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Instagram Is Pushing Cannabis Brands Onto Influencers

Social media sites tend to be more lenient with individual content, which makes influencers an ideal adaptation to online regulations around promoting cannabis.

The power of the social media influencer has evolved from a curiosity of internet culture to a fixture of the modern-day marketplace, and one that brands across sectors ignore at their peril. Brands that are having their social media pages deleted for content violations are now relying on influencers to help market their products, and cannabis brands are no exception.

Instagram, which is owned by Facebook, in particular, has a low tolerance for the marijuana industry, freely deactivating or restricting accounts dedicated to cannabis content where there has been a perceived breach of terms of service or user complaints. But on Instagram perhaps more than anywhere else online, the influencer reigns supreme— a reality that is helping to keep marijuana companies in the social media spotlight.

5 Mental Health Instagram Accounts You Should Follow
Photo by ?? Claudio Schwarz | @purzlbaum via Unsplash

Over the past year, brands like CanndescentPapa & BarkleyHervé, and cannabis subscription box service Nugg Club have utilized influencers to promote their products, to great success. Nugg Club in particular has worked with over 1200 influencers since July 2020, and 700 influencers so far in 2021. Cannabis companies are tapping influencers from a range of demographics, including mommy bloggers, eccentric performers like Kimmy Tan, and food bloggers who are a good match for their brands in order to flog their products.

RELATED: Why Does Social Media Still Ban Cannabis?

Consumers are watching, and spending, accordingly. Influencers have a ready-made platform and attentive audience, with recent studies showing that social media influencers have 16 times higher engagement rates than paid media and media-owned alternatives. Social media sites tend to be more lenient with individual content, which makes influencers an ideal adaptation to online regulations around promoting cannabis.

With a billion monthly users, Instagram holds a lot of marketing potential for companies, as well as the power to deflate a campaign before it truly begins. Instagram is a major pipeline of information and communication for consumers, and when it closes that pipeline down due to brands attempting to sell or promote the sale of drugs on their pages, the disruption can be devastating.

RELATED: Cannabis And Sex: Two Things Social Media Doesn’t Want You To See

Cannabis companies are permitted to have a presence on the platform in order to raise awareness or talk about cannabis-related issues like legalization, but this can be a slippery slope towards inducing the sale of cannabis, linking to e-commerce sites that sell it, or poorly marketing products. These, at least on Instagram, are major no-nos.

Once an account is deleted, it can be reinstated under certain circumstances, but the lapse in outreach capability can be the difference between a successful brand and a fail costing millions of dollars. Many companies have launched protests over inconsistencies in Instagram’s implementation of their terms of service, claiming a lack of clarity and specifics regarding what content is and is not allowed.

Whether it is the rules themselves or the enforcement thereof that is inconsistent, the impact of social media silence on businesses and the trend towards tapping social media influencers to pick up the marketing slack is indisputable.

This article originally appeared on Green Market Report and has been reposted with permission.

California State Fair Including Cannabis Competition Next Year

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The California State Fair is adding a cannabis competition to its agricultural celebration for the first time ever in its 166-year history.

By Jelena Martinovic

In a surprise, the California State Fair is including cannabis competition next year! The CA State Fair Cannabis Competition and Awards represents “a watershed moment” for the cannabis community in California, Cultivar Brands’ Brian Applegarth said on Tuesday, highlighting that they will focus on education and demystification of the plant.

The competition is open to all licensed growers in California and will award medals for the cannabis flower only, showcasing the primary cannabinoids and terpenes expressed in the cannabis flower.

fair foods
Photo by Flickr user m01229

“We are thrilled for California cannabis farmers to have a seat at the table,” Cultivar Brands co-founder/CEO James Leitz told Benzinga. “We will lead with cannabis flower for the inaugural awards, but our plan is to dive deeper in the coming years to recognize even more attributes of the plant, objectively through science and subjectively through judging.”

Classified into three groups, representing three primary divisions for submission by the light source, including indoor, mixed-light, and outdoor, the entrants will be awarded 77 bronze, silver, gold and double gold medals, including the Golden Bear trophy for “Best of California.”

RELATED: 7 Ways To Get A Bad High Under Control

CA State Fair will take place from July 10 to July 26, 2022, at the Cal Expo Fairgrounds in Sacramento, California. The submission deadline is from November 1, 2021, until March 30, 2022.

RELATED: Popular Ways To Consume Marijuana Flower

The competition will be scored objectively through science-based analysis performed and certified by SC Labs, the CA State Fair disclosed. Let’s see if the California State Fair includes cannabis competition next year.

This article originally appeared on Benzinga and has been reposted with permission.

Former Massachusetts Mayor Gets Six Years In Prison For Marijuana Corruption Charges

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Prosecutors disclosed that Jasiel Correia spent nearly two-thirds of the sum he received from investors on his lavish lifestyle.

By Jelena Martinovic

Once viewed as a rising star in the Democratic party, former Massachusetts mayor Jasiel Correia was sentenced to six years in prison on Tuesday after being convicted in May on charges including fraud and extortion of hundreds of thousands of dollars tied to local marijuana businesses.

The ex-mayor of Fall River, 29, showed no emotion as U.S. District Judge Douglas Woodlock blasted him, saying that “City Hall was for sale” during his mandate.

dealing marijuana
Photo by krisanapong detraphiphat/Getty Images

Judge Woodlock, reported MassLive, threw out several convictions against Correia accusing him of deceiving investors who backed a smartphone app, dubbed SnoOwl, which he designed to help businesses connect with consumers.

Prosecutors disclosed that Correia spent nearly two-thirds of the sum he received from investors on his lavish lifestyle.

Correia, however, insisted on his innocence, saying that was the reason he turned down a plea deal and that the trial was politically motivated.

RELATED: Corrupt Mayor Could Face Prison For Extorting Cannabis License Applicants

“The justice system has failed us,” Correia said after the judge handed down the sentence.

According to ABC News, the defense had asked for three years, stressing that Correia also did much good for Fall River.

“None of that excuses what happened here, but I think it’s required to have a fuller picture of the man and to understand how somebody might get derailed but still have hope to contribute in a future chapter of life,” said Correia’s attorney William Fick.

This article originally appeared on Benzinga and has been reposted with permission.

International Travel: Biden Administration Updates COVID-19 Guidelines

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The Biden Administration announced new international travel guidelines that will go into effect in November.

Following months of heavy international travel restrictions, the U.S. is gearing up to reopening its borders. This week, President Joe Biden announced that fully vaccinated travelers from specific countries will be able to enter the U.S. in early November.

Reuters reports that this relaxation in travel guidelines will allow citizens from countries like China, India, and Brazil to enter the U.S. as long as they are inoculated with the approved vaccines, something that falls under the jurisdiction of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

RELATED: Here’s Another Health Benefit Associated With COVID-19 Vaccine

Labor Day: What Does The CDC Advise In Terms Of Travel & Social Gatherings
Photo by Gerrie van der Walt via Unsplash

“In early November we’ll be putting in place strict protocols to prevent the spread of COVID-19 from passengers flying internationally into the United States by requiring that adult foreign nationals traveling to the United States be fully vaccinated,” said Jen Psaki, the White House Press Secretary.

While the decision was praised by the travel industry, it marked a significant departure from what Biden’s administration has been cautioning over the past couple of weeks, especially since the rise of the Delta variant. It’s not known exactly when this rule would be approved. White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients said that it would be during early November.

Throughout the pandemic, the U.S. has allowed international travel from over 150 countries. While the loosening up of these guidelines may be puzzling for some, it indicates that people who were unvaccinated and allowed to travel before will now have to follow the new guidelines to enter the U.S. Everyone who travels internationally will have to be vaccinated and will also need to provide a negative COVID-19 test taken three days before departing for the U.S.

RELATED: This Company Is Developing A Combined COVID/Flu Shot

International COVID-19 travel bans were put in place in the year 2020, when President Donald Trump was in charge. China was the first country to be banned by the U.S., a decision that later extended to dozens of other places without a clear knowledge of when these guidelines would be lifted.

US House Passes SAFE Act As Part Of Defense Spending Bill

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The measure has been widely supported, even though some are pushing for more comprehensive changes to cannabis laws to happen first.

By Jelena Martinovic

The U.S. House of Representatives passed an amendment on Tuesday that would allow banks to do business with cannabis companies without being penalized by federal regulators.

The measure, approved on a voice vote making it part of a large-scale defense spending bill, came after the House Rules Committee made in order the amendment from Rep. Ed Perlmutter (D-CO) for floor consideration, Marijuana Moment reportedadding that it was one of various drug policy proposals lawmakers were hoping to attach to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).

RELATED: Why The Cannabis Industry Needs Congress To Pass SAFE Banking Act

How Long Before The Senate Approves The SAFE Banking Act?
Photo by Kindel Media from Pexels

“This will strengthen the security of our financial system in our country by keeping bad actors like foreign cartels out of the cannabis industry. But most importantly, this amendment will reduce the risk of violent crime in our communities,” said Perlmutter who had re-introduced the bill. “By dealing in all cash, these businesses and their employees become targets for robberies, assaults, burglaries, and more.”

Whether as standalone legislation or as a part of broader legislation, the measure has been widely supported, even though some are pushing for more comprehensive changes to cannabis laws to happen first.

RELATED: US Cannabis Legislation Update: ‘SAFE Act Gaining Steam’

In an interview with Marijuana Moment, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) argued that passing the Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act first could affect support for broader reform.

“I’ve always been of the view that while certainly, we have to deal with the banking and financial issues that we should do them together with legalization because the [SAFE Banking Act] brings in some people who might not normally support legalization, and we want to get as broad a coalition as possible,” Schumer,known for his efforts to create a cannabis legalization bill that will prevent alcohol and tobacco giants from dominating the industry, told Marijuana Moment.

This article originally appeared on Benzinga and has been reposted with permission.

These Former Pro Athletes Played Stoned

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“It’s like I’m in the zone. I feel like nobody could stop me out there. Mellowed me out, got me going and it’s the best thing for me.” — Shaun Smith, Kansas City Chiefs

It’s not exactly human growth hormone, but who’s to say if Mary Jane falls under the category of a performance enhancing drug? With the expanding legalization of marijuana, sports leagues have slowly but surely softened their stances as well. That’s opened the floodgates for former pro athletes to share their experiences detailing how marijuana enhanced their playing careers.  You might be surprised these former pro athletes played stoned.

NBA
Photo by TuelekZa/Getty Images

Matt Barnes, NBA, Sacramento Kings

By launching a podcast with Stephen Jackson called All the Smoke, it’s not hard to tell that Mr. Barnes knows his way through a bag of California’s Finest. He’s even gone on record admitting that some of his best performances happened while he was “medicated”.

Given his fiery on-the-court personality, the casual NBA fan likely wouldn’t peg Barnes as a stoner. The fact is that he’s actually been burning since the green age of 14. His long-lasting relationship with weed could be what led him to fighting for social equity within the cannabis industry in his current role as Senior Advisor to Eaze’s minority-focused cannabis business incubator.

Percy Harvin, NFL, Seattle Seahawks

Given the high-contact nature of professional football, it’s pretty easy to imagine the league’s best unwinding after a long day with a thick joint twisted tightly to perfection. Although that’s the case for a lot of the league, former Seahawks wide-receiver Percy Harvin actually cited a different reason for his habitual blazing throughout his career. He recently claimed that smoking marijuana before games actually helped quell his anxiety.

RELATED: Mike Tyson Once Boxed While High… And Won

His anxiety reached an apex upon being traded from the Minnesota Vikings to the Seattle Seahawks back in 2013. “There’s not a game I played that I wasn’t high,” he said. It’s not surprising given the fact that many users claim it helps calm their nerves.

touchdown cannabis consumers prefer the nfl over all other pro sports
Photo by Doug Pensinger/Staff/Getty Images

Shaun Smith, NFL, Kansas City Chiefs

Unlike Percy Harvin, Shaun Smith, formerly of the Kansas City Chiefs, maintained his pregame ritual of smoking two blunts before each game because it helped him focus. Smith was such an ardent believer in the bud that he claims it made him feel unstoppable on the field. In an interview with Bleacher Report, he said, “It’s like I’m in the zone. I feel like nobody could stop me out there. Mellowed me out, got me going and it’s the best thing for me.”

RELATED: Olympic Cannabis Ban To Be Re-Examined After Sha’Carri Richardson Disqualification

Later on in the interview he attributed weed for helping him manage his pain, before delivering a bombshell. He estimated that up to 80% of players in the league use marijuana, along with other teams and coaching personnel. Considering that, it’s no wonder attitudes around pot are changing so rapidly in what used to be known as the “No Fun League.”

Elijah Dukes, MLB, Washington Nationals

Since MLB is historically the most forgiving of the three major sports leagues when it comes to weed, it’s only natural for its players to take advantage of that fact from time to time. Former outfielder for the Washington Nats admitted to smoking pot before games during his short-lived three year big league career. Posting a rather pedestrian career batting average of .242, it’s hard to decipher what type of impact his usage had on his on-the field performance.

Nonetheless, his time in the bigs came to an abrupt, unceremonious end preceding the start of the 2010 MLB season. Unfortunately since his retirement, he’s made headlines for all the wrong reasons. Some of those headlines include domestic problems resulting in legal consequences.

Amazon’s Cannabis Policy Will Be Retroactive — Formerly Rejected Applicants Are Now Eligible For Jobs

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Amazon recognizes that an increasing number of states are moving to some level of cannabis legalization which makes it difficult to implement an equitable, consistent and national pre-employment marijuana testing program.

By Nicolas Jose Rodriguez

Amazon disclosed on Tuesday that its earlier decision to end drug testing for cannabis will be retroactive, meaning former workers and applicants who were punished or rejected for testing positive for THC will have their employment eligibility restored, reported various news outlets.

Amazon also announced on Tuesday that it is lobbying Congress in favor of legalizing cannabis at the federal level in part to promote equitable hiring practices.

amazon
Photo by Mark Makela / Getty Images

In a Tuesday blog post, Beth Galetti, Amazon’s senior vice president of human resources, said that the firm has “reinstated the employment eligibility for former employees and applicants who were previously terminated or deferred during random or pre-employment marijuana screenings.”

According to Galetti’s post, Amazon recognizes that an increasing number of states are moving to some level of cannabis legalization which makes it difficult to implement an equitable, consistent and national pre-employment marijuana testing program. Publicly available national data indicates that pre-employment marijuana testing disproportionately impacts people of color and acts as a barrier to employment.

RELATED: Amazon Continues To Support Progressive Policies Despite Attacks By So-Called Progressive Seattle Politician

“Pre-employment marijuana testing has disproportionately affected communities of color by stalling job placement and, by extension, economic growth, and we believe this inequitable treatment is unacceptable” stated Galetti.

The Lead-Up

In June, the company came out in support of the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act of 2021(MORE Act) and announced that it will stop testing for cannabis use in most positions. In September, Amazon began asking its delivery partners to stop screening applicants for marijuana use in an effort to address the shortage of the company’s delivery drivers though the company will continue to have zero tolerance for working while impaired.

RELATED: Is This The Real Reason Amazon Is Supporting Marijuana Legalization?

Steven Hawkins, CEO of the U. S. Cannabis Council, pointed out that when a drug-testing policy that affects over a million Americans gets changed, it’s a signal.

Amazon is not alone in its removal of cannabis screening. From the corporate world to professional athletics, major organizations are significantly retooling—or removing altogether—testing or sanctions for cannabis, Hawkins told Benzinga.

“The unprecedented labor shortage is making it difficult for employers to find workers to fill those jobs and employers that meet the moment with smart, modern hiring policies stand to gain the most,” Hawkins added.

This article originally appeared on Benzinga and has been reposted with permission.

CA Turns Blind Eye To Marijuana Black Market

Others in the industry seem to agree that the lawsuit is exposing a serious flaw in the regulatory system that is cutting the financial legs out from under the legal market.

By Nicolas Jose Rodriguez

suit filed last week in state court by a California retail chain against the Department of Cannabis Control (DCC) alleges that criminals have been legally buying an unknown number of cannabis distribution licenses, reported MJBizDaily.  Surprise, CA turns blind eye to marijuana black market, hurting what could be another robust industry for the state.

The DCC is responsible for, among other things, establishing, implementing, maintaining, and enforcing a track and trace program for reporting the movement of cannabis products throughout the distribution chain.

3 Busted Myths On Today's Cannabis Consumers From California
Photo by Viviana Rishe via Unsplash

Through this lawsuit, HNHPC, Inc., a state/local licensed dispensary in Santa Ana, seeks to compel the DCC to perform its legal duties.

According to HNHPC, the DCC’s failure to perform its legal duty to implement systems to properly track and flag questionable transactions has led to the exponential rise of “Burner Distros,” which conceal and launder State-grown cannabis for delivery to unregulated markets without paying significant legally mandated taxes.

According to the suit, operators (usually legal cannabis operators) purchase or obtain distribution licenses in various local jurisdictions, often where cultivation operations are prevalent and/or where such licenses are relatively easy to acquire. They do this by using an array of different “front men” who agree to attach their names to the licenses.

RELATED: This State Is Home To The Largest Marijuana Black Market

Once licensed, the Burner Distros purchase large quantities of cannabis from cultivators within the State. By law, Burner Distros are responsible for paying all mandated taxes although they “may or may not pay” them, alleged the Plaintiff.

HNHPC is informed and believes the system implemented by the DCC, called “METRC,” can be re-designed to identify Burner Distros, but it would require the State to amend its current agreement with the developer of METRC.

RELATED: Marijuana Legalization Makes Black Market Weed Cheaper, Heroin More Expensive

In addition, the suit alleges that the DCC and the State have purposely turned a blind eye to illegal Burner Distros in order to keep excess cultivation tax money flowing in.

“This leads to two inevitable and ultimately devastating consequences,” claims the suit.

  • A cheaper illicit-market cannabis undercuts the legal industry, for starters.
  • A huge hit to state tax revenue, which the suit estimates could be in the “hundreds of millions of dollars.”

The practical result: The legal market has been propping up the illicit market instead of replacing it, said Elliot Lewis, CEO of Catalyst Cannabis Co., a California retail chain that operates six stores. Catalyst’s parent company, HNHPC, is the plaintiff in the suit, per MJBiz.

Marijuana Legalization Makes Black Market Weed Cheaper, Heroin More Expensive
Photo by Matthew Karila via Unsplash

“More legal product is going out of the state than is being sold legally in the state,” Lewis added. “The only question is, is it two times, three times, four times?”

Industry executives say the lawsuit is important because it exposes a problem that state regulators and lawmakers need to address.

“I’m really happy this lawsuit is coming to light because it’ll force the state to act,” said Vince Ning, CEO of Oakland-based marijuana distributor Nabis.

Others in the industry seem to agree that the lawsuit is exposing a serious flaw in the regulatory system that is “cutting the financial legs out from under the legal market,” wrote MJBiz Daily.

This article originally appeared on Benzinga and has been reposted with permission.

New Report Says Medical Cannabis Consumers Spend More

Given the astronomical growth spurt of new adult-use markets, however, the latest findings suggest that medical cannabis will be lucky to maintain its 10-20 % of total market share.

Cannabis data and analytics specialist Headset just released its latest report comparing U.S. medical and recreational cannabis market development, bearing results that reveal sales patterns and unifying trends across the industry.  The report’s findings are grounded in the context of the predominant pattern of a three-step process in cannabis market development, including prohibition, medical access, and adult-use legalization.

Though there are exceptions to this evolution where markets leapfrog medical use and go straight from cannabis prohibition to adult-use legalization, flagship states like California, which approved medical use in 1996 but took another 20 years to allow adult-use cannabis, follow a more predictable pattern. The report compares California’s slower rollout to Illinois accelerated process, evident in its shorter six-year span between medical and recreational legalization.

Green Wednesday Cannabis Sales Blow Away Black Friday
Photo by Ivan-balvan/Getty Images

The Medical To Rec Jump

Due to the time-tested predictability of this market pattern, industry analysts are using it to make sense of the past, paint a clearer picture of the present, and forecast future sales patterns in states such as New York, New Jersey, and Montana, which will all be transitioning to recreational use this year. Headset’s report also looks at cannabis markets in Illinois and Michigan, which made the medical-to-recreational transition fairly recently, and Colorado and Oregon, which jumped on that bandwagon much sooner.

Overall, analytics show significant growth when markets first transition to adult-use, as illustrated by Illinois’ 226% gain in the period between the January 2020 launch of their recreational market to July 2021. Michigan’s recreational use program may have had a more sluggish start, but its total adult-use sales still saw a whopping increase of 1077% over the same period.

RELATED: 4 Tips For First-Time Medical Marijuana Patients

The impact of adult-use legalization on the medical market is less predictable and more state-specific. While Illinois medical use sales initially held steady once adult-use legalization passed, Michigan saw 75% growth in medical sales between January 2020 and July 2021. Still, the proportion of total cannabis sales to medical patients in Michigan has steadily declined since the introduction of the recreational market, and Illinois saw a steady decline over the first quarter resulting in an all-time low of 20.9% in July 2021.

RELATED: Can You Use Your Medical Marijuana Card In Other States?

However, Colorado and Oregon, two of the most mature recreational markets in the country, offer some evidence that adult-use legalization is not necessarily a death knell for medical use. Oregon’s medical sales have held steady at 8-12% since the beginning of 2020 with Colorado topping that over the previous twelve months at between 18-20%.

medical marijuana
Photo by LPETTET/Getty Images

Medical Patients Spend More

Buying behavior differences between recreational and medical use consumers can impact the market as well. Headset data shows that medical consumers tend to purchase more product at one time (a metric they refer to as “basket size”) than recreational consumers, giving Oregon as a prime example, where pre-tax average basket size for medical patients over a 90 day period was a staggering 99% larger than that of recreational use customers. Consumer differences carried over into preferred consumables as well, with medical patients trending higher in concentrate consumption versus the recreational user predilection for edibles and pre-rolls.

In the end, lower taxes, higher potency THC products and more knowledgeable staff and sales experience give the medical use market enough of an edge that it shows some promise of holding its own, even with the advent of adult-use legalization. Given the astronomical growth spurt of new adult-use markets, however, Headset’s latest findings suggest that medical cannabis will be lucky to maintain its 10-20 % of total market share.

This article originally appeared on Green Market Report and has been reposted with permission.

Golfers Say CBD Is A Hole In One

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Golfers, who often play into their retirement years, use CBD to treat mental and physical pains just like any other consumer might.

By Andrew Ward

Professional golf is one of, if not the most, cannabis-friendly globally played sports today. While Olympians and athletes in other sports continue to be suspended for cannabis use, several pro golfers and the Professional Golf Association (PGA) have largely embraced CBD and its $2.8 billion global market value.

Still, skepticism remains as the bond between pro golf and CBD seems to forge stronger over time.

1 in 5 Golfers Use Marijuana In The Past Year
Photo by Court Cook via Unsplash

Several top names in CBD and golf have come together in recent years. cbdMD, Inc.boasts an array of athletes, including two-time Masters winner Bubba Watson, who partnered with the company in 2019. Cativa CBD added 2009 tour Rookie of the Year, Marc Leishman, as a global spokesperson that year as well.

The deals were announced despite the PGA telling Marijuana Moment that it had warned players about CBD use in April 2019.

Kadenwoodand its athlete-centric brand Level Select added 2015 Players Championship winner Rickie Fowler as a brand ambassador in 2020. In 2021, Catriona Matthews OBE signed on as a brand ambassador for the UK’s Golfers CBD brand.

Erick Dickens, Kadenwood CEO and co-founder, said that Fowler is one of several athlete partnerships “that illustrate the brand’s commitment to integrating CBD into the mainstream sports world.”

Some are taking their involvement further. Ten-year LPGA pro, Amelia Lewis became an investor and vice president of CBD brand Zeal Pure — a brand operated by her mother. Others include Darren Clarke, 2011 Open Championship winner, who launched his Darren Clarke CBD brand in July 2021.

The PGA tour also got involved, with PlusCBD Oil, a CV Sciences, Inc company, announced as the January 2020 Farmers Insurance Open sponsor. The PGA also agreed to a three-year partnership, sponsorship and education deal with European CBD brand Cannaraythat year.

Why Golfers And The Professional Tours Turn To CBD

Golfers often use CBD to treat mental and physical pains like any other consumer might.

Alan Rownan, head of sports at Euromonitor International, said that the profile of an average golfer is an athlete often playing into their retirement years, setting it apart from most other sports. He said the purported benefits address long-term symptoms faced by golfers as they age.

RELATED: Why Are Professional Golfers Obsessed With CBD Oil?

He added that CBD acceptance plays into the sport’s recent initiative to grow the game. “From a marketing standpoint, this revolves around how to become more progressive,” he stated.

Still, he said the sport’s CBD connection must grow to meet the sponsorship footprint made by finance and insurance sponsorships, which Euromonitor reports are above 10% of deals across the global tours. Consumer health accounted for just 1%.

Reluctance Remains

Despite the growing acceptance among many in the sport and global governing bodies, like the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), some remain uncertain.

PGA professional, Will Shaw, is a UK-based Ph.D. in biomedical science and founder of Golf Insider UK’s performance center.

Photo by sydney Rae via Unsplash

He said golf “becomes a game of if they can control their arousal, anxiety and thought process to execute when it counts,” and that CBD is marketed as a product capable of facilitating those outcomes.

RELATED: 1 In 5 Professional Golfers Used Marijuana This Year

Shaw remains “highly cautious” over a lack of clinical scientific studies. He’d like to see more analysis on the short- and long-term effects CBD has on golfers.

“When you dig into the references, you’ll notice they are either solely 1) golf performance studies or 2) clinical CBD studies,” he stated. Until he sees peer-reviewed research directly applied to golfers, Shaw says he’ll remain skeptical.

Shaw reports that UK golf bodies are pushing for CBD use. “I personally receive one to two emails a week for CBD placements on my own website,” Shaw added.

Anecdotally, he doesn’t recall any top-tier pros using CBD despite some marketing products.

“I could be wrong, but I feel the sponsorship deals with more elite players are there to try to sell this to the mass market of everyday players, rather than this being for elite players,” he opined.

There are some anecdotal use cases from pro golfers. In 2020, Billy Horschel, winner of the 2021 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play event, told the New York Times that he is convinced CBD helped him break a six-month streak without a top-eight finish on tour. After using CBD, Horschel finished in the top-eight four times over four months.

Horschel’s website lists partnerships with Ralph Lauren Corp, Velocity Global and Titleist, among others.

This article originally appeared on Benzinga and has been reposted with permission.

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