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Dave Zirin

Dave Zirin

Posted: November 24, 2009 10:47 AM

The NFL's Concussion Conundrum

What's Your Reaction:

On Sunday, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell made a startling concession to medical ethics, one resisted by all of his predecessors. Goodell said that when a player sustains a concussion, teams will now be required to seek advice from "independent" neurologists. As the commissioner said on NBC's Football Night in America, "As we learn more and more, we want to give players the best medical advice. This is a chance for us to expand that and bring more people into the circle to make sure we're making the best decisions for our players in the long term."

There is a reason why this story made the front page of the New York Times. It marks a major change in policy and would be like the tobacco industry bringing the American Cancer Institute into its boardroom or Exxon Mobil stating that they needed more input from Greenpeace.

The official NFL line has always been that team doctors held no conflict of interest when evaluating players. The NFL said this despite the stories of former players suffering early-onset dementia at alarming rates and being told to "shake it off" as the ringing continued in their ears.

Former Commissioner Pete Rozelle ignored this issue even when players like the Colts' Hall of Fame tight end John Mackey was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia. Another former commissioner, Paul Tagliabue, did the same, even when Hall of Fame center Mike Webster died at age 50, homeless and incoherent. It has even been said that Webster was suffering from dementia when he was still an active player in the league.

And Goodell continued to defend the system even though Patriots linebacker Ted Johnson, who suffered from concussions, said that his coach Bill Belichick bullied him back into games (something Belichick denies). There was still no action taken after the 2006 suicide of Eagles pro-bowler Andre Waters, 44, whose brain tissue was that of an 80-year-old with Alzheimer's. The absence of medical oversight has been nothing short of breathtaking.

Goodell has been forced to shift his stance because the issue has simply reached a tipping point. Fittingly, New Yorker staff writer and bestselling author of The Tipping Point Malcolm Gladwell wrote a blistering critique of the NFL's treatment of ex-players last month, in the magazine, and concluded, "In the nineteenth century, dogfighting was [also] widely accepted by the American public. But we no longer find that kind of transaction morally acceptable in a sport."

I'm going to guess that the NFL has let its subscription to The New Yorker lapse. But they do have to care what Congress, the NFLPA union and former players are saying. In a hearing last month, The House Judiciary Committee flayed Goodell under the hot lights. It played footage of Dr. Ira Casson, chairman of the NFL's committee on concussions, saying that there was no connection between football and brain injuries, which is like saying there is no connection between smoking and lung cancer. When Goodell commented that the health of retired players is a priority for the league, committee member Maxine Waters said, "We've heard from the NFL time and time again--you're always 'studying,' you're always 'trying,' you're 'hopeful.' I want to know what are you doing...to deal with this problem and other problems related to injuries?"

While Goodell dangled off the ledge, NFLPA union chief DeMaurice Smith felt no compunction to lend a hand, saying that the union "has not done its best in this area. We will do better."

Chester Pitts, a lineman and union rep for the Houston Texans, told the New York Times, "I don't want to call it forced, but it's been strongly urged because of the awareness of the issue these days. When you have Congress talking about the antitrust exemption and them calling them the tobacco industry, that's pretty big. But it's a good thing it's transpiring."

But the main reason this situation has reached crisis proportions, is that every Sunday we see evidence of the problem and now we are much more aware of the tragic consequences. On November 22, the two quarterbacks who ended last season in the Super Bowl, finished their games on the sidelines. Ben Roethlisberger of the Steelers was captured on camera, glassy-eyed and attempting to follow a trainer's finger after taking a knee to the head. Kurt Warner of the Arizona Cardinals, who also took a shot to his head, denied having a serious injury. "I've had a couple minor concussions. Nothing that has been prolonged. Haven't had anything in a number of years," Warner said. There is simply no such thing as a minor concussion.

It's time for a change. A concussion is caused by a blow to the head and can happen to any player, on any play. Goodell, I believe, sees the handwriting on the wall: Brain damaged players and the perception of indifferent owners hold the potential to permanently damage the sport. But before we collectively pat his back, consider the task before him. Goodell and the league will now embark on an effort to sell a slickly packaged three-hour slice of Sunday violence while simultaneously "doing no harm" to its players. Can NFL doctors serve the league and uphold the Hippocratic Oath? Doesn't take a Mayan calendar to see that this will not end well.


[Dave Zirin is the author of "A People's History of Sports in the United States" (The New Press) Receive his column every week by emailing dave@edgeofsports.com. Contact him at edgeofsports@gmail.com.]

 
 
 

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05:01 PM on 11/29/2009
On field prevention is the only way, helmets have very high testing standards by independent bodies.
Mouth guards on the other hand have no oversight, Cantu has stated, concussions do occur from blows to the chin when the Temporal Mandibular joint contacts the skull base at the temporal medail area of the frontal lobe. He also has stated he would like to see some good mouth guard research. It’s already done:

http://www.mahercorlabs.com/pdf/Dental_Trauma…

CTE in this area is a concern, limiting these forces may be the key to protecting High School and youth athletes. A protocol used by the N.E. Patriots idenfities markers that make this energy tranfer more likely. Correcting these biological defects has been found in research to be a means of reducing susceptibility and severity of MTBI due to blows to the chin and chin strap forces.
Many NFL and NHL players are already using this protocol.

http://www.sportingnews.com/blog/the_sporting…
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cplKlyde
09:53 PM on 11/24/2009
Play two hand touch or better yet play with flags.
04:19 PM on 11/24/2009
Dave Zirin --

Excellent commentary about NFL concussions and their consequences. The "elephant in the living room" is, at last, being seen by the NFL hierarchy, no doubt because of Congressional pressure.

Now how about Congress looking at the this issue in college football, especially big time college football. I contend rates of injuries, generally speaking including head injuries in big time college football are almost to the NFL. College football players have no access to workers compensation protections, nor do they have a union representing their interests. Let's see Congress show some real courage and hold hearings about injuries in college football and the lack of protections for the athletes who generate hundreds of millions in revenues each year.

David Meggyesy
NFLPA -- Retired
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HamletsMill
All Myth is Astronomy
01:27 AM on 11/25/2009
Dave Meggyesy,

What an honor it is to hear from you on this HuffPo thread! I was always a big fan of both you and your book. It is good to know you are still in the game of life which is the field of existence that certainly matters most. I played in high school in very hard scrabble country and at the Division IAA level. I had at least three concussions. One was very severe. It has bothered me all my life. There has been numbness in that side of my head and face for decades so I know there is something to this. A female friend of mine is being treated in private practice by the expert for the Steelers. She has networked some for me and I may get an opportunity to get into a study they are doing. The only NFL caliber back I ever tackled was Pete Larson who later went on to the Washington Redskins. Ouch! I still remember what that felt like head on. At that moment I readily accepted that I was clearly out of that league...on the front end!

I have always admired your great intelligence and insight. Every blessing upon you!
04:05 PM on 11/24/2009
the game is voilent and unfortunately concussions
are a big part of the sport....I believe the NFL should
both the league and the players union should make
long term care a provision in their next collective
bargaining agreement. And as a part of that agreement
they should have a fund set up for joint replacement
and long term care for former players servering from
dimentia due to repeated blows to the head

It would be nice to see the league and the players
union recognize that the climate exists in this country
to have an agreement like what I propose mandated
in law........
03:53 PM on 11/24/2009
I am more concerned with the NFL colluding with government to build stadiums at the taxpayers expense. How many American citizens die because we do not have health care, affordable housing, or education? As for football players and head trauma - I concur that they play at their own risk. Perhaps if we lived in a democratic society, players from poor backgrounds would have more options in life to lift themselves out of poverty rather than smash their heads. And on the topic of football as a TV sport - it's dreadful: too many commercials, too many replays, too many intrusive graphics and statistics. I stopped watching a long time ago.
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mansterEZ
searching for secular humanist fact-based truth
03:35 PM on 11/24/2009
The billionaire owners of the NFL exploit the players and society to remain wealthy. Our society is based upon survival of the fittest and prone to violence. A very dangerous combination. I suffered several concussions while playing high school football and have seriously distracting tenitious as a result. With practically every tackle or high speed block the equivalent of a car crash I summize that every professional football player suffers several concussions/year, but I have no sympathy for the players. The minimum wage of NFL players is $250K/yr. They know the risks and are willing to trade quantity for quality of life. It is all about living for today and hope for a better tomorrow. Failing to compete will resign oneself to existing on the outside looking in to what might have been. The NFL owners are giving society what it craves and we handsomely reward them for the entertainment. Didn't Roman society crave the same thing when attending the games at the Colosseum? Isn't our society known as the fourth Reich?

History does repeat tiself and the concussions will continue because that is what we crave. Greed, avarice, fraud, corruption, innuendo and lies is the new morality. And football is the greatest sport.
03:15 PM on 11/24/2009
GQ had a great article about head trauma in NFL players and the conclusion of that article was that it wasn't so much the concussions that skilled players get, although I'm sure that's bad too, but that the repeated shots of helmet hitting helmet on the line 50 times per game that destroys brains. That article says that it is an accpeted fact in NFL locker rooms that you are trading away 10 years of your life or quality of life to play the game. Also, helmets don't prevent concussions, in fact, helmets may only make players more reckless with their heads.
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mandymarleyandme
02:50 PM on 11/24/2009
I know this may not be the most popular opinion, but this is an open forum so I'll throw it out there...

Aren't these grown men that have chosen to pursue not a contact sport, but an impact sport as their livlihood? They risk broken necks, blown-out knees, broken bones, dislocated joints, etc. etc. etc in exchange for more money in a season than I will make in a lifetime. The risk / reward in this situation seems to be balanced (in an obviously obscene manner).

The NFLPA has also garnered for its members one of the finest and most extensive health coverages in any profession (for good reason, and only in the modern era). Can these players not see their own personal doctors or is this forbidden by their teams?

Can we allow these players to make decisions for themselves regarding the risks they take in every practice and in every game vs. the monetary and egotistical gain of fame? Why is this a congressional issue?
04:14 PM on 11/24/2009
By your reasoning, those miners going down into the coal shaft are doing so out of choice and so should not be protected by the benefit of mine shaft safety experts although the pay off isn't nearly as good. And many of these young men are under 25 and at a crazy reckless stage of life. You don't think they could be exploited by an NFL franchise?
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Poiks
02:17 PM on 11/24/2009
I say, dress 'em up in huge, shoulder-width helmets like the guys on "Most Extreme Elimination"
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Nosybear
Liar, damn liar, statistician and brewer
01:04 PM on 11/24/2009
Problem is it sets up a perverse incentive for team docs to diagnose fewer concussions. Now, when a player is rattled after a play, the docs will keep him out for a few plays then diagnose, OK, except in the most severe cases. These guys cost too much money to have them sidelined and independent doctors would mean more of them would be, so the team docs would diagnose fewer concussions and I really wouldn't be too surprised if those independent docs weren't so. Too much money in play here for this to go down honestly.
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Dave Zirin
12:15 PM on 11/24/2009
The minor concussion issue is really important. Yes, there are degrees of severity, but the danger of thinking of any concussion as "minor" is that people still attempt to perform with them. Warner for example finished his series before leaving the game.
11:55 AM on 11/24/2009
Head trauma is just one, and likely the most important, of the medical issues the NFL needs to address. I'm constantly haunted by the vision of Green Bay running back Travis Williams who died a crack addict under a bridge in Martinez Ca. and Earl Campbell, the former Houston Oiler [run into the ground by Bum Phillips] who now can walk only with the aid of a walker. There is a entire range of medical issues the NFL and Player's Union needs to address.