Fired Stars coach Montgomery going into rehab

Former Dallas Stars coach Jim Montgomery is entering rehabilitation for alcohol abuse, he said in a statement on Friday.

Montgomery, who was abruptly fired on Dec. 10 due to “unprofessional conduct,” says his dismissal was a “wake-up call.”

“It was also the appropriate call,” Montgomery said. “I let the team’s front office, staff and players down. More importantly, I let my wife and my family down. The team’s decision to end my role forced me to look into the mirror and decide whether I wanted to continue living a damaging lifestyle or get help. I decided to get help. I turned to professionals in the field of alcohol abuse for their guidance and counseling. It has been an overwhelming and a very humbling experience knowing that I am not alone.”

Stars general manager Jim Nill told the Dallas Morning News that the organization is “supportive of this decision by Jim.”

“We hope that by pursuing this help, he and his family will be stronger for it,” Nill said. He said he would have no further comment.

The Stars had been careful in how they characterized their reasoning for firing Montgomery, saying there was no criminal investigation and that no Stars employees were involved in Montgomery’s fireable offense. The decision was not based on performance either, as the Stars were in a playoff position when Montgomery was dismissed.

Montgomery, 50, was in his second season with the Stars after five seasons as coach of the University of Denver. He had two years left on his contract at $1.6 million per season. Montgomery was fired for cause, meaning the team is not on the hook for the salary.

Montgomery was arrested for DUI in Florida in 2008, an incident the Stars were aware of when they hired him.

Dallas finished fourth in the Central Division last season but made a run in the playoffs, losing in seven games in the second round to the eventual champion St. Louis Blues.

Rick Bowness has been serving as the Stars’ interim coach, and the team has gone 6-3-1 under his watch — including a 4-2 win over the Nashville Predators in the Winter Classic at the Cotton Bowl. The Stars are now in third place in the Central Division.

http://www.espn.com/espn/rss/news

This Year’s Must-Have Wellness Accessory? Narcan Dupes

Credit to Author: Harron Walker| Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2020 19:34:40 +0000

Now that we’ve decided to throw hair gummies, zoodles, and every other terrible 2010s wellness trend into a metaphorical burlap sack and toss ‘em into the nearest, equally metaphorical lake, we can start fresh and find some new, actually useful ones.

Enter Narcan dupes (hear me out… “Notcan”?), the potentially hottest wellness accessory of 2020. Narcan’s manufacturer, Emergent BioSolutions, has released control over the nasal spray technology used to administer the brand-name version of naloxone, an opioid overdose prevention drug, as the Associated Press reported on Thursday. This will allow other pharmaceutical companies to develop their own overdose antidote nasal sprays using nalmefene.

The new versions are probably dropping later this year thanks to a deal worked out between New York state attorney general Letitia James and Emergent BioSolutions. In a statement to The Niagara-Wheatfield Tribune, James explained that she pursued the agreement in order to address “the tragic, devastating effects of the opioid crisis,” which caused 42,000 deaths nationwide in 2016 alone. “With more companies able to access this easy-to-use technology, our hope is that we can reduce the number of opioid overdose deaths across New York and this nation and save millions of additional lives.”

Perhaps it’s fever-dreamy to say, but I’d love to see this lead to an explosion of Narcan-adajacent nasal sprays flooding the pharmaceutical market, customized and aestheticized by wellness influencers à la sheet masks and tinctures until they’re buried at the bottom of every girl (of any gender’s!) bag.

“I want to see Narcan become a ‘must-have’ accessory,” said Ripley Soprano, a 28-year-old harm reduction organizer from New York, who helped design and produce “Suck Dick Carry Narcan” stickers.

That said, we don’t have to wait for Emergent BioSolutions. “If folks want to get involved with harm reduction, [I recommend finding] their local harm reduction center or organization,” Soprano continued. “There's Narcan trainings at local libraries every week. If there isn't a harm reduction project or center in your community, I recommend looking into NEXT Distro, which does mail order Narcan to regions that don't have access.”

Sign up for our newsletter to get the best of VICE delivered to your inbox daily.

Follow Harron Walker on Twitter.

This article originally appeared on VICE US.

http://www.vice.com/en_ca/rss