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Feb-09-2011 16:48printcomments

The Future of Football

Can football be played at an acceptable safety level?

Super Bowl
Can football be played at an acceptable safety level?

(SAN FRANCISCO) - The Super Bowl is over. Or the "stupid bowl" as my wife calls it. Now, the National Football League (NFL) should address the safety of football and the exaggerated claims for equipment designed to protect players from injury. Not only are pro-football injuries and concussions at a nine-year high, but brain-related injuries are the most common type of injury in NFL games. As the season progresses, the chance of injury increases. It is not an exaggeration to say that there is a national public health crisis of concussions in sports – estimated to total four million annually, not including the possibility that tens of millions more “sub-concussive” head blows contribute to youth mental deterioration.

I will always remember the sight of Jim Otto, former center for the Oakland Raiders, on television. Otto completed 308 consecutive games, punishing his body, resulting in nearly 40 surgeries, including 28 knee operations (nine of them during his playing career alone) and multiple joint replacements. His joints are riddled with arthritis, and he has debilitating back and neck problems. He had his right leg amputated in 2007. He suffered numerous concussions. Admittedly, Otto took "playing with or through pain" to an absurd level. But should the NFL or the Oakland Raiders or their physicians have allowed Otto to abuse his body for the sake of the game? Otto claims it was all worth it to be one of the gladiators to satisfy the blood thirst of American couch potatoes.

Aaron Rodgers, the quarterback for the Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers, has suffered two concussions already in his young career, and Pittsburgh Steeler quarterback Ben Roethlisberger has suffered four concussions so far.

In January 2011, the chairman of the Federal Trade Commission announced his agency is looking into marketing claims that some football helmets can help reduce concussions. The investigation will focus on safety marketing claims for some new helmets and reconditioned used ones to determine whether they are misleading and deceptive. For example, Riddell, the official helmet supplier for the NFL, claims -- based on a 2006 article in the journal Neurosurgery -- that: “Wearing the [Riddell] Revolution helmet was associated with approximately a 31% decreased relative risk and 2.3% decreased absolute risk for sustaining a concussion in this cohort study.” Dr. Joseph Maroon is a co-author of this study and is the neurosurgeon for the Pittsburgh Steelers.  Dr. Maroon now discredits the study. The FTC investigation will include an examination as to whether the Neurosurgery study supports Riddel's claim of a 31 percent decrease in risk by wearing the Revolution helmet.  Hopefully, the investigation will also go beyond the Neurosurgery study to other clinical research relied upon by the NFL to minimize the danger of brain trauma in football.

Maybe, national and local sports writers and broadcasters across the country will begin to report on this sensitive subject now that the FTC is involved. Can football be played at an acceptable safety level? And what is an acceptable safety level? Until these questions are answered, I suggest, with apologies to Willie Nelson, "Mammas don't let your babies grow up to be football players."

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I recommend Ben McGraph's article in the Jan. 31, 2011, The New Yorker, "Does Football Have A Future?"


Salem-News.com writer Ralph E. Stone was born in Massachusetts. He is a graduate of both Middlebury College and Suffolk Law School. We are very fortunate to have this writer's talents in this troubling world; Ralph has an eye for detail that others miss. As is the case with many Salem-News.com writers, Ralph is an American Veteran who served in war. Ralph served his nation after college as a U.S. Army officer during the Vietnam war. After Vietnam, he went on to have a career with the Federal Trade Commission as an Attorney specializing in Consumer and Antitrust Law. Over the years, Ralph has traveled extensively with his wife Judi, taking in data from all over the world, which today adds to his collective knowledge about extremely important subjects like the economy and taxation. You can send Ralph an email at this address stonere@earthlink.net




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Luke Easter February 9, 2011 6:24 pm (Pacific time)

Well, with an 18 game schedule that's obviolsly an issue in word only. "Show me the money" is more like it.


Joe Bloggs February 9, 2011 5:57 pm (Pacific time)

Mr. Stone you have hit the nail on the head. Corrupt Drs. like Joe Maroon, Mark Lovell and Mickey Collins have used the Univeristy of Pittsburgh and their affilitation to major sports leagues to profit by speaking out of both sides of their mouths. These guys make money from the leagues, the helmet companies, and from their concussion instrument, Impact sold to schools across the country. These unreported conflicts needs to be exposed. Furthermore, Maroon still advises the NFL as do most of the discredited NFL concussion committee members. Perhaps sports writers across the country should look into these conflicts.

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