Wolf
100% Texan
I didn't know this. This is an article from 2010 after Braylon Edwards was arrested .
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/commentary/news/story?page=jackson/101001
These things happened despite the fact most teams in the league offer some form of car service intended to keep players (and coaches, trainers, scouts and front office executives) away from the kind of incident that Edwards found himself in last week. The league has a contract with a company through which individual teams can subcontract car services. (The NFLPA recently ended its relationship with Safe Rides Solutions and contracted with another company called Corporate Security Solutions; the NFL still uses Safe Rides Solutions for all non-players and NFL corporate employees.) The Jets are among the 22 teams in the league, according to information given to The Associated Press, which provide car service to players for their personal use. The Jets use PlayerProtect, a New York/New Jersey firm that provides armed security from current or former law-enforcement agents and a 24-hour driving service.
On the surface, it's simple: Been out and drinking? Don't drive. Call the car service.
But clearly, these services aren't always being used. Edwards could have called PlayerProtect, but didn't. Nor did the other players and club personnel who've been stopped recently for suspicion of driving while intoxicated play it safe.
So the question is: Why not? Why wouldn't players take advantage of that protection, especially in the wake of the tragic March 2009 accident involving Donté Stallworth that resulted in the death of a pedestrian and a guilty plea from Stallworth on a DUI manslaughter charge?
Why isn't a program that seems to make so much sense being used?
A number of current and former players spoke on that question, mostly off the record. Their reasons included everything from an unwillingness "to leave a $400,000 Bentley in the parking lot of a strip club overnight" in favor of a safe ride home to the simple inconvenience of having to get a ride back to their cars the next day in time to make it to a practice or workout. Some of the players pointed to a fear of ramifications from the club if it found out through a car service's records where they'd been and what they'd been doing.
It isn't that these players aren't concerned about their own safety or the safety of others in these situations. Most of them take the dangers of drunken driving seriously. They are also seriously concerned about issues of privacy and confidentiality.
"It's like someone is keeping tabs on us," Houston Texans tackle Ephraim Salaam said. "What we do on our private time should not always be privy to our employers."
One player, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, used the Edwards situation to make that point. He said Edwards wasn't punished by the Jets for being issued a DUI. Instead, he was held out of the starting lineup against the Dolphins on Sunday night because, according to general manager Mike Tannenbaum, he had been out too late.
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/commentary/news/story?page=jackson/101001