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Concussions, CTE, and other traumatic brain injuries in football

To quote a wise man, I fear one day our children look back on football the way we now look at cigarettes.

At the same time, I sincerely believe the game is safer than it's ever been and is getting safer every day. To what extent – I don't know for sure. I do think these new discoveries, while frightening, are absolutely vital to ensuring the game's survival. You can't make the game safer when you don't know all the risks and consequences.

Entire article: https://www.elevenwarriors.com/skull-sessions/2018/07/94617/skull-session-ohio-state-football

What's it going to look like in 10 years? 20 years?

At the youth level the numbers are dwindling. I think Football might become an even more regional sport than it already is now, with the south plus Ohio, maybe Pennsylvania and a few other areas but all in all I think football as a sport has seen its heyday.
 
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I read an article years ago comparing the physiques of players. More than penalties etc. ... I think they need to have something like weight classes for different positions. A kind of health check before games. Especially for linemen. Limit weight to something more like 250... but ideally a standard that's more current than 70s BMI or similar ?

Tangentially related, I'm waiting for VR to really take off. Like an NCAA MMO type game where you can assemble a whole team and individuals play from their living room... it'd be fitness, sport, and video gaming in 1 package.
 
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Just sayin': Needless to say, it can happen in other sports too:



Former Detroit Tigers catcher Bill Freehan one of many ex-athletes feeling the long-term effects of concussions
Sept. 4, 2019
At a recent birthday celebration in their Vinegar Flats neighborhood, Rick Freehan sat on a sofa next to his wife, Carole, and chatted about typical neighborhood topics. A sighting of young beavers playing in Latah Creek. A neighbor’s adventures mixing sheep and goats.

Usual neighborhood stuff.

But when a friend arrived wearing a souvenir T-shirt from the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, he changed topics.

“You know, my brother should have been inducted into the Hall of Fame,” he said. “He was an 11-time All-Star and he won three Gold Gloves as a catcher.”

Freehan’s brother, Bill, was a catcher with the Detroit Tigers from 1961, when he was called up as a 19-year-old, until he was released in 1976. He was a major cog in the Tigers’ run to a 1968 World Series win over Bob Gibson and the St. Louis Cardinals.

“He always said he hurt his chances to get into the Hall when he was released,” Freehan added later. “Toronto wanted to sign him and have him be their designated hitter, and he could have really padded his stats. But he was a Detroit boy, and he already made more money in business than he made playing baseball.”

Playing behind the plate in the major leagues has always been a rough-and-tumble business. Catchers were taught to block the plate, base runners taught to plow through them.

What’s more, baseballs fouled off a catcher’s mask are enough to leave a player with “their bell rung.”

In other words, concussions were commonplace. In all sports.

“(Bill) was a three-sport athlete and he played quarterback in high school,” Rick explained. “Notre Dame wanted him to come play football, but they wouldn’t let him play baseball, too. So he played football and baseball at Michigan before he signed with the Tigers.

“He lost track of just how many concussions he had over the years. It was just too many concussions.”

Bill Freehan, now 77, lives in hospice care, having suffered from severe dementia for years. A story in the Detroit Free Press last year reported that he can no longer walk, speak or feed himself.

What is known about the effect of repeated trauma to the brain has been under intense scrutiny since it was discovered by forensic pathologist Dr. Bennet Omalu 17 years ago. In medical terms, experts are just now scratching the surface about the neurodegenerative disease he named Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE).

Entire article: https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2019/sep/04/he-lost-track-of-just-how-many-concussions-he-had-/
 
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What's it going to look like in 10 years? 20 years?

At the youth level the numbers are dwindling. I think Football might become an even more regional sport than it already is now, with the south plus Ohio, maybe Pennsylvania and a few other areas but all in all I think football as a sport has seen its heyday.

Speaking as a youth football commissioner....this may end up being the case in a decade or two, but my numbers were up for the 4th straight year. Who knew....I think a lot of it is because my side of Pataskala is rapidly growing but we had 10 more football players this year than last year. Last year we had 35 more than the year previous to that and so on....
 
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The family of Zach Hoffpauir is hoping some good can come out of tragedy.

Last Thursday morning, Zach Hoffpauir passed away at the age of 26. No cause of death for the former Stanford football and baseball player has been released. Hoffpauir’s father, though, stressed to Jon Wilner of the San Jose Mercury News that his son did not commit suicide.

Doug Hoffpauir also confirmed to Wilner that the family has donated Hoffpauir’s brain for concussion research. The younger Hoffpauir had previously publicly acknowledged that he had suffered several concussions during his football playing days. He had also battled depression, including a suicide attempt last year, as well as being diagnosed with Lyme disease.
 
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The family of Zach Hoffpauir is hoping some good can come out of tragedy.

Last Thursday morning, Zach Hoffpauir passed away at the age of 26. No cause of death for the former Stanford football and baseball player has been released. Hoffpauir’s father, though, stressed to Jon Wilner of the San Jose Mercury News that his son did not commit suicide.

Doug Hoffpauir also confirmed to Wilner that the family has donated Hoffpauir’s brain for concussion research. The younger Hoffpauir had previously publicly acknowledged that he had suffered several concussions during his football playing days. He had also battled depression, including a suicide attempt last year, as well as being diagnosed with Lyme disease.


Any word on if Harbaugh has donated his brain for concussion research? It would explain a lot.
 
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Any word on if Harbaugh has donated his brain for concussion research? It would explain a lot.

Well it has to be some place, do you think he left it a Stanford (for research) when he was there?

stanford_center_for_continuing_medical_education_1542259244.jpg


Brain Performance Center

Our Mission: To advance the neuroscience of brain performance in development, injury, and aging and to improve the lives of those with brain performance impairments.

http://med.stanford.edu/braincenter.html
 
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Well it has to be some place, do you think he left it a Stanford (for research) when he was there?

stanford_center_for_continuing_medical_education_1542259244.jpg


Brain Performance Center

Our Mission: To advance the neuroscience of brain performance in development, injury, and aging and to improve the lives of those with brain performance impairments.

http://med.stanford.edu/braincenter.html

It makes sense that they would want it; his brain would give them data on a multitude of impairments.

And it would definitely explain the blank stares, among other things.
 
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