Editorial

REPORT: Cocaine And Molly Are Becoming Popular Among NHL Players

Cocaine (Credit: Shutterstock/valerii_dex)

David Hookstead Sports And Entertainment Editor
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There is reportedly a growing drug issue in the NHL.

According to a report from Katie Strang at The Athletic, cocaine and molly are becoming “more popular” in the league. (RELATED: David Hookstead Is The True King In The North When It Comes To College Football)

Well, this isn’t a great look for the league, and it comes shortly after Washington Capitals star Evgeny Kuznetsov was suspended for a few games after testing positive for cocaine.

I can’t speak for the league as a whole, but I can tell you hockey players at high levels love to party. They live extremely stressful lives, and party like crazy.

I’m not saying they break the law on a regular basis or all engage in criminal activity. I’m just saying hockey players are notorious partiers.

Look no further than the Capitals after winning the Stanley Cup for proof of that fact.

They play hard and they party hard. That’s the nature of hockey players, and that’s never going to change. However, having reports of cocaine and molly issues isn’t a good look for the NHL.

Will you ever be able to stop drug use in pro sports? No, you’ll never rid pro sports of drugs, and I’m not sure you should even waste your time trying.

Cocaine and molly aren’t going to make your players dominate. If anything, it’s going to cause issues. Why the league would waste time with that, I’m not sure.

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As long as it doesn’t become a public issue, then fans aren’t going to care. Now, if you have players coked out of their minds causing problems, it’d be time for a different conversation.

Again, I’m not condoning breaking the law or snorting cocaine, but the NHL shouldn’t be focused on what players do in their private lives as long as it stays there.

Hockey players are cut from a different kind of cloth, and their partying genes will never go away.