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Bradshaw Claims Players Were Shot Up With Unknown Substances Pre-Game

Joe Rogan Experience · #2511 - Terry Bradshaw · June 9, 2026
Bradshaw Claims Players Were Shot Up With Unknown Substances Pre-Game
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience
#2511 - Terry Bradshaw
"We played Cincinnati one year, and the night before the game, there's a lineup of players going into a room to be shot up. A lot of tattoos in here. A lot of tattoos. You mean the building? Jamie's tattoo-free. Yeah. A lot of tattoos."
Bradshaw revealed that before games in the 1970s, entire lineups of NFL players would be injected with unidentified substances by team doctors, which he repeatedly referred to only as 'stuff.' He admitted players never questioned what was being injected and considered it normal practice. This disclosure raises serious questions about medical oversight and player safety in professional football during that era.

About this episode

Joe Rogan sat down with NFL Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw for a wide-ranging and unexpectedly candid conversation that veered from football brutality to bourbon, faith, and the dark underbelly of 1970s professional sports. Bradshaw, now 76 and still working as a Fox Sports analyst, opened up about the shocking medical practices of his playing days, revealing that he once played an entire playoff game after being knocked unconscious in the first quarter and that teams routinely lined players up to be injected with unidentified substances before games. The four-time Super Bowl champion also disclosed ongoing health battles including rheumatoid arthritis that spread after cancer treatment forced him off medication, and confessed he refuses modern stem cell therapy despite chronic pain, citing his faith and skepticism. The conversation took lighter turns through stories of fishing with a baby Jesus figurine, getting burglarized six times and shot at with a shotgun, and Bradshaw's 43-year career giving corporate speeches that now command top dollar. Throughout, Bradshaw displayed the self-deprecating humor and Southern storytelling that made him a broadcasting icon, while offering rare glimpses into the physical and psychological toll of football's most punishing era. Rogan pushed back on several of Bradshaw's medical stances, particularly around stem cells and ivermectin, creating moments of genuine tension mixed with laughter as the two navigated their differences.

Key takeaways

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