41°F
weather icon Cloudy

Lights FC partner with Las Vegas marijuana dispensary

Updated April 13, 2018 - 3:09 pm

The Lights FC hashtag #LightItUp just got a whole new meaning.

The Lights on Friday became the first professional sports team in the U.S. to have a marijuana dispensary as a sponsor, announcing a partnership with Nuwu Cannabis Marketplace.

The team released a promotional video to go with the announcement that included mascot Cash the Soccer Rocker and team llamas Dottie and Dolly visiting the dispensary. Within three hours of its release, the video reached nearly 20,000 views.

“We love Las Vegas. We love downtown Las Vegas. We’re not ashamed of where we’re from. We fully embrace it. Nuwu has invested all sorts of money and resources into growing downtown,” Lights owner Brett Lashbrook said. “It’s a traditional sports sponsorship. It’s in a completely regulated industry and this is part of the destigmatization of it.”

As part of the agreement, Nuwu will have a sign in right field during Lights games. The shop will be a short trip for fans as it is two blocks from Cashman Field.

Cash tweeted #LightItUp after the announcement, hinting he had a good time at the store. It should be interesting to watch the mascot’s behavior at the team’s next home game at 8 p.m. Saturday at Cashman Field.

Contact Ben Gotz at bgotz@reviewjournal.com. Follow @BenSGotz on Twitter.

THE LATEST
Lights FC win over Rio Grande Valley FC

Top scorer Irvin Raul Parra went into a three-way tie for most goals in Lights history as the Lights FC won 2-1 over Rio Grande Valley FC and extended their road losing streak to five games in a United Soccer League match Saturday in front of 8,818 at Cashman Field.

Tacoma ends winless skid, beats Las Vegas Lights

Substitute Alfonso Ocampo-Chavez scored twice in the second half to help the Tacoma Defiance end a 14-match winless streak with a 4-1 victory over the Lights FC in a United Soccer League match Wednesday in Tacoma, Washington.

Las Vegas officials to attend MLS All-Star Week

MLS announced Monday that officials from as Vegas, Charlotte, Sacramento, St. Louis and “other potential expansion markets” will attend its All-Star Week as the league attempts to expand from 27 teams to 30.