Fixing Football, Ending Game Brain

Fixing Football, Ending Game Brain
He played 60 minute games and died five weeks before his 90th birthday.

Fixing football.

Jamil Smith has an article in the New Republic concerning the film Concussion scheduled to be released Christmas Day. He used it to reflect on the importance of football to America.

Concussion is based on the book based on the 2009 GQ expose Game Brain, which details the brain damage suffered by NFL players and how it has led to suicides and other early deaths.

Game Brain was inspired by a paper that  pathologist Dr. Bennet Omalu published in the journal Neurosurgery concerning Hall-of-Fame Pittsburgh Steelers center Mike Webster. Webster died on Sept. 24, 2002 of a heart attack at the age of 50. He was living in his truck and often confused, angry and deranged.

Omalu, who performed an autopsy on Webster’s brain, found the veteran of 16 years had “chronic traumatic encephalopathy” which is brought on by repetitive head trauma.

Other long-time veterans also died early including Eagles safety Andre Waters who committed suicide in 2006 at age 44. Omalu described Waters brain as that of an octogenarian Alzheimer’s patient.

Smith, however, like many of us, still can’t bring himself to hate the game although it has become pretty easy to hate those who profit from it  at the professional AND college level.

“Abandoning football won’t fix the sport—Americans need it so that, one day, we might learn to see ourselves for who we truly are,” Smith says.

With a little less greed, we might be able to have our cake and eat it too.

Eagles great Chuck Bednarik died  last March five weeks before his 90th birthday. While family members said he suffered dementia for which they blamed football, having it in one’s 80s is not the same as having it at 50 or 44.

Bednarik played 13 season with the Eagles retiring in 1962. Like Webster, he played center but he also played linebacker. He was called the last of the 60-minute men.

So let us consider some of the differences between Bednarik’s and Webster’s careers. Bednarik, who retired in 1962, played mostly a 12-game season. Webster, who started in 1974, played a 14-game season for his first four then played the rest with a 16-game schedule.  That’s 25 percent more bangs to the head in games Webster got  during  his career, and don’t forget the bangs received during four more weeks of practices.

Cutting back to a 12-game schedule would sure save a lot of wear and tear on players. Of course, that would wear and tear the profits as well so we can’t have that.

You don’t need to sacrifice profits, however,  with a little imagination. Cut the season  to eight regular season games then start a second eight-game season with different teams and players in January. Global warming is happening right? Have the champions of the different season play each other on July 4. The money would just roll in.

But that requires imagination and the willingness to think outside the box which is something clearly beyond Roger Goodell’s skill set.

How about ending the platoon system? This is something that Bednarik actually advocated. Bednarik weighed 233 pounds in his playing days. Webster weighed 255. Their opponents had the same proportional weight differences. A bigger mass and the same acceleration means more force. More force means more damage.

Centers today are now averaging 300 pounds.

Ending the platoon system would mean lighter players. A 300 pound man cannot effectively play 60 minutes of uninterrupted football.

Then there are of course drugs. Not the illegal ones like steroids but painkillers distributed by team doctors. Suppose a rule is passed that restricts all painkillers to be over-the-counter medicines used in accordance with the directions on the label? We strongly suspect that would mean more players sitting out when they should. Again, creating fewer tragedies and maybe saving football.

Fixing Football, Ending Game Brain

2 thoughts on “Fixing Football, Ending Game Brain”

  1. I am told there’s the possibility this season that a team (even the Eagles) could win the NFC East with a 6-10 record. If you believe in the old NFL adage that “On any given Sunday, etc.”, then you agree that that 6-10 team could win the Super Bowl (especially if it’s the Giants with QB Eli Manning).
    Just thinking about it gives me a concussion.

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