Maybe he will now. Maybe not. If others at LSU follow his example, they will be out of major college athletics, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom