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Leigh Steinberg

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How Many Deaths Will It Take?

Posted: 05/ 2/2012 7:24 pm

The apparently self-inflicted death of legendary NFL linebacker Junior Seau has sent a shock wave throughout the world of sports. Seau played professional football for 19 years for the Chargers, Dolphins and Patriots and was a 12-time Pro Bowl selection. His flamboyant playing style and jolting hits electrified fans for years. He was 43 years old.

This is a time for grief and remembrance. Seau was an integral part of the San Diego community and dedicated time and effort to his charitable foundation. His family needs prayers and support.

Normally, speculation as to causation would be premature, but these are not normal times. The spectre of head injury and the disastrous lifetime ramifications call for emphatic action. There is a largely undiagnosed health epidemic which has surrounded contact sports at the youth sports, high school, collegiate and professional level and it is a ticking time bomb. For many years a veil of denial has obscured the reality of what the long-term impact of multiple concussions portend.

I first became concerned in the late 80s and 90s when I represented half of the starting quarterbacks in the National Football League. As I went with clients like Troy Aikman and Steve Young to post-concussion visits with neurologists there were too many unanswered questions. How many head injuries is too many? What are the long-term ramifications? How long should a player sit out after suffering the hit? Physicians had few concrete answers, the brain was the last frontier of medical research. I finally decided that I could not in good conscience represent players in a sport that we intuitively knew could cause devastating consequences to the mental faculties of athletes, without becoming an active crusader to raise awareness of the danger. I felt like an "enabler" facilitating a "meat grinder" career.

In the 90s we held three concussion conferences in Newport Beach with the leading neurologists, helmet manufacturers, playing surface representatives talking to Steve, Troy, Warren Moon, Drew Bledsoe and many other clients. We issued a white paper calling for a standardized regimen of diagnosis and "return to play protocols", We urged for better helmets and protective devices. We asked for a neurologist to be put on the sideline and that the head and neck be banned from blocking and tackling.

Not much changed.

The players themselves were in a state of denial concerning physical health. They had been taught since Pop Warner to ignore pain -- hide injury so as to not lose their starting position or jeopardize their status on the team. They didn't want to be known as "training room" players and be stigmatized and isolated from their peers. They were young men and athletes, two categories that viewed long-term health as an abstraction. The most critical priority for them was the next play. And retired athletes were stoic and didn't talk about impaired memory or depression to younger players. In some cases, because concussion is not visible like a leg injury, they may not have known.

In conjunction with the Los Angeles based Concussion Institute we helped facilitate another series of Concussion Seminars seven years ago. This time there was concrete data presented by researchers like Dr. Julian Bailes, Dr. Robert Cantu, Kevin Gusciewicz and Dr. Robert Hovda that seemed to indicate that three was the "magic number." Three or more concussions apparently raised exponentially the post-career risk of dementia, Parkinson's and depression. Presentations were made about the existence of a genotype-an allele of which produced heightened risk of concussion and severe post-concussion consequences. A pattern developed in which the repetitive head injuries produced chronic traumatic encephalopathy, permanent brain damage. Player's such as the Bears' Dave Duerson developed depression. Often loss of job and family would occur. And in some cases, suicide.

To their credit, Commissioner Roger Goodell and the NFL responded by convening a physician's conference. They issued a whistle-blower edict which urged player's to report other impaired players. And they adopted baseline testing, developed by Dr. Mark Lovell. A cognitive test is given prior to a season and in the case of concussion is followed by a second test. This is an objective way to measure the degree of damage and ensure that players are asymptomatic at rest, on an exercise bike and at practice before they are cleared to play. This is something that every parent should insist on for their "collision sport" children. Pro football may be most visible, but the risk is present in many other sports and at the collegiate, high school and youth levels. The adolescent brain may take three times as long to recover and it is still in formation.

The physics of collision in professional football have changed -- bigger,stronger, faster athletes colliding with a stationary object. And so the problem will accelerate and not diminish. The simple act of offensive and defensive lineman colliding thousands of times produces a low-level concussive event. What will the cumulative effect of the injury mean for athletes in their forties and fifties?

I knew Junior Seau since the day in 1990 when he and his massive Samoan friends partied back stage after he was drafted.

Now he is dead at only 43. I represented him for a time. I love sports, but love the individuals who play them more. As Peter, Paul and Mary sang "How many deaths will it take til we know that too many people have died." We need to find the answers, they can't just be "blowing in the wind."

 
 
 
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12:04 PM on 05/06/2012
I love football at all levels. The continuing efforts to reduce physical trauma are needed. However, consider that leaving the limelight is very damaging to many. Junior played about 4 extra years than he should have. Maybe he shot himself in the chest to preserve his brain for study and maybe he did it to leave a better looking body. Junior i mean no disrespect RIP. Lineman excluded there is no reason to hit with the helmet to or above the shoulder pads and it should be stringently enforced. Any shot to the head from more than a yard away is just to injure. Hitting high is relatively new, coaching high hits and trying to injure another is not football.
12:21 PM on 05/04/2012
I am not suggesting that Junior Seau or Dave Duerson did PED's. However, I do believe that the use of steroids and other PED's may have a bearing on the number of concussion related injuries becoming evident in the retired players from the 1980's and 1990's as compared to prior generations.
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Richbruin
We'll walk this world together through the storm
10:53 AM on 05/04/2012
"We asked....that the head and neck be banned from blocking and tackling.".....huh? How exactly is that going to be done? Look, every job and profession have occupational hazards. Should we try to reduce the hazards? Sure. But there are a lot of other much more dangerous jobs that pay quite a bit less we should focus on. Junior, rip.
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
04:16 PM on 05/03/2012
I read today that eight of the players from the only Chargers Super Bowl team (1995, I think) have died since that Super Bowl. Not one of them had reached the age of 45.
02:12 PM on 05/03/2012
Don't wait for any facts. Just jump to conclusuins like we know what we're talking about.
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BlairCase
10:27 AM on 05/03/2012
The obvious solution is to ban football in public schools before lawsuits force us to ban football in public schools. Within a generation, soccor would be as popular as football in the United States, and we wouldn't need 90-man squads just to put 11 players on the field at any one time. We would no longer have to encourage junior high and high school players to bulk up to unhealthy weight levels. Athletes would start to look like athletes once again instead of fat men with knee braces who waddle when they walk. (We've already changed the rules to accomodate fat men whose knees are too weak to support their weight by banning blocking below the waist. The"strike zone" is football is now smaller than the strike zone in baseball.) College football players wouldn't lose much playing time if we banned football. In an 11-game season, most starters get less than five hours of playing time and many players get only a few minutes of playing time, if they are lucky enough to get in a game at all.
09:51 AM on 05/03/2012
I find it interesting that both Dave Duerson and Junior Seau committed suicide by shooting themselves in the chest rather than in the head. I believe that they both wanted to keep their brains undamaged by a bullet so that they could be studied. This fact alone leads me to conclude that brain trauma was a factor in the deaths of these two football players rather than other factors such as money or lack of fame.
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shanester
Bedrock & Barack Rock!
10:18 AM on 05/03/2012
That's a very good observation.
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
04:17 PM on 05/03/2012
It was quite deliberate on Duerson's part. It seems that no one is saying that yet about Junior Seau.
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DickTater
American Livestock
08:44 AM on 05/03/2012
My kid is tall and skinny. He hates it, but we have not let him play football. 8th grade. He went to state in basketball, has golf tonite after school, and baseball starts Sat.

He doesn't need to limp away from HS with a bad knee and 3 concussions under his belt.
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JMilton1976
10:36 AM on 05/03/2012
Though I was a high school football player,I simply will not let my son play the sport. I am 35 years old and I have arthritis from my short time that I played. Thankfully, I do not believe I ever suffered a concussion (though it is possible).

There is a lot of pressure in our hometown for my boy to play, too bad. He's a straight A student. He will need his brain alot longer than the pride that will come with being a 2 year star.
08:31 AM on 05/03/2012
Bob Dylan is the correct citation for the lyric " how many times . . . "
GHO
Sooner or later you run out of other peoples money
08:00 AM on 05/03/2012
With all due respect to Mr. Steinberg, all I'm reading here is supposition. Just how many concussions was Seau diagnosed with during his 20 year career?

Over 30,000 people in the US, and upwards of 1,000,000 worldwide, commit suicide each year without having suffered football related head trauma. Perhaps, after nearly 30 years (HS, college, NFL) as a football star, Seau just didn't know how to be anything else and could not cope with finally being out of football and out of the limelight.

The fact is, we just don't know. Linking his tragic death to the NFL concussion issue may be the popular conclusion to jump to right now (and many are jumping), but it's oremature to say the least.
09:32 AM on 05/03/2012
True, but the autopsies they've done have revealed a depth and extent of damage that stunned neurologists. Apparently a lot of these guys have brains that look like octogenarian Alzheimer's patients'.
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BlairCase
10:39 AM on 05/03/2012
The evidence shows virtually all football players at the professional level suffer significant brain damage. A new scanning procedure showed 17 out of 18 players tested had traumatic brain injuries. The figure is almost certainly high among college and high school football players. But traumatic brain injuires are only part of the injury problems. Nagging injuries become crippling injuries later in life and many football players end up in wheel chairs are hobbling through old age on artificial knees.
07:58 AM on 05/03/2012
CTE was first found in boxers as pugilistica dementia. Boxers who develop a "glass jaw" are the only parallel to the prone athlete. Football, hockey ect. athletes who develop the glass jaw, are more prone to ding, dizziness, the sensation of seeing star, nausea and headache. The question is, are these microtrauma the cause of CTE, the cumulative affect from the dings, or is it that one major concussion. The smoking gun is, CTE manifests in the medial temporal lobe, according to Cantu. Exactly where the jawbone strikes the skull base. The glass jaw and its effects are now being researched by the U.S. Military, others must follow suit. www.mahercor.com.
T4Timbuktu
Rich people actually pay the freight
07:36 AM on 05/03/2012
It might not just be concussions. I think some of these guys wake up in their 30's and 40's and have nothing to live for after spending the first 35 years working and achieving tremendous financial success and worshiped as gods by the culture. That kind of thinking wont make anyone money in a lawsuit, but not having a sense of belonging or value clearly creates a huge mental strain.
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manmythlegend
Facts aren't right or left. Facts are facts.
07:55 AM on 05/03/2012
I think its the concussions. look at basketball players and golfers. for the most part they don't end up as bad off as boxers, football, and hockey players. And they usually end up broke too, but not clinically depressed and suicidal.
T4Timbuktu
Rich people actually pay the freight
08:20 AM on 05/03/2012
You make a really good point.It would be interesting to see the data on that.
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jh61
If it's blue, vote for it.
11:52 AM on 05/03/2012
CTE is more prevalent in linemen who had no history of concussions. Stop focusing on concussions. CTE is caused by repeated blows to the head, even when no concussion occurs.
09:17 AM on 05/03/2012
You're probably right that they're confronted with doubts about where they belong post-football; where, or if, they'll still have a contribution to make. The 'worship' you mention might not be as destructive as the years they've spent highly adrenalized. Living a life without those adrenline-spikes might be stranger than we imagine. And then imagine the doubts they have about their future, when they're also recognizing symptoms of memory failures, and having their abilities to communicate impaired, all while still in their 40s. We shouldn't be surprised that some of them fall to despair.
07:30 AM on 05/03/2012
Aren't we somewhat like the Romans watching the gladiators compete in bloody battle when we pack stadiums and watch young men take horrible blows that leave them incapacitated in their later life? I no longer watch football because I don't want to be a part of this any more.
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07:20 AM on 05/03/2012
Do ex pro football players commit suicide at statistically higher numbers than the general population? You don't address these statistics in your article.

As to injuries, brain injury included, football is a contact sport. If an adult chooses to play it, just like jumping from airplanes, jumping horses or gymnastics they better be willing to accept the risks.
chisoxfan
Scientific Progress goes "Boink"?
10:11 AM on 05/03/2012
Yes, they take on those risk, but everything that can be done to lessen those risks should be done.
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12:37 PM on 05/03/2012
I agree and lessing the risk for player injury should start with the leagues, from pee wee football to the pros, throwing out despicable players, coaches and owners who put bounties on the injuries towards fellow players .

I read today, "All but four of the 27 current or former Saints that the NFL linked to New Orleans' cash-for-hits bounty system can now look forward to next season free of worry that they'll be forced to miss games, or game checks."
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
04:23 PM on 05/03/2012
Let's hope that skydiving does not become a contact sport. The stop is far too sudden.
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gdog62
Facts are kryptonite to stupid people.
07:13 AM on 05/03/2012
It seems like football has evolved into the American version of Sumo wrestling, in which healthy young people willingly damage their bodies and die young for the sake of fleeting glory.

Seau was a bright, charismatic person who I always thought had a career in broadcasting waiting for him post-retirement. Terribly sad.