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NFL Concussions: Players Fear, Hide Brain Injuries

HOWARD FENDRICH | 11/18/09 05:42 PM | AP

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Nfl Concussions

Washington Redskins kick returner Rock Cartwright remembers his brain "shaking like a bell" when he was walloped in a game against the New York Giants a few years ago.

"You know how a bell vibrates? That's how my brain was going at that time," he said. "I think five minutes later, I came back to myself. I went back out there and played football."

What Cartwright never did when the hit happened? He never told Washington's medical staff his head ached.

He's not alone. Thirty of 160 NFL players surveyed by The Associated Press from Nov. 2-15 replied that they have hidden or played down the effects of a concussion.

The AP embarked on the most extensive series of interviews about concussions since the subject became a major issue this season, talking to five players on each of the 32 teams – nearly 10 percent of the league – seeking out a mix of positions and NFL experience to get a cross-section of players. While not a scientific sampling, many of the players answered with startling candor.

"You get back up, and things are spinning," Giants backup quarterback David Carr said, "but you don't tell anyone."

Now the NFL wants players to keep tabs on each other and tell their teams if they believe someone else has a head injury.

Told of the AP's findings, NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said in an e-mail that commissioner Roger Goodell spoke to NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith last week about "the importance of players reporting head injuries, no matter how minor they believe they might be. The commissioner said that process needs to include players observing and reporting to the team medical staff when a teammate shows symptoms of a concussion."

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What emerged from the AP's interviews was a wide-ranging, unprecedented look at the way active players think about head injuries in a world where "getting dinged" and "seeing stars" – and the potential long-term effects of concussions – are deemed a frightening but perhaps inevitable consequence of their job.

"Part of the game," Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback Deshea Townsend said.

Indeed it is. In recent weeks, high-profile players Brian Westbrook of the Philadelphia Eagles and Clinton Portis of the Redskins – neither of whom was surveyed by the AP – have been sidelined by concussions. Westbrook missed two games, then returned Sunday, only to leave in the second half with another concussion.

The NFL says its data shows an average of one reported concussion every other game – about 120 to 130 concussions per regular season.

Of the 160 players interviewed by the AP, half said they've had at least one concussion playing football; 61 said they missed playing time because of the injury.

"We're obviously concerned by the data and by the information," NFLPA assistant executive director George Atallah said. "We believe that there's more relevant data and information that the league has on these issues that we'd like for them to share with us in confidence."

During the AP interviews, some players quickly replied they never had a concussion, then realized they weren't sure, such as Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive tackle Chris Hovan, a 10-year veteran, who said: "I probably was just too young and too dumb to realize it."

Not that it's necessarily easy to miss – or mask – the symptoms.

"Everyone can clearly see that you have a concussion: You are walking around like you are drunk," Seattle Seahawks defensive back Roy Lewis said.

Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Bobby Wade told the AP he's never tried to hide a concussion but is sure it happens frequently in the NFL. "You see guys with their eyes rolling in the back of their heads," he said. "You see guys shaking their head trying to get it together. If there was a doctor evaluating them, I'm sure they would say, 'Your brain has taken trauma.'"

Players acknowledged staying on the field despite feeling "dazed" or "woozy" or having blurred vision, because, in Miami Dolphins guard Justin Smiley's words, "It's what you're taught."

Some talked about not wanting to let down the team. Others mentioned the importance of avoiding any sign of weakness in a sport where "warrior" and "gladiator" are viewed as compliments of the highest order.

And then there is the fear of losing a roster spot in a league where the absence of guaranteed contracts makes some players willing to sacrifice their well-being somewhere down the road for a paycheck in the here-and-now.

"If you're a 'bubble' guy, you might want to be out there," Tennessee Titans long snapper Ken Amato said, "so they don't have to bring someone else in."

Players spoke frankly about being afraid of getting the sorts of long-term problems seen in boxers; about hoping they will be able to remember their career highlights once they retire; about their wives' constant concern; about whether they'll be able to see their "kids grow up and have kids," as Houston Texans offensive lineman Eric Winston put it.

Others told of memory loss during and after games, of not being able to recall what particular play calls meant, or of "talking gibberish" to teammates on the field.

"The only thing I remember is coming out of the tunnel at the beginning of the game. And then – a big gap," St. Louis Rams linebacker David Vobora said of a concussion he got this season. "But I played the whole game, until the last series, when I started asking guys questions, and they looked at me like I was crazy."

Asked whether they worry more about concussions than any other injury, 30 of the interviewed players said yes.

"It's hard," Baltimore Ravens center Matt Birk said, "to rehab your brain."

Vonnie Holliday, a defensive end for the Denver Broncos, likened the pounding his head takes to "being in a car crash 20, 30 times a game."

"I do often think about the damage I'm doing to my brain and my nervous system," Holliday said. "When does it catch up with you?"

Two-thirds of the players the AP interviewed said the NFL is significantly safer than it used to be with regard to the risk of concussions, thanks primarily to changes in rules and equipment, particularly helmets and mouthpieces.

But there are caveats.

"Players are bigger, faster, stronger," Baltimore's Birk said, echoing other athletes. "It's simple physics: Force equals mass times acceleration. It is a violent game, and there are inherent risks to the game itself. ... Collisions are becoming more intense."

About half of the surveyed players said they've been paying attention to recent news about NFL head injuries.

That includes a congressional hearing last month, when Rep. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif., said the NFL's resistance to accepting a link between multiple head injuries in NFL players and brain disorders such as dementia and Alzheimer's reminded her of tobacco companies denying a link between smoking and disease. At that hearing, Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., asked the NFL and its players' union to turn over medical records for an independent review.

As attention to concussions has increased, so have the efforts by the NFL and the players' union to address the issue – including working to update the joint letter and brochure they sent to all locker rooms in 2007 to educate players about head injuries.

Goodell told Congress he expects to announce "shortly" new funding for concussion research and that the NFL is trying to learn about "new practice techniques that will reduce the risk of head trauma outside of the games themselves."

Dr. Joseph Maroon, the Steelers' team doctor and member of an NFL committee on concussions, called the subject a "major priority" for the league. In a telephone interview, he cited an ongoing study in which helmet manufacturers' products are being tested and noted the NFL mandate of 2007 that every player undergo neurological testing in the preseason to establish a base line against which results can be compared in case of a concussion.

Dr. Thom Mayer, the NFLPA's medical director, said there are "good trends" in data he has seen, showing that "it appears that concussions are slightly down from where they have been" and that "it appears players are being held out, when they have a concussion, longer – maybe twice as long." He did not give specific numbers.

In the AP interviews, players with more than a half-dozen seasons in the NFL said the league, its teams and the union do take the issue more seriously now than at the start of their careers.

"They are more careful, the doctors and trainers," Chicago Bears defensive tackle Anthony Adams said. "They're better (at) watching for symptoms of what might be a concussion."

Still, concerns abound.

One player voiced his feelings this way: "It worries me, because I have aspirations after the game to work. I'd like to be able to remember everything. I feel like in some ways, my short-term memory isn't as good as it was, already. I don't know if that's from getting older. I don't know. But you only get one brain, obviously."

The words of a grizzled veteran? No. That's 26-year-old Colin Allred, a Titans linebacker midway through his second NFL season.

Other players discussed the difficulties of determining when someone does, indeed, have a concussion and nervousness about accumulating multiple head injuries.

"The unfortunate thing in our business, more times than not, is that either guys don't know it or don't let somebody know it and continually play through those kinds of situations, where it's week after week, it's hit after hit, where they're not coming out of games and they never get healed," said Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner, who's had two concussions in a 12-year NFL career. "And I think that's probably – and I'm just guessing – where the biggest effects are down the road, is guys that may not have a record that they had 10 concussions but probably had that or more so and just played right through it."

Several players said they refuse to allow themselves to contemplate the dangers of their sport because it would become impossible to perform well while devoting any shred of thought to concussions.

"You could easily die in a car," New England Patriots tight end Benjamin Watson said, "but you don't think about it, because you're focused on what you're doing."

There also is some dark humor.

One player joked about eating through a straw at age 45, and Dallas Cowboys linebacker Keith Brooking said: "I tend to use it as an excuse with my wife when I forget something. She tells me to do something, and (I say), 'I've been hit in the head a lot, Baby. Sorry. I forgot.'"

Cowboys backup quarterback Jon Kitna spoke in more serious terms.

"I firmly believe you can be paralyzed on any play, and I believe there's going to come a time when somebody's going to die on the field from a hit on the field. Because the game is getting so fast, the big guys are getting bigger, and the little guys are getting littler, but the collisions are getting greater. That's the scariest thing for me," Kitna said. "What else are you going to do? Shut the game down?"

___

AP Sports writers Andrew Bagnato, Bob Baum, Gregg Bell, Tim Booth, Cliff Brunt, Dave Campbell, Tom Canavan, Mike Cranston, Schuyler Dixon, Josh Dubow, R.B. Fallstrom, David Ginsburg, Fred Goodall, Pat Graham, George Henry, Chris Jenkins, Larry Lage, Mark Long, Michael Marot, Brett Martel, Janie McCauley, Alan Robinson, Kristie Rieken, Andrew Seligman, Arnie Stapleton, Doug Tucker, Howard Ulman, Teresa M. Walker, Dennis Waszak Jr., John Wawrow, Joseph White, Bernie Wilson, Steven Wine and Tom Withers, and AP freelance writers Dave Hogg, Josh Katzowitz and Mike Sharesky contributed to this report.

Washington Redskins kick returner Rock Cartwright remembers his brain "shaking like a bell" when he was walloped in a game against the New York Giants a few years ago. "You know how a bell vibrates? ...
Washington Redskins kick returner Rock Cartwright remembers his brain "shaking like a bell" when he was walloped in a game against the New York Giants a few years ago. "You know how a bell vibrates? ...
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- kevaney I'm a Fan of kevaney permalink

I am a Division 1 college basketball player and have had seen my fair share of head injuries. One of my teammates was just diagnosed with her third concussion in two years and the medical staff is contemplating ending her career early for fear of what type of damage she has already done and what more she could possibly do if she continues to play. Now, this is basketball, a relatively non contact sport. I can't even begin to fathom the damage that is being done to the brain's of these young men where most of their job descriptions basically entail beating their opponent up on a daily basis.

Before reading this I was aware, like many, that there was a serious problem in the NFL with head injuries and them going unnoticed or undiagnosed, but I did not know that they were this prevalent.

I like that they are making strides to help combat this epidemic, but now everything is surfacing about players hiding their head injuries and playing through them, I think that more drastic measure need to be taken and soon.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 AM on 11/23/2009
- GwentBoy I'm a Fan of GwentBoy permalink

I played rugby for 20 years, during which time I took --- and dished out --- some pretty nasty medicine. On one occasion, after I got clobbered, I jumped to my feet and started running sideways. I thought that the field was sloping at a 45-degree angle to my left and I was trying to compensate for it. My coach yelled at me to stop clowning around, and I never came off the field until the game ended, although I have precious little memory of what happened that day. Next day, I was back on the field playing as hard as ever.

Sometimes it's ignorance that is the enemy, not your opponent on the field.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 AM on 11/19/2009
- KIVPossum I'm a Fan of KIVPossum 127 fans permalink
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Football is a brutal contact sport and there will be injuries. The players pocket big bucks to take the risks. The only solution is to have a player checked out by a physician (not one hired by the team) before they are allowed to reenter the game, much like race drivers have to do after a crash.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 AM on 11/19/2009
- ladyvader I'm a Fan of ladyvader 112 fans permalink
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Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel, a show on HBO has had several segments over the past few years about this very topic. The NFL is slowly coming around on head injuries. The last segment they air was about concussions in high school players. Even high school players don't say anything about head injuries. They want to play and if they say anything they will not play.

This is something that has to start when the players are younger before high school in order to get any real change. This is one topic that does not start with the NFL, but pee wee football and high school.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 AM on 11/19/2009
- Mort I'm a Fan of Mort 38 fans permalink
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Grown men playing children's games for a living.... . I'm sorry, but we pay them WAY too much and it isn't worth ruining their health or lives for. We put so much emphasis on games & entertainment and almost none on things that really matter. No wonder teachers, cops and firefighters have to scrape by to put food on the table while we shower athletes and actors with millions and undeserved hero status.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 AM on 11/19/2009
- KellyJohnson I'm a Fan of KellyJohnson 5 fans permalink

This is too sad for words.....I don't enjoy football as much because of potential catastrophic injury on each play......

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 AM on 11/19/2009
- squiems I'm a Fan of squiems 10 fans permalink

I've received a concussion playing rugby. I was so dazed, when I received the ball next, I had to really focus to decide what direction I was supposed to run in. My cognitive abilities were markedly decreased over the next week or so. However, I went out and played again as soon as I was cleared to. Stupid? Crazy? No; it's just that I love the game and accept the risks inherent in it. Football players are the same way

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 AM on 11/19/2009
- jsarets I'm a Fan of jsarets 205 fans permalink

How long before NFL players have to wear some sort of HANS (head and neck support) device like they make race car drivers wear? It would be a modification to the helmet and the shoulder pads designed to transfer impact loads from the helmet into the body, bypassing the head and neck.

Some shoulder pads already have a part sticking up behind the neck that prevents the head from being knocked backward too far. That shape can further improved to handle loads into the face/chin.

Then they'd need a "skirt" along the bottom edge of the helmet that catches against a "collar" around the neck of the shoulder pads to handle compressive loads into the top of the head.

Finally, players would be trained to brace their new helmets against their new shoulder pads when they hit or anticipate being hit so that any head impact goes directly into their shoulders.

Motorsport has made remarkable progress with head and neck protection in the past 15 years. Racing drivers walk away from high-speed impacts with g-forces that almost certainly exceed those encountered by professional football players. With a few equipment modifications, the NFL can have its own version of the HANS device to protect its valuable human assets.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 PM on 11/18/2009
- Shirley Fisk I'm a Fan of Shirley Fisk 14 fans permalink
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11/18/09
10:21pm
Alexandria,VA

How can anybody play football after a concussion? Six months ago I suffered a concussion and was afraid to walk down the stairs for weeks.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 PM on 11/18/2009
- Danilo-11 I'm a Fan of Danilo-11 3 fans permalink

I guarantee that the NFL tells them to not say anything. Because you are never going to find somebody making over $1 million a year that will "downplay a concussion".

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 PM on 11/18/2009
- bobste I'm a Fan of bobste permalink

I never played college ball and up, but in high school I was a starting player. At 128 lbs, I played wideout, flanker and returned punts and kickoffs. During my 36 games in high school I was knocked unconscious nine times. On numerous occasions I lost my helmet on hits. I never left the game for more than one play. That was a long time ago (late 70's), so the rules were different and certainly slower at the high school level.

I few years after high school, I began to notice increasing hearing loss in one ear. Then I had a horrible attack of dizziness that led to a lot of vomiting (like sea sickness). I thought it was just the flu, but when it happened a few months later, I decided to get it checked out. When doctors noticed my hearing loss they suspected a benign tumor on the base of the brain stem. Fortunately, an MRI revealed there was no tumor. However, the attacks of vertigo progressively got worse and more frequent. The seasickness part was the worst. When the dizziness hit, it would be just a minute before I'd vomit. Sometimes the dry heaves would go on for eight hours. I lost 23 lbs in 30 days. Football did this to me.

I can't fit the rest, so please visit here to read the rest: http://frightnight.wordpress.com/

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 PM on 11/18/2009
- JR Jake I'm a Fan of JR Jake 9 fans permalink

Football players learn at an early age they are going to take some severe and brutal hits. If they talk about it, complain or baby it; they usually don't play as many minutes after that. It is a unspoken rule where the coach will say little, but you won't play. They will sit you out, and so from that point forward even though the tweetie birds are chirping, you keep playing.

I believe now there is real documentation that we did not have before, and with the high quality of players everywhere, more attention will be given the injury, the athlete and the person. Football is a brutal sport and much has improved in the equipment. However the players today are huge compared to what they were 20 years ago.

What guidelines need to be adopted regarding head injuries. I believe everything is being done and as technology improves in equipment more safety features will be added to minimize the risk to the player and the team.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 11/18/2009
- dentuso I'm a Fan of dentuso 429 fans permalink
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I've had four concussions, two major.

Since then (and progressing for the twenty years since) I've found myself more prone to irritability. I believe my sense of exhaustion stems from them. Most sadly - I cannot remember the simplest word in the world. I can be speaking to a group of ten, and not be able to drum up the word "dog" for the life of me. Most know my little word-find problem, and it's a running joke for most. But it's frustrating beyond belief.

Anyone who tells you there aren't permanent effects to concussions is wrong. They're serious, and life-changing for some.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 PM on 11/18/2009
- bcarb I'm a Fan of bcarb 19 fans permalink
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I think it's a great idea that players keep an eye on each other, as long as the medical staff do also. You can see that vacant look on the player, as a TV veiwer, sure hope they don't have a lot of trouble identifying it face-to-face.

Anyone remember years ago when Favre suffered a concussion, was taken out of the game, the back up quarterback went in and ran a play or two. No one was watching Favre on the side line and being the fighter that he is, ran onto the field, told the backup ( I think it was Rogers) he was back in and proceeded to throw a touchdown. He of course couldn't remember the play after. I just remember thinking, whatever yahoo that was watching Favre should have been canned. THis is serious stuff and it's about time that the NFL took some action.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 PM on 11/18/2009
- Kiernan7 I'm a Fan of Kiernan7 permalink

The atrocious figure is that NFL players have a life expectancy of between 55-57 years.

Normal American males life to 77 on average. This is a sport ready for the heap like bullfighting and gladiators.

http://www.seattlepi.com/football/362412_nflhealth09.html

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 09:07 PM on 11/18/2009
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