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San Francisco 49er Great Joe Montana Invests in Cannabis

Joe Montana

The Super Bowl is coming up and one of the all-time clutch Super Bowl quarterbacks, Joe Montana, has made huge news by announcing his investment in the cannabis industry. Football players subject their bodies to a massive amount of punishment, so it shouldn’t be a surprise to see football players join the cannabis industry, but Montana is the most prominent player to join a fight that includes former Chicago Bears Super Bowl QB Jim McMahon and former Heisman Trophy winner and rushing champion Ricky Williams. Montana is part of an investment team that is putting up $75 million into an integrated company called Caliva, as Esquire reported:

Joe Montana, football legend and four-time Super Bowl champion with the San Francisco 49ers, is getting into the weed game. It was announced this week that Montana was part of a $75 million investment made into a California marijuana company. (It’s all above board on the West Coast.) The amount he contributed is unknown, but we do know this is the second time he’s dumped money into the marijuana industry—the first was into a cannabis media company called Herb in 2017.

Montana said that he believes his recent investment is supporting an industry that “can provide relief to many people and can make a serious impact on opioid use or addiction,” ESPN reports. It is perhaps not a coincidence that a handful of retired football players have said they prefer managing their pain, wrought from years playing a physically brutal sport, with medical marijuana rather than prescribed opioids.

The cannabis company itself is called Caliva. It is based in San Jose, and plans to use the influx of money to start work on a farm, a retail store, a distribution center, and even a delivery service. It already distributes its own products—including a pack of doobies meant to enjoy while walking a dog, called Dogwalkers, and vape oil—around the state.

Montana, who not only starred for the 49ers, but also led the Kansas City Chiefs (my team!) to the AFC Championship game in 1993, will hopefully bring more mainstream attention to the legalization movement and the need for the NFL, and our entire nation, to move away from addictive and deadly opioids. With CBS rejecting a medical cannabis ad during the Super Bowl, yet collecting millions for alcohol advertisements, we certainly have a long way to go.

Step by step, we are making progress and Montana should be welcomed with open arms into an athlete fraternity that includes fellow football players, but also stars from other sports, dominated by NBA players, such as former All-Star and Sixth Man of the Year, Clifford Robinson, Hall of Famer Bill Walton (must be something about playing in Portland, Oregon!), as well as John Salley an NBA Champion with the Detroit Pistons, who spoke at the International Cannabis Business Conference in San Francisco last year. No word yet whether Cool Joe will be joining other industry movers and shakers at the ICBC in San Francisco this February 7th-8th, but we shouldn’t be surprised to see him there as there will be no better place to network with other top investors and entrepreneurs.

Tickets are still on sale for the ICBC in San Francisco, so get your tickets fast before the event sales out. After San Francisco, the ICBC will be heading to Barcelona, Berlin, Zurich, and Vancouver

Clifford Robinson, Joe Montana, John Salley