Friday, March 29, 2024

Cowboys LB Rolando McClain’s 10-Game Suspension Over ‘Purple Drank’, Not Weed

Rolando McClain
Rolando McClain

*Turns out that Dallas Cowboys linebacker Rolando McClain’s recent 10-game suspension is not for a failed marijuana test but for “purple drank” — an opiate in the form of Sprite, cough syrup and codeine, reports ESPN.

McClain has yet to report to training camp, and ESPN says his overall NFL employment is now in question.

“Even we don’t know all the details,” Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones said when asked about McClain as he walked off the field after Tuesday’s walkthrough. “We just don’t know.”

McClain and Randy Gregory, who sources said is facing a potentially longer suspension for another violation of the substance abuse policy, were placed on the reserve/did not report list at the start of training camp. Per the collective bargaining agreement, the players are subject to fines of $40,000 each day they are absent.

When asked whether McClain’s career is over, coach Jason Garrett said, “We’re focused on the guys who are here.”

Via ESPN

The Cowboys knew of Gregory’s absence before camp as he checked into a treatment facility, according to sources. McClain was expected on the team’s flight to California last week and did not show.

Owner and general manager Jerry Jones said last week there are “nuances” involving McClain’s situation but would not elaborate. If the Cowboys release McClain, he would count $750,000 against the salary cap. Because the suspension does not start until the season starts, he technically has not violated his contract.

Whether McClain wants to continue to play football is unknown. He has retired twice in his career before joining the Cowboys in 2014. He participated in the early part of the team’s offseason program but did not last long.

McClain, who missed the first four games last season because of a suspension, is in Stage 3 of the substance abuse program. According to the policy, a player is subject to a suspension of one year if he does not enter a treatment facility at the medical director’s request. It’s not clear whether that request has been made of McClain, and efforts to reach McClain’s agent, Pat Dye, have been unsuccessful.

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