A young football player
lines up on defense during a 6th grade youth football game in Richardson,
Texas, in 2010. Some of the players were using a new type of football helmet
designed to reduce the risk of concussions.
Forty percent of
Americans say they would encourage their children to play a different sport
than football due to concerns about concussions, according to a new NBC
News/Wall Street Journal poll.
This comes just days
before the Super Bowl and in the midst of a major ongoing lawsuit which
questions whether the National Football League did enough to prevent
concussions or provide care for players suffering from brain injuries.
There is a striking
split when it comes to how those at different income levels see the issue.
Forty seven percent of respondents making the highest incomes (more than
$75,000 per year) say don’t want their children playing football due to these
concerns while just 28 percent of those with the lowest incomes (less than
$30,000) say the same.
Legendary NFL
quarterback Brett Favre talks to TODAY's Matt Lauer in an exclusive interview
about a possible connection between his memory loss and many years playing
football. He also gives his take on the Miami Dolphins flap, saying bullying in
the NFL is "part of the locker room."
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Still, 57 percent of Americans
in the survey say they would have no problem if their child wanted to play
organized football.
"I think it's
important for parents, especially parents of youngsters under 14, to have this
discussion,” said Dr. Robert Cantu, a professor of neurology and neurosurgery
and co-director of Boston University’s Center for the Study of Traumatic
Encephalopathy. “If the youngster doesn't have a passion for a sport with a
high risk of head injury than he is probably better off with some other
sport."
Last year, the National
Football League reached a $765 million settlement with thousands of retired
former players – including some suffering from concussion-related injuries –
who had filed a lawsuit alleging that the league failed to disclose the dangers
of head trauma. But a federal judge denied the settlement’s early approval,
arguing that the sum might not be enough to cover all concussion-related
claims.
A series of
high-profile suicides in recent years have shed light on the long-term damage
that violent blows to the head can have on players long after they step off the
field. Retired all-pro linebacker Junior Seau had a degenerative brain disease
when he was found dead in 2012 with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the
chest. Seau’s death followed the suicides of former NFL players Dave Duerson
and Ray Easterling, both of whom complained that their years of the gridiron
led to a deteriorating mental state.
More and more former
NFL players are speaking out about the impact that football has had on them
later in life. Rayfield Wright, a star offensive lineman for the Dallas Cowboys
in the 1970s, revealed for the first time on Sunday that he suffers from
dementia. “These young players, they have no idea what’s in store for them,” he
told the New York Times. “They don’t know.”
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