COLUMBUS, Ohio—Cleveland Browns and Cincinnati Bengals fans can’t legally use medical marijuana to treat the suffering caused by their teams, the State Medical Board of Ohio ruled Wednesday.

However, board members voted to moved autism and anxiety a step closer to becoming qualifying conditions to receive a medical-marijuana recommendation from a doctor, according to Orie Givens of Spectrum News.

Vincent Morano of Cincinnati submitted a half-serious application to the medical board to allow medical marijuana for fans of Ohio’s two NFL teams.

“I know some people think it was maybe wrong because there are real medical conditions,” Morano told cleveland.com last month, noting he only spent 15 minutes on the application. “At the same time, could it help? Yeah. Could it be considered a medical condition? Sure.”

The board voted to submit autism and anxiety for expert review as potentially qualifying conditions, Kevin Barry of WEWS-TV reported. Board members voted last September to reject recommending medical marijuana as treatment for either condition.

Cachexia, a wasting syndrome, was also approved for expert review by the board.

However, medical board members voted to reject depression, insomnia, and opioid use disorder as potential qualifying conditions, reported Jackie Borchardt of the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Read other recent Ohio marijuana stories:

African Americans to benefit most from Cleveland eliminating penalties for low-level marijuana possession

Ohio medical marijuana created an estimated 4,275 jobs: report

Cleveland City Council approves eliminating fines, jail time and criminal records for low level marijuana possession

Ohio medical marijuana 1 year in: What you need to know about successes, struggles of the state’s program