Pablo Torre Finds Out - How Marijuana Can Be a Performance-Enhancing Drug, with Matt Barnes

Episode Date: April 18, 2024

If you want to trace the normalization of weed in sports and America, there is no better ambassador than NBA champion and "All The Smoke" host Matt Barnes. Taking gravity-bong rips to go full "Teen Wo...lf" in high school? Check. Beating drug tests in college and, uh, having a narc watch him pee — and poop! — during a test in the NBA? Yeah. Smoking with Woody Harrelson on his head coach's balcony, during the playoffs? Really. But the NBA came late to the cannabis party, as "more than half the league… from the superstars to the rookies" got caught in pro basketball's race-baiting, steroid-fearing war on drugs. In a new era of acceptance, marijuana might just help hoopers stop the next Kobe. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out. I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is. The Whizinator is a lifelike prosthetic penis designed to simulate male urination. It is very easy to use and available in white, black, and Latino skin tones. Right after this ad. You're listening to Giraff Kings Network. So, Matt, I've been wanting to do this for a long-ass time. I've been planting the seed, as it were, that I want to an episode with you specifically about the question of whether, marijuana can be a performance-enhancing drug. Okay, you're a guy, I mean, I assume you smoke today. Yeah, today, yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:00:51 I'm pretty high as we speak right now. Very good. Yes. I am jealous. And for people who don't know, and I hope they do know already, your reputation, but how would you describe the sort of player you were in the league? Probably like 3-D before there was coined 3-D, just a hard-nosed defender that had, you know,
Starting point is 00:01:10 did a little bit of everything on the dirty work side, and defensified and then, you know, knock down shots when I got the opportunity. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. There's another simpler word that I feel like gets thrown around your scouting report, which is you were an asshole. Hated to play against me, love to play with me, is what I've heard from teammates and executives and coaches. Okay, so if you want to understand the culture of a sport,
Starting point is 00:01:52 if you want to find out, for example, why upwards of 80% of the greatest basketball league in the world may smoke weed, you can't really go to the superstar athletes. This is a theory I have. They are simply too famous, they have too much job security. What you really need to do is go to California and sit down with Matt Barnes. Because the most distinguishing thing about Matt Barnes, to me,
Starting point is 00:02:14 is his candidness. About what it's like to play for nine different teams over a 14-year NBA career, and also about what it's like to have been, according to my own research here, arguably the biggest stuff donor in professional basketball. And all of this was back when smoking weed really meant something, by the way.
Starting point is 00:02:33 Matt Barnes is from Sacramento County, and he was doing all of this when it was very illegal. Back before legal dispensaries, back before all of these stores that have opened up, this was still years and years away from the NBA deciding finally to stop testing for weed altogether. You were doing this, by the way, like during, and I think this is a key distinction here when you talk about policy changes. You were doing all of this during David Stern's NBA. Yeah, it was a different watch back then.
Starting point is 00:03:02 Definitely a different watch. So let's just start from the start. So for you, I want people to really understand where you're coming from just like even before the NBA. Yeah. Chronologically speaking, when does the relationship between marijuana and basketball begin for you? Man, my dad was dabbled in the streets a little bit. So, you know, I saw drugs at a early age.
Starting point is 00:03:27 I was born in 1980s. So in the 80s, a lot of people did a lot of different drugs. But I always remember my dad at the end of the day would smoke a joint. And he also smoked cigarettes and I hated smell cigarettes. But I remember when he smoked it. I didn't know what it was at the time. But he would smoke this joint and it would smell different. And he would relax and he'd have a Budweiser and he'd watch something on TV.
Starting point is 00:03:45 And that was kind of like the mellow time we would have. And it just always kind of always stuck with me. So at 14, I stole some weed from him. him and tried it. And the first time got a huge headache. Huge, huge headache, but I wasn't a quitter. I jumped back on the horse and kind of found early on. This is 14, 15 years old. It relaxed me. It focused me. How would you describe that? So when you say it relaxed you, what did you need relaxation from? It would just allow me to kind of relax and focus and take things step by step and you know, not overreact and it helped me sleep. So it did a lot of things early on that I couldn't
Starting point is 00:04:26 put my finger on, but I knew it just made me feel different and made me feel better. You know, now there's medical research to back up what I know it's been doing for me since I was a teenager nearly 30 years ago. You know, when you mentioned that your dad, he was in the business of drugs before this was a business that was allowed. Right. So when you think back, just how how do you describe it for someone who isn't familiar with what that must have been like? It was different because it wasn't just weed. It was coke. It was a lot of different.
Starting point is 00:04:59 It was a lot of different. It was the 80s, you know what I mean? So it was interesting because me and my brother and sister all steered away from that. You know, I felt like, but there were some kids, you know, I have five years old. I'm playing with the neighbor kids because our parents are getting high and my little friends not going to play to cocaine over and start eating it. And next day I know, they're foaming out the mouth. I'm running to my house to tell our parents that I don't know what the fuck. But I'm five years old, six years.
Starting point is 00:05:19 six years old. You know, so I just saw a lot at an early age, and I kind of feel like either if you see it, you're going to steer toward it or you're going to steer away from it. And I steered away from it, you know, so my goal was to never kind of be back in that kind of situation or environment, and I knew there was more out there. So that was kind of always my go throughout my childhood and high school days, college days, and through the pros. So the biggest difference between Matt Barnes, even in early age, stoned and sober is what? How different are those people would you say? I mean, they're not very different. I think at an early age, I think obviously you have to handle what you can handle.
Starting point is 00:05:56 You know what I mean? I went to school with a bunch of, excuse me, but I went to school with a bunch of white kids. So they're taking six foot gravity bong rips. We don't use those slurs here, white kids. So there's six foot bong rips, and then there was gravity bons where we used to take it out of hamber bottle. And to cut the bottom of the alhambra bottle out, make a bowl at the top, submerge it, make a bowl. And then, so that's the first time. Funny enough, we're talking about a gravity bong.
Starting point is 00:06:19 the first time I got high before a game, this is, I think my, it was in my junior senior year of high school. We're playing in this tournament, and I've won MVP two years. I think it's my junior year. I won MVP my freshman, my sophomore year, dominating first game, big game,
Starting point is 00:06:36 cut school on the Friday of the second game and gets super high. And it was like Team Wolf, where you're turning and everything's coming a little bit behind you and turning, and it's just like, it was just, it was, I was too high, I played horrible.
Starting point is 00:06:56 My friend dropped in the stands laughing at me. I want to say I was averaging like 35, 40 points in this tournament. I had like four to six points in this tournament. I remember I airballed two layups. It was just, it was bad. So I'd say all that to say. Like I had to figure out what worked for me. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:10 You know, how much? Because, you know, maybe it's more for me and less for someone else or less for me and more for someone else. So I kind of just found what my why was? First of all, why was I doing it? And then what was my tolerance level to be able to still perform and do it at the same time? because I have to be responsible with it. Right. So the first time, though, you...
Starting point is 00:07:27 Too far. When you went, when you went Teen Wolf. Deep, deep waters. What was the, what was the, was there a thought as to, like, I'm going to see what this is like. I'm going to try this out. I just didn't think I was going to get that high and it was going to stay that long. Like, I... It was an accident.
Starting point is 00:07:41 It happened at 1.30 and the game was at 7 and I was still just loaded. The whole day, the whole day, I was just loaded. And it just, I could cold water, pool, nothing could shake it off me. And it just, it was a lot. When do you realize the Goldilocks of this, right? Okay, too hot, too cold, but just right? Yeah. How do you figure out?
Starting point is 00:08:19 When do you figure out what just right feels like? I remember the football season. Early on, I hurt my foot and kind of kept playing. Because you were also like a star receiver. Yeah, I was a better football player than basketball. So just, you know, before a game, kind of finding out, okay, you know, half a blunt. What would that do to me? Okay, I can do that.
Starting point is 00:08:37 And then, you know, it eventually got to throughout my career. with what I would smoke, you know, whether it was the blunt stage or the joint stage, a joint or a blunt before the game. And when did you decide it's a blunt or a joint? Whiz, Khalifa actually changed me from blunts because I was a swisher sweet guy for like 20 plus years, and those things are just, whoof, those are heavy on your lung, but you don't know how heavy they are until you try something else. So, again, I'm someone who, during my time, I pride of myself on being really well in shape
Starting point is 00:09:07 and never getting tired and always running. So I didn't realize how heavy blunts were on my chest until I switched over to joints. Complements of my guy, Wiz, he just, try this. Tastes a better, cleaner. It just didn't feel as heavy on my lungs. So I probably crossed over in 2015 and haven't been back since. Okay, so I want to go back to college, though, right? So high school, I can imagine you get away with some stuff because it's high school.
Starting point is 00:09:34 And I guess they're just not, there's not a testing program that's official in high school. But UCLA, I mean, you go to UCLA. You know what about in UCLA. It's a little different. How would you figure out this is what I need to do to not get in trouble? Nyacin, I think it was. They said, because you'd hear urban legends of guys on campus. What do you do to get it out of your system?
Starting point is 00:09:54 So I stayed on campus for four years and had three tests. And somehow it got by all of them. I just didn't go to one. That's a pretty good way to not. Fail it. One was niacin, and then one, I drank so much water. I felt like I was going to be like pass out. and one was diluted and it was fine,
Starting point is 00:10:12 one I didn't take, and then the Niasen flushed me one time. At first, you know, I didn't know who at UCLA smoked, so I used to just be by myself, and there's, like, a wooded area with steps down to the fraternities. So I used to go back there and smoke by myself because I didn't know who I smoked. It's relatable in the sense that, like,
Starting point is 00:10:28 you got to go to this, like, wooded area by yourself because the stakes are high. Right. No pun intended. Yo, but for real, though, I want people to understand, Because this is around what time? What year? 198, 2009, 2000.
Starting point is 00:10:44 Right. So this was like headlines in newspaper stories if you get pop for this. Like, you know, probably get kicked out of college possibly. How obvious was it, though, that you were smoking and playing and evading the tests at the time you were doing it? I mean, I was just good. I mean, I've always been really self-conscious of, okay, if I'm going to do this, I can't because I'm public. I'm a functioning smoker, I guess you would call it, like before I'd go on ESPN, before I play.
Starting point is 00:11:13 Like, I'm always smoking, but I always have my little kit where I have my toothbrush, my mouthwash, some cologne, a change of clothes, some lotion, because I can't walk around smelling like it all the time. I just understand this professional. Right, come on, man. Yes, no, I think functional is a key, it's a key adjective to all of this.
Starting point is 00:11:29 Got to be, man, it's got to be some balance. Right, right, right, right. So, okay, but the idea that, okay, I have a kit, I have a process. Yeah. When did that specific ritual really set in where you're like, I know how to do this? College, it was because obviously I knew I had to hide. But, you know, once I didn't really, not that I didn't care, I don't want to say that.
Starting point is 00:11:49 Just once I was kind of more recognizable and in situations and around people that would, because I've been around athletes, unfortunately, that does smell like a whole pound. And I'm just thinking like, that's, it's cool. I know you smoke, but it's kind of irresponsible from a standpoint of we're not there yet. You know what I mean? we're not there yet, so you're kind of giving up the secrets for everybody almost. Right. No, so, but this part is really important, the nuance of what you're describing, which is,
Starting point is 00:12:13 if we're going to do this at this time, like the early 2000s, we need to be careful and responsible because we're all at risk here. Are you doing the thing where it's like a paper towel roll equivalent and like some fabric softener in it or like, I mean, it just depends. I mean, I was always a big candle dude. So, I mean, I always had candles. I'd always block the doorways as much as I can. I used to run the hot water early on
Starting point is 00:12:35 but then it would get too hot in there It would just cause more steam And you would think So who knows it scientifically It's maybe an urban legend that it actually worked But again I just tried to control it with And then anyone who came to my room Just made sure they were
Starting point is 00:12:48 They would tip them well And yeah just you know Make sure just be very respectable When you're going in I guess And right so the consideration for other people You don't want to get in their way You don't want to make their lives harder Right
Starting point is 00:12:58 And in the process what you're also doing is like living in the future. Right. So the idea that you get to the NBA and there's now going to be this testing program and the reputation of the program in, again, this is fucking David Stern's NBA. So this program's reputation,
Starting point is 00:13:16 did it even begin to scare you out of trying this? I came in the league early 2000s and it was everyone got drug tested during training camp one time. So it'd be a fact where everyone knows, okay, yo, training camp starts Monday, Thursday, the dudes come. And everyone's getting tested.
Starting point is 00:13:32 So we would have our blunts or our joints rolled up in the car as soon as we get out of practice. Like cheers at each other in the parking lot still. You mean, because we knew it was coming. But I kind of... But that scene, though, the idea that, like, it's kind of like, you know, it's almost like, that's graduation day. Yeah, like whose house are we going to after practice? Right. We're going to go smoke a couple and, you know.
Starting point is 00:13:50 So it starts off with, you know, that's going to be one test in training camp preseason. To four randoms. So I want to just generally situate, again, like the kids out there, right? for like what's happening in the league at this point. Because this is now David Stern, this is like the dress code had been implemented. And so the question of like why, Matt, why does it go from one predictable preseason test to four randoms? There was issues with performance enhancing drugs in other sports, whether it be football, baseball. I don't remember the exact years, but it was in the same time.
Starting point is 00:14:23 Yeah, yeah, late-99. Yeah, early 2000s, mid-2000s. Yeah. So they know there wasn't really a steroid issue in the league. but a league that's predominantly black, what is the stereotype drug that most black from back in the day from rappers to street dudes use? We'd.
Starting point is 00:14:38 There wasn't a steroid problem. We weren't getting to like football and baseball tested for steroids. What can we test them for? Weed. Parallel to the dress code in its own way. Kind of, you know. How do we clean up the image?
Starting point is 00:14:50 Under looking at our demographic, you know, predominantly, you know, 70% if I'm not mistaken. You know, someone around that. A super majority, yep. And it was funny to say all that, probably because I remember, I did fail a few times. You get three strikes.
Starting point is 00:15:02 I was on like 2.75. You know, a couple fails. You get a couple of, if you know it's coming and you're not prepared, you can turn yourself in. So I turn myself in. Luckily, they let me turn myself in twice. That's why I say you're only supposed to be able to turn.
Starting point is 00:15:16 One, you get out of jail free car. Like, hey, you're coming to test me today. I don't have my drink. Cliff, Dirk. I'm coming home, baby. I'm coming back to the drug program. You know what I mean? So I'm coming back to the drug program.
Starting point is 00:15:29 So Cliff and Dirk, in case you were wondering just then, Cliff and Dirk are the names of the people who run the NBA's drug program, which I need to clarify with Matt by text afterwards. And Cliff and Dirk and the NBA first started testing for weed back in 1999 during training camp, specifically. And as Matt alluded to, as a result, everybody knew when the test was coming. This may explain why only 12 active players out of 430 that first year tested positive, a super low number that the league publicly celebrated
Starting point is 00:16:02 as proof that this whole slate of off-court marijuana possession incidents in the 90s were absolutely not reflective of the reality of the NBA. But in the 2000s, the NBA instituted what Matt has referred to as those four random drug tests, which meant that if you ever got a third positive test, that third strike, you got suspended for five games. And then the league would start adding five more games to each ensuing violation after that.
Starting point is 00:16:27 And so Matt Barnes failed one test in 2007 with the Warriors and a second test in 2014 with the Clippers. And so instead of testing positive a third time, he just chose to re-enroll with Cliff and Dirk preemptively. But I found out, you know, towards the end of my career when I'm in there, from the superstars to rookies are in that program. And I remember at one point they told me more than half the league was in the program for cannabis. half the league 250 plus guys are in the I don't know who
Starting point is 00:17:01 I know some of the people because we were teammates at times or whatever but a lot of people for that period right which is I think
Starting point is 00:17:12 a staggering thing to realize on a couple of levels so it's staggering on the level of like okay so what you're saying is that more than half the league has been involved in the program meaning they have gotten popped or been summoned
Starting point is 00:17:25 to the league office on a watch list of some kind. But what that also says is that beyond, okay, it's catching people, it's the prevalence of this. Was that surprising to you when you heard that it was more than half the league? Yes, because it was just that many people in a league of 400, a little bit over 400 people. It's like a silent majority. Right.
Starting point is 00:17:48 Literally. So the NBA has its own version, has its own version of a war on drugs. And it's done, I think I'm with you on the level. of this originates from a PR perspective. And manicuring of an image to make it more friendly and comfortable for... It's family. Family-friendly, mainstream America is the theory, right? But when it comes to those tests that is...
Starting point is 00:18:12 The test that is getting more than half the league involved in this program, who are the people doing the testing? Oh, it's a company they hire... I can't even say what we used to call these people. Why? I can't you say it. Just because we're in a different climate now. This is, you got to think, you used to, you know, we call them, for a better work, watchers, you know,
Starting point is 00:18:35 because they would really, it gained a point because there was a point where there was, you know, I'm not giving anything that people don't know all their way because the policy is completely gone. Exactly. No, we can talk about it now. PPS staff, the fate, the prosthetic penises. The Wizzinator. With the, you know, someone else is peeing it.
Starting point is 00:18:51 And that was what got you. That was urban legend. I heard about that in high school. and first getting in college and this and you don't got the fake. Like, nah, bro, I don't got the fake. Sorry. The Whizzinator is a lifelike prosthetic penis
Starting point is 00:19:02 designed to simulate male urination. It is very easy to use and available in white, black, and Latino skin tones. And then it would be a situation where sometimes you would just turn a cup of pee in so you can have someone else peeve for you. So, I mean, obviously it started to evolve and they took it more serious.
Starting point is 00:19:16 So it got to the point where you had to drop your pants down to your ankles and someone would, like, if this is me peeing right here, there's a watcher, like, This is Matt Barnes taking the podcast microphone and staring at it at an arm's length. Yeah, it's not, you're barely an arm's length. Like, they're that close to you. And they watch the pee come out of your body.
Starting point is 00:19:33 You know what I mean? So which is to say that the Wizzinator became, and the chain of custody of urine became such a threat that they were like, we got to see it come out of your actual. It's got to come at the source. We got a literal. Pablo, I kid you not, there's been twice in my career where I had to shit and give the pee it. And this person had to come in the stall with me because they wanted to make sure that I wasn't. So I had to put the cup down. in here while I'm shit
Starting point is 00:19:55 and I would have to pee in a cup. Like if I'm lying. And that's just nature calling. If I'm lying, I'm flying. I'm just like, I'm not going to be able to pee without someone else coming out. So I'm going to have to go. And it happened twice in my career. And they were there.
Starting point is 00:20:05 They were there, man. So it was serious. I didn't realize that I would find out that Matt Barnes shit and peed in front of a drug testing MBA employee twice. Yeah, I don't even think it's, yeah, they work for the NBA, but they're outside company. So, okay, so as in, they show up how and when they're in the morning of, they have to, so the morning.
Starting point is 00:20:22 So it used to go. So once. we were in the four randoms, we would get a call the morning of from our trainer. It used to say who was on the list, four to five guys. And I think they got hip to that. So they just started saying, okay, just four or five guys, but we're not giving you any names until we get there. So there could have, or may have not been trainers that got paid to say who was on the list so we can prepare. I can't confirm or deny that.
Starting point is 00:20:45 That's right. May have happened. May not. Allegedly is the word. So we got to the point now where it's just, all right, most teams are in group chats. So, right, drug test guide to hear today. So I would just always, every time that happened, which is probably, man, 10 times a year, eight times a year, I would have to treat it like I was getting tested. So I always had a drink on me, so I'd have to get up early.
Starting point is 00:21:07 I would take this nasty drink, then I'd drink three big bottles of water. You're like entering ghost protocol. It's tough because especially you've got to think if it's a game day or practice because you're so bloated from having to take this shake and then drink all this water, and then you have to pee three times, and then you have like a six-hour window where you can pee clean. Right. And I did that for almost 15 years. But you were ready.
Starting point is 00:21:26 It was like people have like a to-go-back. On call. So I'm eating clean. I'm eating a lot cleaner. So, you know, you stay lean. So you get out of your... Because they say it on average is a month. And well, the THD gets stored in.
Starting point is 00:21:36 Yeah. But they say on average, you know, it stays in your sister for a month. You know, they say it's stage your hair a little longer. But this, again, this is pre-being accepted. So it's just like I'm eating clean after the games. I'm in the steam room or after the games. I'm even doing another workout just to sweat more. So it was a real job to do it.
Starting point is 00:21:51 I imagine at a certain point, these guys who are, like, contracted with the NBA, who are watching you shit in a stall with you, watching your dick in the most real way. That sounds violating even talking about it. It sounds insane. I wonder if there's even some sort of, like, camaraderie, we're just like... Oh, we knew the dudes by name and everything. Like, it was cool. We would be cool with them.
Starting point is 00:22:13 You know, we'd be cool with these dudes. We knew them by name. It kind of just was what it was. I mean, they knew they were watching and we knew they had to watch our d'i. So it was kind of just damned if you do, damn. if you don't. We need this piece somehow. What's what was? Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:22:26 Just a series of incredible sentences. When it comes to the estimates of like how many guys are enjoying cannabis in the league at the time that they were playing. So I've seen a couple of estimates. So obviously the most, I think, direct one is your estimation that more than half the league per these testers were in the program. But then, of course, Al Harrington is saying probably around 70% of the NBA when he played, Kenyon Martin was saying,
Starting point is 00:23:02 and Kenny Martin played from 2015. overlapping with you in large part you're saying that yeah 85% of the NBA is I'm just saying only half the league was caught that's not saying like so a lot of people got because I got you got to think I got caught you know what I mean so there was a lot of times I wasn't getting caught right and so the question I have which is based off of just that degree that degree of pervasiveness in the league when you think about why they were doing it what's your theory I don't know why I can never speak to why they were doing it. I can only speak to why I was doing. And it was something that it would just became a part of me and to this day. And I feel like in life, whether you're a big time athlete or
Starting point is 00:23:43 CEO or just a housewife that takes care of kids all day, like everyone has a vice, whether it be a glass of wine, whether it be harder alcohol, whether it be harder drugs, whatever it may be. And I kind of just felt like cannabis is not really that bad. And now that there's medical research backing it up, you know, it was just kind of my call it my vice. and that's why I did it. Again, as an athlete, I wasn't someone who popped pills a bunch. While pills are, I can only, I've talked to football guys, or pills are like in big jars of, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:17 it's almost like little candy for them. But, you know, for athletes, there was, for basketball, it was, you know, we can get our hands on anything we want. I mean, I even got shot with a tour-doll to play, you know, before. Which is, again, a football style remedy. Yeah, so it's just like it was always that or, you know, cut that in half. smoke weed with it so the idea of like pain management i think i wonder if people appreciate
Starting point is 00:24:40 how much of a just a constant state of pain some players are in because football is like well that's football yeah but the NBA you're saying that hardwood i mean banging falling on the ground ankles fingers i mean obviously football's contact every single but you know and then it's played on grass and it's a very physical sport hockey very physical but basketball is that hardwood and we're on the ground a lot and people don't realize how hard like the ground is undefeated you know what I mean so it's just wear and tear it's a long season 82 games so you know I was lucky to not really have any significant injuries but it's just the wear and tear of just basketball alone is is a lot on your body right and so coming into this I was like okay if we're talking about 85% of the NBA potentially 85% of the
Starting point is 00:25:25 highest level basketball league that's ever existed enjoying cannabis I want to get to the question of how many of guys or at the very least how realistic it is that some people were taking whatever form of marijuana that they were in order to actually play better in order to be better at the game that they would be otherwise i wouldn't say that cannabis directly makes you better from a enhancement standpoint of a of an hg or a steroid or something like that i would say it enhances your play because you get a great night's sleep. It helps with inflammation. I smoke before I played, so I'm watching game film on Kobe, and I'm high. So I'm tuned into his moves. I know his rhythm. I know when he takes two dribbles right. He's going to stop in shot fake and get me up in the air. He's
Starting point is 00:26:15 going to run. So I'm locked in on... Your stone watching Kobe Bryant. The task of whoever was, Carmelo Anthony, LeBron James, Kevin Durant. That was my job. I had to guard the best players in in the world every night. The best guy on every team I had to guard every night. This is why you're the perfect person to talk about with this stuff, because your job was not merely to like get onto the floor and passably be a normal person while stone. It was to stop the greatest scores in the history of the league. Yeah, man. But there are lots of people out there who are listening to this conversation.
Starting point is 00:26:41 They're like, when I smoke weed, I need to sit in a couch and not move. And you're doing potentially the most opposite version of that entire spectrum of possibilities. I'm trying to stop Kobe Bryant from scoring 40. You're trying to stay awake watching the rest of Oppen, Right, right, right. It's, it worked for me. It work for me, you know what I mean? But there's times at a time where I would be getting, I'm not going to like, again, it did a lot of things for me. Mentally, focused, sleep, you know, anti-inflammatory. But there's time, Pablo, after just a crazy day of game, stress, or family, or issues, or I'm in TMZ and on Sports Center and I'm
Starting point is 00:27:22 fighting with my former teammate and I'm getting a divorce in front of the world, but I still got to play. Like sometimes. You're getting name checked by Kanye, Matt Barnes. Man, right. 90 miles like Matt Fawars Just a whoop a s' I mean, sometimes I do just sit back on the couch, man And just smoking and get high And just kind of just allow things to
Starting point is 00:27:40 As your God-given right as a human being. Absolutely. God is good. But the question of the science of this, right? What does marijuana help an athlete do potentially? So I've been reading into the science on this When you've talked to actually a couple of scientists. My name is Angela Bryan
Starting point is 00:28:00 and I'm a professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of Colorado, Boulder. And their argument is, one of them is, this is not a performance-enhancing drug. And what Professor Brian did in retrospect made a lot of sense. She set up this experiment to test the effect of cannabis on athletes by asking a runner to run the same route twice, once under the influence of cannabis and another time sober. Under the influence of cannabis, people, they went pretty significantly slower in the cannabis run. The data we have collected suggest that the organizations that ban cannabis on the basis of it being a performance-enhancing drug are flat out wrong. But what you're saying is that you found benefits personally when it came to how you proceeded on the court.
Starting point is 00:28:56 And so one of the things that I'm curious about is when it came to playing in the game, specifically, how do you think it made you better? I just think it was focus. It helped me with my focus. But I'll even take it back. Say we're in L.A. tonight. I'm playing for Golden State.
Starting point is 00:29:14 We're in L.A. tonight. We play Kobe and the Lakers. And then we have a back-to-back on a T&T game, which means everything is a little bit later. And we've got to fly to San Antonio and we're getting to San Antonio. T&T games, it's going to go an hour longer. Everyone's got to do media after.
Starting point is 00:29:30 It's going to take an hour and a half, two hours to get on the plane and actually in the air to San Antonio. We're not getting to San Antonio until anywhere between 2 and 4 a.m. So some people, it's hard to get off a plane, wake up, get on the bus, and get to your room and go right back to sleep. What are you going to do? You're going to drink. You're going to take a sleeping pill that's going to have you groggy now for 8 to 10 hours. You know, it might mess up your pregame nap or me. I'm going to go ahead and smoke me one day.
Starting point is 00:29:56 to the face and make sure I go to sleep, you know, within the first 30 minutes, 40 minutes while I'm there and get a great sleep and get ready to guard Manu or Tony or whoever else I had to, you know, guard that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I was just glad that it finally has reached a point where there's medical research backing this up and now, you know, most of major sports, if I'm not mistaken, test for once or don't test at all for it. Yeah, no, I mean, this is, this is where we are living in the future, the future being the president tense now. So, like, for instance, I just want to contrast this, right? So Al Harrington once said that he would never get high before playing like Kevin Durant.
Starting point is 00:30:28 But Al was my dog, so Al didn't even start smoking until like late. I wasn't really smoking during the days like where we were, and that's the only reason that I'm talking about that's our guy. Yeah, yeah, of course. But it was, some guys didn't, like Stephen Jackson had someone I can say that, you know, he was smoking while he was playing.
Starting point is 00:30:45 He didn't smoke before games either. He would after games, he would blow it down with you. But before games, he wouldn't. So this club that you were, of course, a charter member of. Like, I'm smoking before a game. Explain? I guess explain what that ritual was. So it would be, first of all,
Starting point is 00:31:01 explain the post-game ritual is normally everybody. Or whoever's a smoker on the team after the game, we're burning it down. Sometimes watching game film, sometimes, you know, order some food to the house, kick it, you're ready to go out, or whatever the situation may be.
Starting point is 00:31:14 Day of, it depends. If you're on the road and there's a couple guys that smoke, I've had guys come to my room and we'll after shoot around, you know, we'll go to shoot around. You know, shoot around's 11 or 12 o'clock. For an hour, we come home,
Starting point is 00:31:24 I'll come home and, you know, one of the teammates will come over to my room and we'll smoke one. And then I'll take a nap. I'll wake up, take a shower, eat, and go to the game. So within probably a, if I'm smoking about one or two in the game, to seven, within a five-hour window. So it's not like I'm smoking all the way to the game, but it was something that I would smoke and it helps me take my, because I like to take like two-hour pre-game naps, two, sometimes three-hour pre-game naps, help me take that nap, wake up, feel refresh, get in the shower, eat, and it's time to go. Right. And how set was that process?
Starting point is 00:31:53 That was 95% of the time. Wow. Wow. And so the question of focus, I want to get to that because it's interesting, right? So as much as science is saying, you're not going to get the benefits from weed as you would, anabolic steroids, obviously. It's interesting that like a sport like archery, and this is where you've got to go a little bit off the board to see the parallels. In Olympic archery, alcohol is a banned substance. Because the theory is that alcohol for some people calms.
Starting point is 00:32:23 their nerves. You've ever played darts? You've ever played beer pond? Yeah. All of us have been in, all of us have felt like Kobe. Oh, one time, yeah, I'm nice at beer pong, by the way. I have no doubt about that. Even if I have to keep my elbow behind the line. I was going to say the elbow rules are big, I would be enforcing a shit out of that. Yeah, I'm getting it. I'm ready for it. Next, next time we hang together, we're playing beer pong. Who else was on your sort of approach? Who else is like, how many other guys were like that?
Starting point is 00:32:52 There was a lot, to be honest with you. You mean, there was a lot. I mean, again, close to, I would only speak on people who are close, you know, the Stephen Jackson's. Who else can I speak of? Yeah, who's okay with this now? Yeah, it just depends because people are at different places in their life. Like some of my OGs, like someone who kind of raised me, who was my big brother,
Starting point is 00:33:12 was instrumental in and kind of making it like this is a responsibility. You still have to do this and this and this. And he was someone who was kind of, again, big brother in me when I first came. came to the league and I was bouncing around and not really set on any team but still doing it because I knew it was a, you know, something I was with. So I was, yeah, I'll leave it at the names of Stephen Jackson, but I played with some of the the greatest players ever to play this game have, you know, been involved with this plan and winning championships.
Starting point is 00:33:41 By the way, was there a sense as to like when you were in the league, were guys smoking, were they eating edibles? Were edibles really a thing at that point? Edibles were just coming along. You have to think my last year was 16-17. So edibles had touched down, but I felt like you had to be really well-versed in that space, and I wasn't. I had a couple homeboys that were, they had the edibles down to microdason before it was even, because it just first came as edibles, and they were microdosing came later.
Starting point is 00:34:05 Yeah. But I had homeboys, there were test dummies. They would crash and-teen wolf thing. Yeah, and figure out what's right, and then, you know, and these are other athletes. These are other teammates. You know what I mean? One particular teammate was a test dummy, was my dog, one of my own neighbor. How does one end up the test dummy?
Starting point is 00:34:22 On an NBA team. Just he's the one that wants to jump in there. You know what I mean? Like like I said, edibles were new. Like we all kind of knew our, we all had our older stories at how we found out how,
Starting point is 00:34:31 you know, the actual joint or blunt were for us. Edibles are different. There's only one way to find out what this specific edible contains. You got to jump in there, butt naked and see what happens. But I want to get to the question of like,
Starting point is 00:34:55 okay, some people, they have a little bit of weed and they have a laughing attack and God bless those people. Love it. But at the same time, for you,
Starting point is 00:35:03 your reaction time wasn't slower. That's the crazy part. It's like, that's for so many people, unrelatable. Yeah. Well, and then all this stuff, the psychedelics, the cannabis, the alcohol, it's, it's, everyone is different. So how it affects you is different. I knew, I was never a huge drinker, but I know that I can, no matter what, I can probably take five, six, seven shots and be okay because I'm six, eight, two 40. You know what I mean? My body's different and I completely know my body. You know, I know that I can smoke a joint or two and be completely fine. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:35:36 So it's everyone is different. You know, someone with the same makeup may not have that type of, but again, all that is a tolerance. So this stuff hits everyone different. So I would never, you know, this is what I did because it worked for me. I don't know what works for you. Right. You're not prescribing. I'm not a doctor.
Starting point is 00:35:51 But if you want to have fun, come kick it. When it comes to the strain, setiva, indica, what's part of your preference? I was always an indica guy because. Sativa was fairly new. Like it kind of caught on. When I kind of started hearing about it, it was like maybe 13, 14, 15. But girls were kind of smoking it when it was first coming out. So I tried it.
Starting point is 00:36:14 And it was cool. It's a different taste. It's obviously a different type of high. But I've always been kind of an Indica guy, which is, you know, the OGs, the purple, the kush. That kind of stuff is what I grew up smoking. Obviously it's gotten stronger and better over the years. That's the relaxant as opposed to the upper of a satire. But on the flip side, it's just, it's, it's whatever works for you.
Starting point is 00:36:36 And everything now is kind of, it's a hybrid because they're crossing everything now. So everything is a little bit of everything now. So it's really your preference. But yeah, I was more of an into guy because that's what I grew up on. What about your coaches in the league? How much of a understanding was there? The only coach I really think had an understanding and cared to have an understanding was Nelly. Of course.
Starting point is 00:36:58 Nellie was super cool. Nellie. Don Nelson. Yeah, Don Nelson from the We Believe Warrior team. Right after we beat the Dallas Mavericks, Jack used to live in the same building as Nellie, and Jack was in the middle floors, and Nellie had the whole penthouse.
Starting point is 00:37:10 So we went to Jacks, me, him, Baron, a couple other people pregame because we're going to hit the city before we go out, and Nellie wanted us to come up. So Nellie, again, has the whole top floor, penthouse, balcony, everything. We come up there. What a ridiculous apartment complex you describe.
Starting point is 00:37:23 So dope. Go up there and right when we walk in the door, and Nellie's like, hey, fellas, Woody's in the back rolling doobies. and we're like, what the fuck? We kind of like, what? He's just trying this is front of, there's some Hollywood stars there,
Starting point is 00:37:35 probably executives from the team. We're like, holy shit, what did this man just say? Yeah, Woody's in the back. And we go in the back and Woody Harrelson's rolling up joints. So me, Parent and Jack, go in the back of our coaches,
Starting point is 00:37:46 on our coaches' balcony during the playoffs. We're still in season and smoke weed with Woody Harrelson. So Nellie, you discovering that Woody Harrelson was hanging out inside of Nellie's apartment. How much of a surprise was it that Nellie was that kind of a smoker?
Starting point is 00:37:59 Or did you know that by that point? I didn't know that Nelly was really smoking. Nellie was just so cool and laid back. Like he would come to the practice at 10 or 11 o'clock with either a beer or a coffee cup, sometimes his coffee, sometimes as crown, and then his dog that would piss everywhere. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:38:13 So Nellie was just so with the flow that he just didn't give a shit. I think he knew that, you know, let these guys do what they need to do because, you know, as long as they show up, we're good. You know what I mean? And long as they're staying out of trouble, we're good. It feels like historically the turning point
Starting point is 00:38:27 in terms of just like, at least my understanding of how, the NBA felt about this. It was an interview actually that the aforementioned Al Harrington did with David Stern. Yeah. And again, we've been talking about David Stern's MBA this whole time. David Stern and Adam Silver, Adam Silver was David Stern's deputy, but David Stern was... Mafia boss. Yes. Yes. Yes. The iron fist. And maybe Adam has a velvet glove around that iron fist. He got Michael Jackson's glove. But David Stern was a terrifying person to everybody. And so when Al Harrington has David Stern basically on this couch with him talking about what the next phase
Starting point is 00:39:06 of the NBA's weed policy should be. David Stern says something that I truly like when I first heard in 2017 needed to rewind. Marijuana is now in the process of being legalized. I would think you should be allowed to do what's legal in your state. So now I think it's up to the sports leagues to anticipate where this is going and maybe lead the way. It's about deciding to take it off the band's substance of list because it's no different than other subjects that may work or not work with particular players. I'm now at the point where personally I think it probably should be removed from the band list. He basically says, I don't think it should be criminalized anymore. The, the, the, the watchers can all stop watching. Find a new job, fellas. And it was big.
Starting point is 00:39:52 And again, 17 was the season I retired. So, I mean, obviously shout out to my brother Al Harrington. I definitely think opening that door was Al and, you know, rest in peace, Commissioner Stern, saying at this point where we are, you know, as a world, as a culture, as a sport, I don't think it should be banned. And I think that was the beginning of people starting to talk about it. It all came to a head during the pandemic where, if I'm not mistaken, they didn't test in the bubble.
Starting point is 00:40:18 And after that, it was gone. They just kept on saying we're not going to do it. It seemed like when you listen to David Stern's words, what he's saying also is basically like, look, it's not just the culture that's changing, not just the science that's now becoming clear, like the economy around this is becoming clear. And that part, the part about like, oh, by the way, now the owners can get in on this. That always felt like the actual quiet subtext of all of this, which is we can make money on this now too. We can make money on it.
Starting point is 00:40:49 Yeah, I mean, I don't know how many got involved as management or owners, but I know a lot of players, you know, You mentioned one being KD, and I remember KD and I used to have talks, and I said it's going to be more socially acceptable if a superstar would ever take that stance. So did you smoke today? Yeah. And you're just fine. I'm actually high right now. I think he's kind of been that star that has kind of not come out and just I'm a smoker,
Starting point is 00:41:16 but he's invested in it. Yeah, he's a weed maps deal. Yeah, he's got to deal with weed maps. And, you know, him and Rich Climman have been very strategic on the way they do it. But, you know, it's, like I said, some of the greatest to ever do it, some of the greatest in the game to rookies have all, you know, kind of fall into it. And before, you know, you think about you being a rookie and getting, you know, a test and the team finds out, you know, you're really risking your job at that point.
Starting point is 00:41:39 So I just think it's come a really long way. And as someone who risked a lot during my career to do it, you know, I'm just very happy that these guys don't have to worry about it. So the CBA, the new collective bargaining agreement in April 23, it was officially decided that after the pandemic in the bubble, into just like kicking the can down the road of like, okay, we're not going to test in 2021 or 2022, 2022, 2023. Finally, it's codified.
Starting point is 00:42:01 Like, the era is over. It's out of here. It's dead. And it also, relatedly, inside of that document, which is like almost 700 pages is interesting, there is now text that allows guys to, as you alluded to, have stakes in various companies. And it just seemed like at that point,
Starting point is 00:42:20 it didn't even feel like a thing. as much as you guys were behind the scenes, like trying to create momentum towards a change by 2023 and April in the CBA being codified that way, it didn't even feel like a fight. That's the crazy part. It wasn't.
Starting point is 00:42:35 You would think it would have been a knockdown, drag out, you know, guys are standing for it. People, it just... The traditional ownership versus labor versus management. It seemed like, oh, everybody realized there's... This is fighting a tide that's turned a long time ago. Wasting our time. where we're actually late to the party.
Starting point is 00:42:54 Yes. And that's the funny part about doing an episode like this now. Of course, it's like, you know, in celebration of the holiday coming up, of course, 420, it feels appropriate, but it also feels like, I mean, truly, like America's attitudes towards cannabis
Starting point is 00:43:09 have changed so dramatically that it just feels, I live in New York, I said this to you before. When you visited the city, I'm like, I walk around and there's nothing stopping anybody from the science of it now, right? So there are all these scientists who are saying we don't think it's a PED, but we also want to acknowledge that there just isn't research. Enough, yeah. Enough research into this.
Starting point is 00:43:32 We want to do more controlled studies where we compare forms like edibles versus, you know, vaping versus smoking, so that we can really answer some of those questions about the impact they have on lung function, on breathing, and on how the exercise feels. As crazy as the attitudes changing so dramatically. towards like also like family friendly now. Yeah. Weed is more family friendly than it's ever been in ways that are unthinkable to people who live through the 90s, obviously in your case. But it's also still a scheduled federal schedule one drug. Yeah, it's crazy.
Starting point is 00:44:09 It'd be nice if this drug was actually like federally decriminalized. You would think. So that science can officially dive in all the way on what is this due to a person from the athletic sports context. That would be nice. And just a little deeper of, you know, people with minor cannabis offenses are not sitting years in prison. No question. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:44:29 So it's just like we're out here making money on it now and people who, you know, did it as, I mean, there's survival to get by or are rotten away in jail, you know, or been killed over it. So it's just it's a deep, it's a deep journey that we've been on. But I feel from a professional sports standpoint, I think, I feel like everyone has it right. You know, it's not that we have to promote the guys are doing it, but we're not testing for it anymore. What's the next phase of this, do you think? You mentioned mushrooms before, you mentioned psychedelics before. I kind of feel like, honestly, the cannabis wave is kind of settled, oddly enough. I mean, it was such, it was the green rush for a handful of years.
Starting point is 00:45:18 If you got in, you know, early teens of the 2012, 13, 14, and it was, you know, hit an all-time high. And then it's definitely settled, I would say, in the last three or four years. It's not that big of a deal anymore. I definitely think psychedelics are really, really. buzzing right now and guys are taking their cannabis money and investing in psychedelics. The world is just really open to some of these now that there's a little bit of research behind it and people realizing the benefits from it. To bring it all the way back around, the question of whether weed is a PED, so it's a more complicated
Starting point is 00:45:51 answer than the one that I was assuming you might give, which is to say that you did it in a way that made your MBA career better. But what I'm finding out is that it was helpful it was performance enhancing in a sense that's not the same as I was stronger or I had this mental state even that was more advantageous it was the way that you found
Starting point is 00:46:17 peace in your life that allowed you to be the best version of the asshole that many many teams wanted you to be. Absolutely. No, it was, it was it was my vice so to speak. But I'm realizing also is that when it comes to weed as a BED
Starting point is 00:46:32 it's far more obviously I think it feels more like a podcasting PED, like a writer's PED. Like what it is for me is like I have writers block and I'm by myself. I need to hear from someone else with another opinion on this. That someone else is me,
Starting point is 00:46:49 but slightly higher than I am now. I mean, to me, it's a creative. I feel like I'm a better form of me on it and again, I played on it. I went on TV on it, whether it was ESPN or Fox or Sacramento Kings. and, you know, obviously all the smoke, it speaks for itself. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:47:06 So it's just like, you know, to show, I think for athlete to show on several levels that it's not something that it used to be. It's supposed to, it's going to gateway drug, and you're a thug, and you're this if you smoke, and you're going to do this, and you're going to waste your life. And it's just, it's more serious than that now. You know, it's a medication now, and it's something that's important to this world. When you think back at the end here, at the fondest memory you have of the time in which none of this was allowed and none of this was okay.
Starting point is 00:47:35 What makes you smile when you think back at like the before times? The good times I had on the Warriors, the Clippers, the Lakers, smoking at your coach's house. I mean, people can say you're smoking at your current coach's house. I mean, there was just, I smile when I think about, you know, obviously what that plant has done for me and the fun times, you know, the fun times we had. doing it. So it was a big part of my life. It's continuing to be a part of my life. And obviously now in moderation, then I'm a father of six and have one on the way and I'm building a production company. So it's not as much as I used to, but it still definitely happened. And it's still, you know, for those similar reasons that I gave back when I was 15 years old. Right. Is there
Starting point is 00:48:23 anything you want to say to the guy who had to watch you take a shit while peeing at the same time? Who are you, bro? What's your name? Were you able to look at yourself in the mirror and tell your wife that I had to stand in a stall with a former player as he's shit so I can get a little bit of pee out of him. Yeah. Weird.
Starting point is 00:48:41 Yeah. On that note, Matt Barnes, thank you for coming through, man. Absolutely. No doubt. This has been Pablo Torre finds out. A Metal Arc Media production. And I'll talk to you next time.

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