The opioid crisis has a new opponent: Long Island’s wrestling community.
Friends of Long Island Wrestling, a Wantagh-based nonprofit with more than 11,000 members, has partnered with the Nassau County Police Department and the National Wrestling Hall of Fame to highlight drug prevention and education.
The campaign will educate middle and high school students about the dangers of opioid abuse and the best ways to prevent addiction, including sports like wrestling that promote pride and self control.
“We want wrestlers to be a solution to this epidemic and not part of the problem,” said Friends of Long Island Wrestling executive board member Kevin Murphy at a news conference Wednesday at Nassau Community College.
Weidman, a collegiate wrestling All-American, said the message of “saying no to drugs” was instilled in him at a young age while playing Little League Baseball in his hometown of Baldwin.
“So I am hoping that if we have the opportunity to save just one kid’s life, and make an impact on any kid out there, it’s all worth doing,” Weidman said Wednesday.
Opioid overdoses have claimed nearly 3,700 lives on Long Island since 2010, but law enforcement officials said the tide may finally be turning.
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