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	<title>Chaney's Blog</title>
	<updated>2012-02-10T07:43:12Z</updated>
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		<title>26 Football Fatality Cases of America 2011</title>
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		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="Football Catastrophic Injuries" />
		<category term="News Analysis" />
		<updated>2012-02-08T21:00:21Z</updated>
		<published>2012-02-08T21:00:21Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;h3&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px"&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;h3&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;h3&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px"&gt;&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;Football Repeats Heat-Illness Disaster of Decade Before&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;h3&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px"&gt;About 20 Player Deaths Will Qualify as Game-Related&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;h3&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px"&gt;Death Statistics Appear Sound Despite Faulty Studies&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;!--?xml:namespace prefix = o /--&gt;&lt;!--?xml:namespace prefix = o /--&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h3&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;By Matt Chaney&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;ChaneysBlog.com&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Wednesday, February 8, 2012&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Ten years ago last summer, in 2001, five American football players died within nine scorching days of July and August, including Minnesota Vikings tackle Korey Stringer and Rashidi Wheeler, defensive back at Northwestern University.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Football officials vowed the calamity would never reoccur, swearing they finally recognized heat illness and its influence on further deadly conditions. They said an “awareness” sweeping football aimed to eliminate heatstroke, which was wholly preventable by expert consensus longstanding.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The promise was broken in subsequent years, naturally, like every alleged safety reform of incorrigible football, as heatstroke and related conditions continued to plague players.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;But that forsaken pledge reflected eerily on football in 2011, with an 11-day stretch of extreme heat and outcomes for unfortunate players, their families, schools and communities.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;From July 22 through Aug. 2, at least five prep football players mortally collapsed amid the game’s stubborn push through record heat in the country. A middle-aged football coach also died, of a heart ailment, after withering at a morning practice in Texas with temperature nearing 100 degrees.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The deadly 2011 timespan marked a dark anniversary for brutal football—while accentuating perpetual folly over health risks—occurring almost precisely 10 years after the heat slaughter of July-August 2001.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;All told for football in the United States during 2011, dozens of people died in or around the sport, as usual for a given year, with about 20 player fatalities that are provably game-related, including 4 apparent collision deaths, likewise typical of recent decades. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;This blog post is the first comprehensive collection of reported deaths surrounding American football in 2011, presenting 26 select cases from fatalities located through my Boolean searches of Google information banks.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The case narratives below contain available information, distilled primarily from news reports, on the deaths of 23 American football players, 1 coach, 1 referee and 1 cheerleader in 2011. None qualifies as medical study and each case requires expert follow-up for verification as game-related or not.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Beyond this list there are more reports of fatalities occurring close to football last year, such as 2 players in offseason training who died of cardiac problems while playing pickup basketball; 3 players dead of painkiller overdosing; player suicides that invited question of brain trauma’s involvement; and additional cases of coaches who died on the job.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;But football fatalities merely introduce the large, costly scope of catastrophic or severe casualties every year in religious blood sport of the culture.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;This weekend I will post an unprecedented number of casualty reports on American football in a given year, on ChaneysBlog.com: 220 annotated cases for 2011 culled from hundreds of game emergencies publicized in Google.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My pending report will contain fatalities but spotlight the survivors of football terrors, nearly 200 individuals who suffered severe injury or condition.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My categories of survivor conditions include brain bleeding (23 cases located of 2011), spinal paralysis (minimally 6 cases), vertebral fracture (about 60 cases), cardiac arrest, heatstroke, non-cerebral blood clots, organ rupture or damage (51 cases), “compartment syndrome” with amputation, facial fractures, peripheral nerve paralysis and staph infection of spinal column.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;About 110 of the survivor cases—severe injuries of brain, skull, spinal cord, vertebral column and heart—are candidates for designation as catastrophic in the pending report for 2011 by the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research, University of North Carolina, which has yet to address its serious errors in data collecting and recording of the past.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The UNC researchers, led by Frederick Mueller, a PhD in education, and Dr. Robert Cantu, the Boston-based sport neurosurgeon, face major revision of faulty data for 2010 and 2009, their football underreporting documented by my Google retrievals of cases they missed, doubling to tripling numbers they’ve published.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For more information, see ChaneysBlog posts since October on catastrophic injury in American football during 2011, featuring scores of survivor cases and analysis of reporting limitations. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Mueller and Cantu have declined my interview requests and my offers to forward them more than 100 total survivor leads missed for their catastrophic-injury reports of 2010 and 2009.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The Mueller-Cantu reports are accepted at face value and repeated as authoritative epidemiology on American football, for decades running, by parties such as medical journals and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;At least the Mueller-Cantu fatality numbers appear fairly sound for two primary reasons regarding news media, their primary source of case leads:&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;News media learn of and report&amp;nbsp;the vast majority of deaths in America, primarily through public records and human sources such as police.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;And football death has been a news priority since American mass media exploded as the Golden Press, print news, the daily papers and periodic magazines following the Civil War.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Today, electronic search has increased&amp;nbsp;prospects for gathering football deaths reported in news media, likely helping&amp;nbsp;strengthen&amp;nbsp;research on deaths in vast American football, although cases are still missed for studies.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Mueller and Cantu, for example, omitted at least 2 football fatalities from their 2010 report, cases that I nevertheless located in Google: a youth player killed in Pennsylvania by football collision and a college player in Minnesota, dead of a brain aneurysm suffered during winter conditioning.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My 26 select cases of football fatalities in 2011 follow here.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Some will not qualify as football-related under Mueller-Cantu definitions and classification, either for medically verifiable fact or because no linking evidence exists.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h3&gt;Online Reports of Deaths Surrounding American Football, 2011&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;h4&gt;&lt;i&gt;Cases require expert follow-up for affirmation as football-related&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/h4&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;By Matt Chaney, &lt;a href="mailto:mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com"&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;April 27&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Marcellis Williamson, 23, a former college defensive lineman preparing for pro football, suffered fatal pulmonary thrombosis, a blood clot in lung. Williamson died while training as hopeful for the upcoming NFL draft and as CFL teams scheduled tryouts for the 6-1, 327-pound prospect. Williamson had excelled at nose tackle for Ohio University, where he graduated in recreation management and former football teammates remembered his commitment and personality. “Everything he did, he tried to be the best,” said linebacker Noah Keller. Cornerback Julian Posey was crestfallen during video comments but took solace in recalling his close friend Williamson, including for dance moves: “Watching Marcellis dance… (wasn’t) a rare occasion ’cause he loved to dance, but it was something special ’cause he could move just like any small person would,” Posey said. Williamson’s older brother Denayne Dixon, a linebacker in the Arena Football League, said he was coping with the tragedy. “It’s tough,” Dixon said. “We were real close… I’m not the same. I feel like a part of me went with him. I’m just trying to get through it. I’ll never get over it, it’s always going to hurt, but I’m just trying to do my best. … (Marcellis) was a big guy and that could be a little intimidating at first, but once he opened his mouth, you knew he was a real good guy. He never threw his weight around.” Sources: OhioBobcats.com, Rivals.Yahoo.com, &lt;i&gt;Des Moines Register&lt;/i&gt;, AthensMidDay.com and &lt;i&gt;Ohio University Post&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;b&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;May 12&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Luke Killian, age 16, North Carolina, lineman for the Morganton Mountaineers, collapsed during warm-up for a conditioning session with teammates at a city park. Killian, an overweight youth, was pronounced dead at a local hospital, possibly of heat exhaustion, according to reports. Team coach and organizer Doug Deitz had not attended&amp;nbsp;the unofficial workout, which he said was staged by the players. No athletic trainer was present. The Morganton Mountaineers compete in the non-profit Pioneer Football League, which is “founded on Christian principles with an emphasis on helping young men and women develop biblical character traits,” the team website states. “The league provides an opportunity for home-school and private-schooled students ages 12-18 to play regulation football or participate in cheerleading. These student-athletes would normally not have the opportunity to play football through the public school system or if their private school does not offer football as a choice of athletics.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;Morganton News Herald&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Athletic Business&lt;/i&gt; magazine, WSOC-TV and MorgantonMountaineers.teampages.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;July 22&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Samuel Gitt, 17, Pennsylvania, lineman for Boiling Springs High School, collapsed in a dormitory at Albright College, where his team was attending a football camp, and later died at a hospital. Gitt, listed at 6-foot-3 and 325 pounds on a team roster, was stricken following an evening football practice in extreme heat. Gitt was housed in a dormitory with window units for air-conditioning and some were not operated properly, said Albright spokeswoman Barbara Marshall. Coroner Charles Sweitzer determined Gitt died of an enlarged heart, or “natural causes,” and heat may have contributed. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Carlisle Sentinel&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Reading Eagle&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;July 27&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Isaiah Laurencin, 17, Florida, offensive guard for Miramar High School, collapsed and fell comatose during team conditioning drills on the evening of July 26. Laurencin, listed at 6-3 and 286 pounds, died the next morning at a local hospital. The autopsy report stated Laurencin died “of cardiac arrest during physical exertion due to multiple factors superimposed upon sickle cell trait and alpha thalassemia (a genetic blood disorder).” No single cause was cited, with “co-morbid natural factors” also including hypertension, bronchitis, obesity and temperature of 92 degrees when Laurencin was stricken about 5 p.m. Matt Eagan, sports columnist for Mansfield.Patch.com, took exception with the football deaths of Laurencin and Samuel Gitt in the South, within a summer week, for a post titled “Don’t Try to Beat the Heat”: “There is absolutely no way two-a-day conditioning practices for a high school sport should be sanctioned in July, especially when the heat index rises over 90,” Eagan commented. “Student-athletes, perhaps more so than other students, are raised to trust the adults in authority. … (We) need adults to behave like adults and stop sending our kids out to get in shape when it’s 95 degrees. So many things in life are out of our control. This is one that isn’t.” Other sources: &lt;i&gt;South Florida Sun Sentinel&lt;/i&gt;, WSVN-TV and &lt;i&gt;Miami Herald&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;July 30&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Tyquan Brantley, 14, South Carolina, linebacker for Lamar High School, collapsed after a morning practice session in 100-degree. Brantley, somewhat overweight, died in a local hospital. The Darlington County Coroner’s Office concluded death occurred for complications of sickle cell trait, with various factors possible and exact cause unknown. In months following the tragedy, family and friends regularly visited a Facebook page dedicated to Brantley, a popular and beloved teen who had looked forward to high school. A young relative named Commiesha posted faithfully on Tyquan’s page, especially as the holidays approached and passed. A college student, Commiesha identified herself in tribute to Tyquan as “Your Big First Cousin.” The morning of Oct. 25, she wrote: “I was thinking about you. Just sitting here doing my work in my dorm then I look to my left (And there was your picture). All I could do is smile and think about the times we all had together. We miss and love you. Mesha.” She wrote on Dec. 23: “Words can’t explain how much you’re missed… Even though we all know you are in a better place, there are just some things that we cannot replace. Love and miss you Ty. -Your cousin Commiesha.” And in January 2012, having returned to college, Commiesha posted for Tyquan: “Just stopped by your page because you have been on my mind lately (A lot). We love you and miss you.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;Florence Morning News&lt;/i&gt;, The Associated Press, &lt;a href="http://www.facebook.com,"&gt;www.facebook.com,&lt;/a&gt; Rivals.Yahoo.com and Legacy.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Andy Collins, 27, Florida, pro quarterback and linebacker, collapsed while running on a hotel treadmill and later died at a hospital. Preliminary autopsy determined heart attack to be the cause and arterial malformation might have contributed. Collins had played in the Arena Football League and the Indoor Football League but was a free agent at his death. Robust and handsome, Collins appeared in television commercials, and his wife, CBS Sports reporter Brooke Collins, said her husband was “the healthiest person I knew.” Andy Collins reportedly considered the Catholic priesthood before meeting the former Brooke Olzendam in California; both were natives of Washington, where he played IFL football for the Tri-Cities Fever in 2010. “This is tragic,” said Teri Carr, Fever co-owner. “You think about these young men and they could be your kids.” Kevin Anderson, athletic trainer, said, “It’s kind of cliché when something like this happens to say he was a great guy. Andy was actually one of the great guys you could know.” Collins was “an incredible human being,” friend Josh Wallwork posted online. “It’s crazy how you see bad things happen to good people.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;Tri-City Herald&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Stockton Record&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Yakima Herald Republic&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Spokane Spokesman-Review&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Wade McLain, 55, Texas, assistant football coach for Prestonwood Christian Academy, was stricken at a morning practice session in extreme heat, as temperatures would climb to 107 degrees that afternoon. McLain died at a local hospital, and a witness to the incident, Jack Graham, pastor of Prestonwood Baptist Church, recalled in a prepared statement that the team “had been stopping regularly for water and air-conditioning breaks, and during one break (McLain) became ill and collapsed.” The Collin County medical examiner ruled McLain died of heart problems “associated with heat exposure,” according to KDAF-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Don’terio J. “D.J.” Searcy, 16, Georgia,&amp;nbsp;defensive lineman for Fitzgerald High School, was found unresponsive in a cabin at team football camp in rural northern Florida, about 90 minutes after a morning practice in extreme heat gripping the Southeast. Searcy, 6-1 and 330 pounds, was pronounced dead at a hospital distant from his Georgia home. The player’s parents and WTEV reporter Ashley Coleman investigated, hearing from Searcy’s teammates that he collapsed twice at Florida Bible Camp, located 135 miles from Fitzgerald and site of four days of summer drills for the public school team. Players said Don’terio was initially found unconscious in a bathroom the night before his death, a Monday, by two assistant coaches following a team “devotional,” but no emergency call was made. The parents, Carlton and Michelle Searcy, weren’t notified of such an incident: “My question to the coaches is why didn’t you call 911 on (that) night and notify me when (Don’terio) first went down unconscious and unresponsive,” Michelle said. Fitzgerald High football coaches referred questions to district superintendent Nancy Whidden, who said coaches whom she queried were unaware of a bathroom collapse. Players also said that Don’terio had struggled in the heat for the camp practices in full pads, including suffering vomiting and headaches and lying down, but coaches did not sideline him. “It was intense,” said player Deion Bivens. “It was real hot and we were running and they were just pushing us real hard.” The Searcy family requested an investigation by Georgia school officials, but nothing had transpired by November, when a coroner’s report in Florida stated Don’terio died of a heart condition exacerbated by hypertension. Heat was not cited as factor. Whidden, the superintendent, issued a statement after the autopsy: “(A)ll indications were that D.J. was physically able to participate in football,” Whidden wrote. “Unfortunately, this long-standing heart condition caused his death. According to the information we have received, there was nothing our coaches or other staff members did or did not do that in any way contributed to this tragedy.” However, U.S. Army Capt. Carlton Searcy was not satisfied, and he contacted the medical examiner in Jacksonville regarding his son’s death; according to Capt. Searcy, the coroner said he was not fully apprised of circumstances like&amp;nbsp;the teen’s alleged first collapse and the team’s practice conditions in oppressive heat. The parents then consulted an unidentified Army medical expert, according to a statement released by their attorney that stated: “After reviewing D.J.’s medical records, autopsy report, and considering the circumstances surrounding D.J.’s death, the medical expert formed the initial opinion that D.J. died from a heat-related event and that his tragic death was preventable.” Inquiries continued. Sources: WTEV-TV, &lt;i&gt;Atlanta Journal-Constitution&lt;/i&gt; and WJXT-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Forest Jones, 16, Georgia, offensive center for Locust Grove High School, collapsed, comatose, as a voluntary conditioning session concluded at the school on July 25. “After practice, he got a drink of water and dumped it over his head and started walking up a grassy hill, and when he did he fell backwards and hit his head. Then he stood back up for a second and passed back out,” said Glenn Jones, the player’s father. Doctors said heat may have contributed, and Jones never regained consciousness, succumbing on his eighth day hospitalized, brain-dead with complete organ failure. Family members said Jones, at 5-8, 240 pounds, had driven himself too hard in the heat, and his death occurred only a few hours after that of another Georgia prep player, Don’terio Searcy. The same-day tragedies in Georgia were America football’s 5&lt;sup&gt;th&lt;/sup&gt; and 6&lt;sup&gt;th&lt;/sup&gt; field fatalities within 11 days of withering heat—repeating closely the sport’s calamitous 8-day stretch of 10 years before, July-August 2001, when 5 players died&amp;nbsp;such as Korey Stringer, mammoth tackle for the Minnesota Vikings. Now public discussion reignited nationally, and at Locust Grove, Georgia, one of the 2011 death locales, Gina Hughes was among citizens groping for answers. The deceased Forest Jones had been a teammate of her son, and Hughes noted the players drilled outside on hotter days locally than July 25, when Jones collapsed. “I’m a football mom, I believe in those boys getting out there and working their butts off,” Hughes said, “but everyone has to stop and think.” News writer Paul Newberry lambasted football for outside activities in summer and called for delaying the sport’s start on the calendar to offset heat stress on players, coaches and others. “Enough’s enough,” Newberry declared. “There’s just no need to be practicing football in 100-degree temperatures.” Meanwhile, the Jones family did not carry medical coverage or life insurance for Forest, nor had money for a funeral; local fundraising efforts helped defray mounting expenses. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Atlanta Journal-Constitution&lt;/i&gt;, WSB-TV and WXIA-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Montel Williams, 15, Arkansas, defensive end for Gurdon High School, collapsed while running sprints about 8:30 at night practice, as local temperature registered about 90 degrees. Williams, conscious when he went down, was later pronounced dead at a&amp;nbsp;hospital. Findings of a state preliminary autopsy “indicated” a pre-existing heart condition was involved, not the excessive heat, but Williams’ parents were skeptical. “I still think they were practicing too hard,” said Sandra Walker, the boy’s mother. Walker said she was not aware of pre-existing health conditions for Montel, an honors student who was solidly built and athletic, and she regretted having allowed him to play football. Montel’s father, Charles Williams, questioned the autopsy report but said: “I have no medical experience, so I don’t know.” Sources: KLRT-TV, &lt;i&gt;Arkansas Democrat-Gazette&lt;/i&gt; and The Associated Press.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 28&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Derek Sheely, 22, Maryland, fullback for Frostburg State University, suffered brain trauma on Aug. 22, apparently amid collisions at a practice session. “They were preparing for the next round of drills, and it was then that Derek started to mention to the coaches that he wasn’t feeling well,” said Kenneth Sheely, the player’s father. Derek collapsed as athletic trainers escorted him from the field. The comatose athlete was air-lifted to a regional hospital then a Baltimore trauma center by Maryland State Police, for immediate surgery. Sheely died on his sixth day hospitalized, and his father said pathology results revealed the cause as severe brain injury resulting of head impact. Sheely was apparently the year’s first publicized collision death in football, and his father hoped the American institution took heed—the sport itself and advocates, not merely the Frostburg University community. “I’m not a medical expert. I’m not a football expert.” Kenneth Sheely said hours after his son’s death. “But I would hope that any time, in any sport, whether it be during a game or during practice, that if an athlete passes away from something that wasn’t of natural causes, that was clearly seemed to be induced by the activity, that the NCAA or somebody should try and look into that and see what lessons could be learned. I don’t know if it’s education, equipment, training, a combination of everything—but it seems like there has to be some subtle thing that could be learned that might help protect somebody else.” On the Frostburg campus, student videographer Madison Martin reported Sheely was “known for his determined demeanor and coy sense of humor.” Several teachers remembered him as a top student majoring in history and political science. A visibly subdued Tim Magrath, professor of political science, said of Sheely: “It’s hard for us to understand someone so strong and so capable is gone. He seemed such an unstoppable force. He’s someone I thought would never slow down.” Football quarterback Josh Volpe remembered Sheely, a good friend, as “always in pursuit of excellence,” never missing a practice, workout nor class assignment. Volpe recalled on camera that his first touchdown pass in college, in his first game, went to Sheely on a route out of the backfield. Excited for both of them, Sheely celebrated: “He scored the touchdown then he spiked (the ball) and he got a flag, got kicked out of the game,” Volpe said, smiling. Martin reported that Sheely was scheduled to graduate with honors in May 2012. “Sheely had intentions of serving our country after graduation,” she said. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Prince George Gazette&lt;/i&gt;, WTTG-TV, &lt;i&gt;New York Times&lt;/i&gt;, Madison Martin on Vimeo.com, and &lt;i&gt;Cumberland Times-News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Al Smith Jr., 15, Texas, lineman for Eisenhower High School, became ill then fainted during a practice session on Aug. 30. Smith regained consciousness briefly, but his condition worsened: “(Doctors) were saying his system was shutting down a lot,” Al Smith Sr. later recounted. The teen died after two days hospitalized, and no cause was known immediately. “He was just a good kid, that’s all I can say. A good kid. Whatever&amp;nbsp; happened, I’m lost for words,” said his father. “He wanted to play professional ball, and he always wanted to be a real estate broker.” At Eisenhower High, schoolmates remembered Al Smith Jr. as a kid in good physical condition. “He was real healthy,” said sophomore classmate Tralynn Robinson. “This don’t make no sense,” said sophomore Antanisha Richardson. “I don’t know. It’s sad.” National discussion continued over football fatalities occurring from July until autumn. “For the sixth time this summer, a high school football player has collapsed and died after practicing in scorching heat,” Joel Siegel reported, also noting the death of coach Wade McLain. “The dangers of student-athletes training in extreme heat creates tragedies every year.” A Dallas newspaper’s inquiry into prep football’s practice procedures in summer drew a response from Texas school athletics officials, of the University Interscholastic League. A UIL medical panel wanted changes on time and frequency for “two-a-day” practices, and it recommended an extra hour of recovery between same-day sessions. However, no doctor mentioned revising start date for preseason drills. Meanwhile, final autopsy results were not publicized in Google news banks by year’s end. Sources: KRIV-TV, ABC News, &lt;i&gt;Dallas Morning News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 5&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Kishon Cooper, 8, Florida, a youth-league wide receiver and defensive back, collapsed outside his home during activity with his father on Labor Day, as they ran and tossed a football. Cooper was later pronounced dead at a hospital. His father, Kerash Cooper, recalled the incident for blogger Eric Ikpe: “I had water in one hand with Kool-Aid in my other hand, and (Kishon) had one more lap to go, and he said, ‘I don’t feel good.’ ” Ikpe reported that heat complications caused the death. Kishon apparently took up football largely with peers, as a strong, athletic youth player for the Washington Park Buccaneers program in Hollywood, Fla. “His desire for the game was so strong that he would come home and run drills around the house,” Ikpe reported. Kerash, a musician, would be drawn outside, leaving the home studio to indulge football with his son. “It got to the point where I would start watching football just because of Kishon,” the father said. “I was proud of him, and what he was doing on the field.” Two days before he died, Kishon scored a touchdown for Washington Park. “It was a good touchdown. It was a good game,” said Matayo Gray, a 13-year-old cousin. Sources: GenNexxt.WordPress.com, &lt;i&gt;Miami Herald&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;South Florida Sun Sentinel&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Frederick Latrell Dunbar Jr., 16, Mississippi, fullback for D’Iberville High School, collapsed while blocking on a play during a game, suffering cardiac arrest. The incident occurred about 9 p.m., and trainers and medics attended to Dunbar for 15 minutes, employing an automated external defibrillator, or AED. An ambulance transported the teen to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. “Everything was done on the field to (try saving) him,” said Arlton Hudson, coach of Gautier High School, which hosted the game. “The trainers worked on him when they realized he was not breathing. CPR was administered to him. I know they ‘defibbed’ him three or four times. They did everything they could do… and it just didn’t work.” A coroner was unsure what triggered the cardiac arrest while finding that heart abnormalities may have contributed. Dunbar was solidly built at 5-7, 185 pounds, and video of his last football play did not confirm whether an impact caused his heart to stop beating. D’Iberville coach Buddy Singleton said Dunbar was struck near a shoulder, from the side. “You could see him kind of stumble and he fell. I don’t think he ever regained consciousness after that,” Singleton said. Meanwhile, friends and family remembered Dunbar, who had gone by his middle name, for fine qualities founded in his unwavering positive attitude. “He was such a good dude, such a happy dude,” said Orin Cole, friend and teammate. “Cherish everything you have, because you never know when you are going to lose it.” Singleton, with more than 30 years coaching experience, said: “He was a great kid, real clean-cut, a good student. He was one of those guys you love to have on the team. … It was real tough (at the tragic game). I’ve been in this business a long time, and you don’t get prepared for something like this. I’d never lost a player like this, and I just thanked the Lord it hadn’t happened before now.” Sources: MSGulf.com, &lt;i&gt;Mississippi Press&lt;/i&gt;, WLOX-TV and &lt;i&gt;Biloxi Sun Herald&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 10&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Brian Rushing, 17, Virginia, defensive tackle for Southhampton High School, died in his sleep during the overnight following a football game. A preliminary autopsy found Rushing died of stress linked to an undiagnosed heart condition and football collision was not a factor, according to Rev. Charles Worth, spokesman for the Rushing family. The player, somewhat overweight, “suffered no life-threatening injuries from football,” Worth said. “Any exertion would have brought on this condition.” Worth, pastor of the True Word Christian Church that Rushing attended, remembered the young man as upbeat and humorous: “He was a good kid. I can’t say enough platitudes about him.” Former schoolmates posted tributes online. “You will be missed Brian,” wrote Harvey Holt. “You could never be forgotten,” Amber Jefferson wrote, adding, “I shed one last tear for you as I read through that beautiful but goofy poem you wrote me. I miss you. And you will always be in my heart.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;Franklin Tidewater News&lt;/i&gt;, Recruit757.com and &lt;a href="http://www.facebook.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.facebook.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h3&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 14px"&gt;Sept. 16&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 14px; FONT-WEIGHT: normal"&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Jerry Green, 66, Tennessee, referee of football and basketball, complained about feeling sick during halftime of a football game he was officiating at Signal Mountain High School. Green went to a bathroom where he was discovered later, collapsed of a brain aneurysm, and he died that night at a hospital. Green, a realty specialist who was diabetic and overweight, had officiated school sports for 35 years in western Tennessee. He was known as a rules stickler who insisted players were fully padded, including hip and butt pads, David Whitley reported. “He was known to be very stern on the field,” said Billy Fairbanks, officiating crewmate and friend of Green. “That’s just how he was.” Sources: WRCB-TV, AOL.SporttingNews.com and Chattanoogan.com.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;h3&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 14px"&gt;Sept. 18:&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-WEIGHT: normal"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 14px"&gt;Kainen Boring, 17, Tennessee, kicker/linebacker for Bledsoe County High School, suffered head trauma of a helmet-to-helmet collision during a practice session, while making a “perfect form tackle,” said a friend. Boring rose to his feet, walked to a huddle and said, “Something ain’t right.” The 6-foot, 195-pound teen collapsed, remaining conscious long enough to speak with a coach, then fell into seizure. Boring was airlifted to a hospital for emergency brain surgery. His mother, Paula Boring, later said a constricted-arteries tangle found at base of Kainen’s skull apparently contributed to the injury—“venous malformation” or AVM—which she described as “like a birthmark, a cluster of blood vessels that ruptured… during practice.” In hospital Kainen would not regain consciousness, sustained on ventilator with nary vital signs until the removal of life support, and his organs were donated to transplant patients. Weeks afterward, his father discussed the tragedy with news reporter Stephen Hargis: “The first thing I want to make clear is that football didn’t kill Kainen,” said Robby Boring. “We never knew he had AVM until after his accident, but it could have happened by him doing just about anything. Kainen loved football. He loved being part of that team, and this wasn’t anybody’s fault. We don’t even question God as to why this happened. It’s not for us to understand right now.” Nevertheless, the death qualified as the year’s second known collision fatality in American football, according to definition of the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research (NCCSIR), University of North Carolina. Kainen Boring was a dedicated athlete, faithfully attending football practice and other workouts; the day he was injured, Kainen rose early before school, leaving home at dawn to lift weights with an uncle. “That was the last time we spoke to each other, and I wish now I had held onto him longer,” Paula Boring said. The mother told Hargis she took comfort knowing Kainen’s organs lived on through transplants, like for the young woman in Georgia who received his heart. “I want to meet her so badly,” Paula said. “I want to put my hand on her chest and feel Kainen’s heart beat one more time.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;Chattanooga Times Free Press&lt;/i&gt;, WRCB-TV, WTVC-TV, Chattanoogan.com and &lt;i&gt;New York Times&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 22&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Jurelle Davis, 15, California, defensive back for Cosumnes Oaks High School, suffered a severe asthma attack followed by cardiac arrest at his home on Monday, Sept. 19, according to school officials. Davis died that Thursday in a hospital, and football activity was not reported to have contributed. His football coaches said Davis had chronic health conditions, including Crohn’s disease, but the teen was determined to participate and received medical clearance. Davis carried an inhaler everywhere and was remembered as quiet, respectful and intelligent. “He was an undersized guy who had health issues his whole life,” said coach Ryan Gomes. “But he loved the game so much, he never wanted to give it up. I talked to his mom and dad, and they said the one thing he absolutely loved was being out on the football field with his brothers and teammates. He was absolutely aggressive on the field. He played hard and let it all out on the field.” Davis was “one of the hardest hitters we had,” said Vinny Herrera, friend and teammate, “and he pushed himself harder than anyone else. He’s an inspiration to me. … He was a quiet person but funny.” Sources: ElkGrove.Patch.com, &lt;i&gt;Elk Grove Citizen&lt;/i&gt;,&amp;nbsp; KOVR-TV and KXTV-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Angela Gettis, 16, California, cheerleader for George Washington Preparatory High School, collapsed amidst a leg-kick routine during a school football game, suffering cardiac arrest. The incident occurred about 9 p.m., as Washington High tied the game score on a touchdown, and bystanders performed CPR on Gettis until emergency personnel arrived, reviving her only briefly. Gettis was pronounced dead around midnight at a hospital, and family members said she formerly had been diagnosed with an enlarged heart, which may have contributed. “It is a catastrophic loss for the school and community,” said John Deasy, superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District. Todd Ullah, principal at Gettis’ school, said: “Washington High, like every other high school, has its share of unfortunate incidents regarding youth… but you can never really prepare. It’s devastating, it’s tragic.” Friends described Gettis as popular, cheerful and studious, aspiring to major in forensic science at college. “We thought she’d do something special,” said friend Chizo Iberosi. Sources: The Associated Press, Los Angeles Times, KABC-TV and NBCLosAngeles.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Nicholas Gulow, 15, Georgia, center for Rome High School, was stricken at home then pronounced dead at a local hospital. Coroner Ernie Studard said he believed Gulow died of natural causes. Gulow, an overweight youth, apparently played a junior-varsity football game on Sept. 29, but the sport was not reported to have contributed to his death. “He was a respectful kid and he loved Rome High football,” said coach Franco Perkins. Gulow was a “humble and spirited” player, wrote student reporter Chelsea Crumley, and senior football player Cameron Richardson referred to him as “my brother.” The team dedicated a victory to Gulow. “I played my hardest just for him,” Richardson said. Senior player Joe Claytor said, “The whole team was not thinking about losing or winning, but rather to play every play like Gulow would have, 110 percent.” Besides football and track at school, Gulow participated in Junior ROTC, FCA and yearbook. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Rome News-Tribune&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Rome High Harbinger&lt;/i&gt; and Talley’s Parkview Chapel Funeral Home.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 12&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Ryan Smith, 16, Oklahoma, defensive lineman for Edmond North High School, suffered bone fractures in his right leg, of the tibia and fibula, when struck from behind during a practice session on Oct. 11. Smith, 6-3, 220 pounds, was treated at a hospital and released, with upcoming surgery scheduled for the leg injuries, but at home in the overnight his condition deteriorated. Lethargic, unable to rise from bed the next morning, Smith was taken to a different hospital and admitted to critical care; he died that night and blood clots possibly contributed, resulting from the leg fractures, said one expert. In January 2012, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma medical examiner’s official said Smith died of an abnormal condition or “sequela” originating of the leg injuries, pending a final autopsy report. “Unbelievable,” said Michael Lively, the teen’s uncle. “It’s hard to believe something like that would happen. … It’s just something you can’t understand.” Smith had attended two high schools in the Edmond area, and students at each remembered him as fun and engaging, a teen enjoying football and wrestling, and dreaming of playing in the NFL. Taevyon Warren was a sophomore classmate and teammate of Smith; each had transferred to Edmond North High for the fall, and they met in summer football practice. “With both of us being new, we just bonded,” Warren said. “Just his presence, just him being around, would make your day.” Warren and friends produced a rap rhyme in Smith’s honor. “We did a remix of a song, talking about how life is short and how you never expect to end. We just talked about Ryan and how good a person he was.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;Oklahoma City Oklahoman&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Edmond Sun&lt;/i&gt;, KFOR-TV, KWTV-TV, ABC News and MaxPreps.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 14&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Ridge Barden, 16, New York, defensive tackle for Phoenix High School, suffered brain trauma of contact during a game; he lay on his belly momentarily after a play, until coaches and trainers arrived at his side. Barden rolled over of his power and sat up, complaining of headache. “Coach, I think I got hit head-to-head,” he told head coach Jeff Charles. Then Barden tried to stand and collapsed, comatose; he died later at a hospital of a brain bleed resulting from impact to the head, according to police. A school athletics official in New York, John Rathbun, said: “I don’t think anyone could have ever, ever, ever seen this coming. Accidents do happen.” Dr. Jeffrey Kutcher, an authority on sport-related head trauma, said of Barden’s case: “Those kind of injuries are very rare, they’re catastrophic, they will happen and there’s no real way of preventing them through equipment. That’s going to happen any time there are impacts to the head of significant force.” The coaches reviewed game video of Barden but could not determine a causal instance between two possible collisions that were routine for football, Jorge Castillo reported. Charles told journalist Castillo he was so shaken by the tragedy with Barden that he considered leaving coaching. “I will never bad-mouth the sport of football,” Charles said. “I played it and I loved it and I’ve coached for years, but it does make me take a second look at it.” Jody Barden, father of the deceased athlete, said he blamed no one and did not want “negative spin” on football. “I don’t want to scare kids from playing the game,” the parent said. “Ridge loved playing the game, and I know he wouldn’t want it to get a bad name.” The death of Ridge Barden qualified as the third known collision fatality in American football of 2011, per criteria of the NCCSIR at UNC. “It’s still shocking,” said his mother, Jacqueline Barden. “He was with us and now he’s gone.” She did not want other players to feel guilty, and she said neither would her son. “He just would not want those people to think that it was their fault,” Jacqueline said. “Everything that Ridge did, he did with full gust. I’d say just take that attitude with you.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;New York Times&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Syracuse Post-Standard&lt;/i&gt;, WSYR-TV and ABC World News.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 27&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Alec Mounkes, 13, Kansas, offensive lineman/linebacker for Lyndon Middle School, sustained an ankle injury during a game on Oct. 6, initially diagnosed by doctors as a mere sprain. Mounkes, in good physical shape, was prescribed rest, to stay off the injured ankle, but his condition grew catastrophic with development of blood clots in the legs; he twice suffered cardiac arrest, said a school official. The boy was hospitalized for weeks, kept alive on a heart-and-lung machine and undergoing amputations on both legs. Mounkes died following lung surgery as a “great kid from a great family,” said Brian Spencer, superintendent of Lyndon Unified School District. “We are sorry for your loss,” stated an online post to the Mounkes family, from friends in their community, the Scott Jordan family, who added. “Alec was so special and loving like his family.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;Topeka Capital-Journal&lt;/i&gt;, KansasFirstNews.com and Legacy.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Nov. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Aaron “Tootie” Harris, 18, Alabama, a large offensive tackle for Walter Wellborn High School, died of reported kidney failure in a hospital. An overweight young man, Harris first had kidney problems at 4 years old, his mother said, and he was ill the week he played a football game on Thursday night then missed school the following day, experiencing headaches, back pain and lethargy. The family thought Aaron was negotiating usual ailments of football season. “I didn’t think nothing worse until they had to put him in intensive care (at a hospital on Saturday), when he was having shortness of breath,” said Sharon Moore, Aaron’s mother. Harris succumbed on his third day hospitalized, shocking football teammates and coaches on the small roster at Wellborn High, where “Tootie” was a senior-class leader beloved by students and staff. “We tried to keep it together, the coaches tried to keep it together, for the younger guys,” said senior Dalton Screws, Harris’ friend and teammate, “but if you knew Tootie, you would know why it was hard. It was losing one of the best people we knew.” Schoolmates covered Harris’ locker with tribute notes and a Facebook memorial page was loaded with posts from friends of all ages. “Very upsetting,” said football coach Jeff Smith. “We love him (Harris) so much. He was a Panther in the truest sense. He represented our school and our community the best way he could.” Sources: &lt;i&gt;Anniston Star&lt;/i&gt;, WVTM-TV and MaxPreps.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Nov. 8&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Jerson Tizol, 15, Texas, nose tackle for West Brook High School, told family members of suffering a head injury in a freshman game on Oct. 26, and medical examination revealed both hemorrhaging of his brain and leukemia. “He was sent to M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, where he died,” Scott Lawrence reported. “The cause of death was bleeding and swelling of the brain.” The case may qualify as football collision death through follow-up by NCCSIR researchers. Tizol, undersized but intense for line action in football, was an honors student and newcomer to high school who attained sophomore rank for advanced credits earned while in middle school. At Tizol’s former school, Odom Academy, he was remembered as a good athlete, outstanding student and popular personality. “He made friends with everybody,” said Tillie Hickman, Odom principal. “He was a real leader for the children and had an incredible future.” Students and teachers at both schools raised thousands of dollars for the Tizol family, to defray medical and funeral expenses. Giovanni Romero led fundraising at Odom, as friend and former schoolmate of Tizol. “We cared about him,” Romero said. “And, you know, we all miss him. We love him, so we are just trying to help out the family. … You’re never going to know what happens to a person, so just treat them nicely, and get along with everybody.” Sources: KFDM-TV, &lt;i&gt;Beaumont Enterprise&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;West Brook Times&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Nov. 20&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Garrett Uekman, 19, Arkansas, tight end for the University of Arkansas, became stricken on Sunday morning in Fayetteville, alone in his campus dormitory room. Uekman was found unresponsive at 11:15 a.m., about an hour after a roommate had seen him playing a videogame, and medical personnel arrived to find the athlete in cardiac arrest. Uekman, listed at 6-4, 254 pounds, was pronounced dead in a local hospital at 12:10 p.m., less than 24 hours after his last football action, playing in a Razorbacks game on Saturday in Little Rock. Coroner Roger Morris concluded that Uekman had a previously undetected heart condition, enlarged heart syndrome, which caused the death. Toxicology scans came back negative and Morris said manner of death was natural, with no sign of foul play. As No.3-ranked Arkansas prepared to face No.1 LSU on Nov. 25, Razorbacks coach Bobby Petrino issued a prepared statement, saying in part: “Garrett Uekman was a special member of our family, and we are all saddened by his passing. His loss is a terrible shock, and it makes you realize how precious life is.” The deceased athlete was a former prized recruit, an in-state product, and his parents, Danny and Michelle Uekman of Arkansas, issued a release through the university, stating: “Our son was living his dream of going to the U of A and playing football for the Razorbacks. He loved his school, his coaches, and his teammates and classmates, and was an influence and inspiration to so many people. We ask your love and prayers for Garrett, our family and his friends as we all cope with this heavy and painful loss.” Sources: The Associated Press and University of Arkansas.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Matt Chaney is a writer, editor, teacher and restaurant worker living in Missouri, USA. His 2001 graduate thesis study for an MA degree at the University of Central Missouri was qualitative media analysis of 466 football reports, historical print coverage of anabolic steroids and HGH in American football, largely based on electronic search among thousands of news texts from the 1970s through 1999. For more information, including contact numbers and his 2009 book, &lt;/i&gt;Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football, &lt;i&gt;visit the homepage at&lt;/i&gt; &lt;u&gt;&lt;font color="blue"&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/u&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>Football Researchers Mum on Faulty Injury Statistics</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2012/01/04/football-researchers-mum-about-faulty-injury-data.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2012-01-04:6904169f-8d3f-4dab-a0fa-76276925b7d9</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="Football Catastrophic Injuries" />
		<category term="News Commentary" />
		<updated>2012-01-05T01:22:01Z</updated>
		<published>2012-01-05T01:22:01Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style=""&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font style=""&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font style=""&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font size="-0"&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;Glaring Shortfall of Catastrophic Casualties Grows in Ongoing Review&amp;nbsp;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Spinal Cases Might Reach Hundreds Annually in American Football&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Mueller and Cantu Gathered Mere 24 Catastrophic Cases for Year 2010&amp;nbsp;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;News commentary by Matt Chaney&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;ChaneysBlog.com&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Posted Wednesday, January 4, 2012&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;!--RADEDITORSAVEDCOMMENT[if !supportEmptyParas]--&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;!--RADEDITORSAVEDCOMMENT[endif]--&gt;&lt;!--?xml:namespace prefix = o /--&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Football-funded researchers Frederick Mueller and Dr. Robert Cantu are ignoring interview requests concerning their under-reporting of catastrophic casualties in the American sport, injuries they classify as severe trauma involving brain, skull, vertebral column and/or spinal cord.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Or Mueller and Cantu aren’t talking to me, at least, perhaps understandably from their perspective, facing now their likely decades of bad data in cases shortfall, erroneous rates, and even baseless claims about trending “safer” football in the United States.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;And all because my electronic searches through Google banks continue to produce cases and rates of catastrophic football injury that bury Mueller-Cantu numbers, which are widely accepted and republished at face value, including by medical journals and the CDC.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Mueller and Cantu work under auspices of the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research, University of North Carolina. The NCAA provides major funding.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Most importantly, America faces prospect the large majority of catastrophic football injuries go unreported in public, besides a minor portion emerging in news information, the stream fished heavily by Mueller and Cantu for cases they catch.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In the class of vertebral fractures involving no paralysis, for example, there’s probability at least &lt;i&gt;hundreds&lt;/i&gt; such “walking” cases go unreported or missed every year in American football, based on sound estimates and etiology outside UNC, along with expert and witness opinion on injuries.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For survivors of all catastrophic categories, I’ve now collected almost a hundred candidate cases for 2011 and should find more. For 80 annotated cases and further discussion, see my Dec. 21 post.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My final qualified number for 2011 should far exceed any on record by Mueller and Cantu, whose 2008 tally of 63 cases is apparently their high mark.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For 2010, the current Mueller-Cantu report lists mere 24 survivors of catastrophic football injury nationwide, including 13 in “complete” recovery.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;By stark contrast, my ongoing searches have located some 70 survivors for 2010 football, including over 20 in the past week, and I expect to hit more cases through Google.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;About 50 cases I’ve gathered for 2010 remain omitted from the current UNC data.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;I have at least 7 detected brain bleeds missed by Mueller and Cantu, of 2010, along with about 35 reported spinal fractures, some cases involving lasting paralysis.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Epidemiologist Charles Yesalis empathizes with Mueller and Cantu. Yesalis, ScD, a professor emeritus of health policy and administration at Penn State University, says challenges are immense for producing representative or accurate accounting on bodily catastrophes in vast American football, a high-risk population of upwards five million active participants.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“I think the key thing is this notion that they (Mueller and Cantu) are only picking up a small percent of cases,” Yesalis said in a phone interview. “And given my experience as an epidemiologist, that just doesn’t surprise me at all.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“When you go farming for these data—and that’s a good a term as any—boy, it’s a lot of hit and miss.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The Mueller-Cantu approach for gathering catastrophic cases is characterized in annual UNC reports, depicting a patchwork of football sources and other spotters, coaches, trainers, organizers, doctors and media like me, who forward candidate finds such as online news stories.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Granted, the Mueller-Cantu method picks up some information, but little else is certain beyond invalidity as epidemiological study, pending revisions.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For briefing on the research team, Mueller is director and a former football coach who’s compiled injury cases since the 1970s. “Dr. Mueller,” as Cantu addresses him, holds a PhD in education and works as a UNC professor of sport administration and science. Cantu, the well-known neural sport surgeon and researcher based in Boston, is medical director of the studies.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Yesalis has not performed scholarly critique of the Mueller-Cantu reports at UNC, but he says the inexact approach for gathering football’s worst injuries is nothing new in aspiring research.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“When you’re dealing with (data) as what might get reported in the news, versus trying to identify accurately what’s reported in emergency rooms, or hospital records, that’s problematic,” says Yesalis, co-author of acclaimed national surveys on steroid use by teenagers, among his scientific credits on sport doping and more epidemic disease.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“You’re trying to glue all this together, which is what it appears they’re doing (at UNC),” Yesalis says. “And they’re not the first people to do this on a variety of disease states, and emergency-room conditions, injuries and all that.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Heavy limitations virtually quash the Mueller-Cantu approach at outset, for bearing solid data and rates, and the absolute numbers they typically present or imply are impossible. Their documents always contain a pair of obscured same sentences, disclaimers for inadequate data, but there’s no formal statement of study limitations. Scant literature review doesn’t mention pertinent research, including studies outside UNC on spinal injuries in general population that rank the sport of football among causes.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;An informed schoolteacher would revise the Mueller-Cantu study at first draft, proposal stage, and apparently the UNC readers of graduate and doctoral theses never have the opportunity, given shoddy final data and presumptions that are published and disseminated worldwide, thanks to witless journal editors, government officials and news media.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Obstacles for Mueller and Cantu begin on likelihood that most catastrophic football cases remain unreported in any fashion, for factors such as injured players’ ignorance or resistance of seeking treatment. Cases are also withheld for patient privacy, doctor misdiagnoses and faulty medical coding.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“And if you rely on the fact that it &lt;i&gt;might&lt;/i&gt; be in the news?” Yesalis poses. “Well, you know…”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Attritional effects on information don’t end with a case’s publicity by news reporters. Much daily print and broadcast content is culled out before reaching online posting, and cyber pages are routinely taken down in as soon as weeks. Subscription-only access blocks readers from many online news publications, particularly of rural areas.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Indeed, I cannot declare that my vigilant Google review, based on revolving Boolean word searches over hundreds of hours, produces a representative sampling of catastrophic football casualties for a given year. No known reference can affirm, and I find that even news of football fatalities slips by, a few cases, through cross-checking my own lists and those of Mueller-Cantu.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Meanwhile, Yesalis confirms medical databases are no catchall method, no resolution for limitations, and the human variable can skew electronic data in translation.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“If you’re using in any way of automated medical records, then (the question becomes): How is a condition diagnosed?” Yesalis says. “You may have a condition that &lt;i&gt;should be&lt;/i&gt; included that is not… That would be a false-negative (case).”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“You could have a false-positive. You might count something as an athletic injury, having to do with (brain injury) or the like, that isn’t. Again, (problems) because of miscoding, or you have diagnosis that’s in gray area.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“That can be affected by what the physician writes,” Yesalis adds. “Somebody might be (hospitalized) and it may not even be in the report that it had to do with football. What you’re picking up, in an electronic medical-records search, is the primary diagnosis and the cause. If it’s a trauma, it wouldn’t surprise me if often football, or the cause, is left off the chart.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Trying to harvest (epidemiological data), looking at medical records and diagnoses, it’s not a walk in the park to be sure.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 18px;"&gt;Football Spinal Cases Become Black Hole for Disclosure, Research&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Based on my intuition of e-searching and -sifting countless thousands of news texts involving football health issues, conducted since graduate study in 1996—along with my experience in football as player, coach and journalist since 1976—I believe Google currently accesses the large majority in actual game cases of death, survivor brain bleeds requiring surgery, and spinal-cord traumas causing permanent paralysis. Those represent the sensational or “newsworthy” casualties of American football.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Bets are off for other categories, though, particularly football cases of severe injury to vertebral column without paralysis, like bone fracture. If anything, I’d wager that hundreds of these casualties are missed every year, if not more, given various insurmountable factors, correlating studies outside North Carolina, and the fact I’ve found 50 and counting for year 2011.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;After the untold amount of football spinal injuries undisclosed, the cases involving treatment often require CT or MRI radiology and subjective judgment for rendering diagnosis—“What is one specialist’s picture of a cervical vein is the next one’s image of stress fracture,” a technician tells me—then the variable of &lt;i&gt;prominence&lt;/i&gt; influences public revelation or silence.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Starting football players on school teams comprise the majority of publicized spinal cases through all levels, especially prep standouts at the offensive “skill” positions of quarterback, running back and receiver. The story of a juvenile backup player with mere vertebral fracture rarely reaches public airing, from youth levels encompassing about 98 percent of football population. Sportswriters and editors don’t qualify such non-paralysis cases as newsworthy, if even alerted.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Thus news quantity is no vetted indicator of spinal injury’s scope in athletics, but credible estimates suggest how big the problem might manifest for tackle football in the United States.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Data sets of the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center at University of Alabama-Birmingham suggest American football could annually produce 36 to 72 paralyzing injuries, defined for database criteria as “temporary or permanent sensory and/or motor deficit.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;I base that range on the UAB system’s intake of about 13 percent of the estimated 12,000 cervical-cord traumas each year in the United States, and football’s ranking as 15&lt;sup&gt;th&lt;/sup&gt; in etiology for 27,526 patients in the database, having caused 0.5 percent of the injuries to lead all sports.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;By contrast, Mueller and Cantu list 8 total spinal-cord traumas for football 2010, along with 12 for 2009 and 17 for 2008.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For all vertebral fractures, an estimated 700,000 occur in the general population, with as many as two-thirds undiagnosed. The field is dominated by people with degenerative bone conditions, but&amp;nbsp;football’s ranking in etiology of spinal-cord trauma signals it could produce thousands of cases with vertebral fracture.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In comparison, the Mueller-Cantu 2010 report lists 13 cases of vertebral fracture in football, cases ranging from quadriplegia to no paralysis and strong recovery.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Juvenile players comprise 9 of the cases, for an injury rate of about 1-in-500,000 athletes by UNC data, despite other literature indicating rate closer to 1-in-1,000.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Meanwhile, among NFL players in 2011, known catastrophic spinal casualties occurred at rate of about 1-in-200 players or less. And that accounts for only the cases in news media.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Sportswriters certainly miss severe neck and back injuries of the high-profile NFL, for communication blocks ranging from &amp;nbsp;no diagnosis to privacy. Unreported catastrophic spinal injury likely occurred in 2011 among NFL players, beyond at least 6 known candidate cases requiring operations and 1 of non-surgical neck immobilization lasting three months for the athlete.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Browns linebacker Scott Fujita, a 10-year NFL veteran, wonders of true epidemiological scope for his notorious work environment. “A lot of us (players) are walking around with so much damage to our necks, and our spines, and you never know what might turn up,” he said, speaking in a phone interview.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Much of the damage to NFL players is likely residual, dating back to college and prep football. Fujita had neck surgery as a college player at Cal, for his severe case of stenosis or narrowing of the spinal canal that crimped the nerve-bundle cord. Not only was surgery imperative for continuing his playing career, but for resuming normal lifestyle as well.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“I was getting (nerve) stingers pretty much every time I hit somebody “ in football, Fujita recalls. “Then I’d be typing a term paper and turn my head too fast, and give myself a stinger. I was starting to have significant (muscle) atrophy on my left side, over my trap and delts and down my arm. It was noticeable in pictures.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For a year of football news online, I’ll find a few cases like the collegiate Fujita’s, severe spinal stenosis leading doctors to recommend corrective surgery. Some players take the option, others don’t.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Mueller-Cantu annuals list a single case in recent years, a “complete” recovery of 2009, but Fujita and I believe there are undisclosed severe cases. And symptoms of minor spinal stenosis affect a football multitude, as many as 50 percent of players, studies find.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Myself, nearing 52 years old and 28 removed from battering collisions in college football, I experience symptoms of neck stenosis, the shooting numbness, radiating pain and trademark interior “coldness” overtaking my C5 to C7 vertebrae range. The episodic inflammation strikes regularly, often weekly, especially while driving or at a computer, and I gobble ibuprofen for the discomfort, or agony.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“(Spinal) stenosis is extremely common,” Fujita says of pro players. “Most guys get a stinger here and there. I imagine once you get a few, then it becomes worse and worse, then it becomes chronic.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;At least 8 NFL players had neck surgeries in 2011, including the aforementioned 6 solid cases for catastrophic designation. Sometimes a surgery is driven by the player’s desire to continue his career, but I find most are necessary for stabilizing spinal damage that acutely threatens nerves and normal function.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Throughout my playing career, college and pros, I occasionally hear about a guy with a broken neck that requires surgery,” Fujita says. “I’d say more often than not, if it is a pretty serious break or operation, I don’t seem to recall those guys coming back and playing. But that’s just me shooting from the hip.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Yeah, I would kind of put the neck and spine in same (regard) as head injury,” Fujita continues, focusing on the NFL. “There’s a lot of gray area involved, and no one knows exactly how to diagnose it, how to describe it, how to talk about it. They know it’s serious, they just almost don’t want to touch the issue.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fujita, 32, is an intelligent and thoughtful athlete, husband and father. He holds a master’s degree in education from UC-Berkeley and serves on the NFL players union executive committee.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;But Fujita currently wears a cast on his right hand, after shattering bones of two knuckles and fingers while hitting ground in a game last month. Complicated surgery pieced together the bone fragments in Fujita’s fingers, hopefully, lashing everything back in place with steel screws, 22 tiny bolts. This season Fujita also spent two weeks on the Cleveland disabled list for diagnosed concussion. That’s his brutal job however lucrative, until further notice.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fujita treks the jungle of pro football in America, long has, and he always runs. Physical threat and unspoken boundary are everywhere, like stiff resistance to report bodily damages of the NFL. The stillness stands pragmatically for every insider concerned, all parties, league, management, union, players, families, agents, with fortunes riding the line over health risk, outcome, and especially liability, who ends up paying.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“A lot of times when guys are having neck stingers, or even some back issues, in many cases the clubs won’t even want to take a good look at it, especially on the MRI,” Fujita says. “And I know a lot of times the player doesn’t want to take a good look, either, because you &lt;i&gt;don’t want to know&lt;/i&gt; what’s going on.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Maybe that’s stupid and irresponsible, but I think that’s the reality that a lot guys are living with right now.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;So-called safer football is wholly unrealistic, meanwhile, a national joke that nevertheless occupies national dialogue for the game’s epic health crisis at hand, blowing up over brain-injury revelations and lawsuits compounding for all levels.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Thus the data of catastrophic injury enter play, and inadequate numbers serve to nurture a popular, resilient myth, the one how an individual player faces just “rare” chance for sustaining “freak” violent mishap resulting in death or permanent dysfunction.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Parents and novice players buy that falsehood by the millions. I did as a boy.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Actually, catastrophic football injury—which by definition must be expanded to include lethal categories such as heatstroke, blood clotting, organ destruction, artery rupture, staph infection and peripheral paralysis that comprise scores of survivor cases I’ve located for 2011—is quite predictable and possibly occurring daily on average, somewhere.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The American gridiron’s goriest, most risky stretches are the regular season from late summer into winter and “spring practice,” when many states allow full-contact drills and scrimmaging at schools, along with collegiate programs nationwide. Conditioning and weightlifting sessions of January and February also kill and severely wound players, particularly at colleges.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Yet some American opinion leaders say it isn’t really so, this picture of brutal football, not any longer. People like NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, who promotes neo-fandom terms like “culture change” and “concussion awareness.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Today, football advocates insist they’re seeing a safer brand of tackle football, and Mueller and Cantu join Goodell at campaign front, citing their decades of catastrophic-injury numbers as evidence.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Mueller and Cantu claim their data have been instrumental in a game trend since the 1970s, steering players away from head contact.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Ridiculous, retorts Fujita, the NFL linebacker who’s flabbergasted the foolishness is mentioned in straight face. “Absolutely not, if anything I would say there’s more head contact in football today.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“There’s increased emphasis on trying to clean up the game,” Fujita acknowledges. “You know, coaching guys up in ‘proper technique’ and all these catch phrases, and paying lip-service to everything. So when it comes down to it, this remains a violent game.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Pro players certainly grasp their risks, and the genetic violence of football for all ages. And helmet or head-to-head colliding is the rule rather than exception for modern football, particularly with skull-preserving helmet technology among forces that channel combatants into zero contact, every player, from “Tiny Mite” to NFL linebacker.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fujita has to laugh when I ask whether he feels safer playing football these days, definitely a stupid question.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Um, no, I don’t feel any safer,” he replies. “I think in some respects you see the game changing. Some ways. Like a guy (of the NFL) coming across the middle, catching a pass for a 15-yard dig, and the safety will pull off (for the cameras), whereas before, more likely, the safety would blow the guy up.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“It’s just a brutal game, and I don’t think you can &lt;i&gt;technique&lt;/i&gt;—using ‘technique’ as a verb here—you can’t technique the game into becoming safer. You can’t even (player) fine the game into becoming safer. And that’s just the reality.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 18px;"&gt;Human Toll, Medical Damages, ‘Public’ Football and Vital Statistics &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Independent journalist Irvin Muchnick laughs, too, when I broach the theory of safer football, the central talking point of football advocates for their increasing problems over injury epidemic and monetary damages.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Anyone with two eyes on a Sunday afternoon can see that’s not so,” he says, dismissing assertions a fundamental reduction is possible for football risk and casualty.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Muchnick, the author, alternative columnist and indie blogger with cunning for banging on sport-entertainment conglomerates, bristles at the idea of faulty research, funded by football, as a catalyst for safer sport over 34 years of publication.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“If Cantu and the North Carolina people are claiming some credit here, about what their data have wrought, that’s so patently a false claim,” says Muchnick, a leading voice of our growing faction against “public” football financed by government, schools and colleges and largely carried for damages by general insurance consumers of health and liability coverage.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Muchnick said, speaking with me by phone, that UNC’s glaring under-reporting of football injury makes news on two levels.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“One is the statistics themselves, knowledge is power, and the information is important,” he says. “For a sport system out of control, I don’t know exactly at what point the (germane) statistics move people, to take our master points seriously, but clearly it’s part of it.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Which brings us to the second point, the process,” Muchnick continues, “and the idea that these kind of data are being collected by people who aren’t doing the job right. Not so much that they’re doing it in bad faith, but that it’s not a priority and it’s supporting some agenda other than getting everything out there.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Muchnick sees football advocates in stall tactic amid dread crisis, recalcitrant to accept looming reform of their blood sport, if not abolishment. He scoffs at supporters’ rhetoric overall but does detect a shift in public conscience, related to their talk.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“One good thing about ‘concussion awareness’ is that it is pointing the markers in only one direction,” Muchnick says. “Even if people are not buying into this football problem as speedily and as conscientiously as we would hope, there’s only one place this story is going. And it’s not going toward reduced deaths, reduced disability, reduced public-health costs for our country.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Even if the NFL threads the PR needle in all this stuff, and they do a pretty good damn job on that, it still doesn’t add up to answering for the feeder levels of this activity, amateurs in public high schools, colleges and so forth. The economic numbers just can’t sustain themselves.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Football,” Muchnick says, “still doesn’t get its arms around the fact that seven- and eight-figure lawsuits, and imbalanced budgets, are going to be inevitable as our public awareness increases.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Finally, of the data mess at UNC on catastrophic football injuries, Muchnick wants real response from the researchers, besides their short email replies to me, thanking me for my "interest" and noting they're busy evaluating &lt;i&gt;their&lt;/i&gt; data for 2011.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Right. Mueller and Cantu are presently bombarded by about 95 cases I’ve dropped on them, including over a dozen since my Dec. 21 post.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Mueller and Cantu also cannot yet address their second overdue task, revising their bad data and assumptions of 2010, while also gauging the infestation back through decades of their reports.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For 2010, I’m still awaiting Mueller’s green light for loading them with the 70-some survivor cases I’ve pulled from Google, surely to obliterate their paltry year data currently posted at &lt;a href="http://www.unc.edu/depts/nccsi.%3C/p%3E"&gt;www.unc.edu/depts/nccsi.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Muchnick is bored already, seeking open discussion on the matter, quickly.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“It’s very important for Cantu and Mueller to talk about why their methodology failed to catch these cases that you did catch, as a lone, independent, unfunded researcher and journalist,” he told me.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“I’m not qualified to say everything you’ve written is perfect, but I’ve seen enough of your work to know that it’s conscientious and it’s based on a coherent method. And it’s found things that are at odds with what the public’s being told, so we need to resolve those contradictions.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-family: Arial,san-serif; color: rgb(102, 102, 102); font-size: 12px;"&gt;Matt Chaney is a writer, editor, teacher and restaurant worker living in Missouri, USA. His 2001 graduate thesis for an MA degree at the University of Central Missouri is qualitative media analysis of 466 football reports, historical print coverage of anabolic steroids and HGH in American football, largely based on electronic search among thousands of news texts from the 1970s through 1999. Email him at &lt;/i&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-size: 12px;" color="#666666" face="Arial, san-serif"&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-family: Arial,san-serif; color: rgb(102, 102, 102); font-size: 12px;"&gt;For more information, including about his 2009 book,&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-size: 12px;" color="#666666" face="Arial, san-serif"&gt;Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football,&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-family: Arial,san-serif; color: rgb(102, 102, 102); font-size: 12px;"&gt;visit the homepage at&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-size: 12px;" color="#666666" face="Arial, san-serif"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;u style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-family: Arial,san-serif; color: rgb(102, 102, 102); font-size: 12px;"&gt;&lt;font color="blue"&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/u&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-size: 12px;" color="#666666" face="Arial, san-serif"&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt; &lt;/p&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>Review Finds 73 Catastrophic Football Injuries in 2011</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/12/21/review-finds-73-catastrophic-injuries-in-football-2011.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2011-12-21:2c33370f-c9b0-4751-80d7-ae7967858721</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="Football Catastrophic Injuries" />
		<category term="News Analysis" />
		<updated>2011-12-21T18:18:31Z</updated>
		<published>2011-12-21T18:18:31Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 16px; "&gt;&lt;b&gt;2011 Survivor Cases Likely High Mark for Modern American Game&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 16px; "&gt;&lt;b&gt;E-Search Also Finds Error in Catastrophic Data Reported Last Year&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 16px; "&gt;&lt;b&gt;Prominent UNC Report Far Short on Grave Casualties of Football 2010&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;By Matt Chaney&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Posted Wednesday, December 21, 2011&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The rate of catastrophic injuries in American football could
be a record in 2011, with more than 70 survivor cases of conditions such
as brain hemorrhage and spinal fracture, according to an intensive electronic survey by this reporter.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;See the complete annotated list of cases below, with
juveniles comprising the large majority of victims.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The findings belie talk of “culture change” by football
officials, their popular claim of “safer” football in America, and raise question
whether catastrophic injuries of the inherently brutal sport are significantly under-reported in record-keeping of the present and past.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Last year the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury
Research (NCCSI) logged only 24 survivor cases—barely half the 2010 cases still
available online, including players with brain bleeds and spinal paralysis missed in the report.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Now stronger accounting is assured for 2011, standing on results of my daily
searching of Google banks that's garnered a solid 70 survivor cases for verification as catastrophic football injuries, defined by the NCCSI as affecting the brain,
skull, spinal cord and/or vertebral column.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My cases include the following:&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*1 comatose preschooler, a 5-year-old “Tiny Mite” player
hospitalized with brain trauma of full-contact football.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*23 head injuries such as brain hemorrhage and skull
fracture, cases including surgery for 16 players suffering cerebral bleeding.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*41 spinal traumas, the vast majority fractures, including
17 cases requiring surgery and at least 5 involving continuing paralysis.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*1 case of MRSA infection of the spinal column apparently
triggered by football contact.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*6 cases of cardiac arrest, including 5 players revived by
portable defibrillator and CPR.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*1 case of heart attack.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In addition: &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*7 reported brain and spinal casualties require expert
consideration for catastrophic data, including the football-related
trauma of a Tennessee schoolteacher hospitalized in an ICU, after she was struck
in the head sitting along a sideline, by helmet of a diving player.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My basic approach is regular filtering of Google content, utilizing Boolean command terms such as &lt;i&gt;football &lt;/i&gt;and&lt;i&gt; hospital&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;football
medical center&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;football brain&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;football head injury&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;football
spine&lt;/i&gt; and&lt;i&gt; football vertebra&lt;/i&gt;, along with substituting main adjectives
like “player” for “football,” to recycle search on terms like &lt;i&gt;player
hospital&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;player brain&lt;/i&gt; and so forth.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Every 2011 incident I have found requires expert follow-up and
verification as football catastrophic injury, but available data indicate about
90 percent are locks for the classification by the national center
based at the University of North Carolina.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;At the NCCSI, funded primarily by the NCAA, two of
football’s associate experts have co-authored annual injury reports for a quarter-century: Frederick Mueller, who holds a PhD in education, is a
professor of sport administration at the university and a former football
coach, and Dr. Robert Cantu, of Boston, is the renowned sport neurosurgeon who
leads NFL-funded research documenting permanent brain damage in deceased
athletes, primarily football players.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Since the 1970s, Mueller and Cantu have been key figures in
the modern movement for “safer” football in America, which promotes initiatives
such as rule changes, injury awareness, helmet standards, “concussion testing”
and anti-concussion law, along with “behavior modification” of players that
teaches theoretical “proper contact,” collisions supposedly avoiding head
impacts.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Roger Goodell, NFL commissioner and associate of Cantu, has
taken up the safer football campaign since fall 2009, when a congressional
committee lambasted him for the league’s deplorable record on brain trauma in
active and retired players.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In recent years, the Mueller-Cantu research on
catastrophic injuries is cited as evidence of a trend toward less risky football in America, especially for youths.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For 2008, the NCCSI logs 63 survivor cases, adding
updates, which is the highest mark among UNC reports available online. The center’s same numbers drop to a current 44 for 2009 and the 24 last year.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;These figures are recognized as authoritative epidemiology
on American football’s worst casualties, the cases most lethal and costly, with
many survivors requiring lifetime care.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;This year’s alarming amount of
brain-bleed injuries alone translates to tens of million dollars for healthcare
in the present and future, perhaps a nine-figure cost for long-term inflation,
according to an expert I consulted. And the estimate accounts for this year’s
brain-injured players who recover functionally, as some already have.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Risk assessors, obviously, are among parties relying on
catastrophic-injury data, as they in turn represent interests in healthcare and
insurance, the co-op industries that essentially carry medical and liability
damages for American football.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;But information gathering and presentation have been
problematic for the Mueller-Cantu team at North Carolina, beginning with
reporting language that presents data in absolute terms rather than accompanied
by qualifiers like &lt;i&gt;at least&lt;/i&gt; 24 survivors for the football year and &lt;i&gt;among
available reports&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The UNC documents do contain disclaimers for inadequate
data or gathering, but the notes are brief and buried with no prominence in
methodology passages. There is no formal declaration of study limitations.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;News media, meanwhile, parrot the annual UNC numbers as hard
facts of American football, disseminating worldwide the misinformation and erroneous injury context.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In reality, no epidemiological method is proven for
reliably assessing rates of catastrophic injury in American football, and the
recognized Mueller-Cantu approach also lacks consistency of definitions and
breadth in categories. The final UNC data on survivors ignore football-related
injuries such as peripheral paralysis, heatstroke, blood clots, kidney rupture,
staph infection and “compartmental syndrome.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;No collection approach is yet validated for producing a
representative sampling or thorough accounting of grave injuries in football,
with promising e-search like mine notwithstanding.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Indeed, &lt;i&gt;multiple&lt;/i&gt; teams for annual comparison and
pooling of data might become sound strategy, if any method could prove
reliable. For example, I find cases missed by Mueller and Cantu and vice versa; they have sources in
medicine and athletics for information I cannot get.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Regardless, the UNC research needs year-round, state-of-art
collection for finding catastrophic injuries in football, particularly through electronic search. Far too many
injuries are presently missed in Google alone, inexcusably.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Regarding 2010, for example, the Mueller-Cantu report online
lists merely 14 spinal injuries, ranging from paralysis victims to cases of
“complete recovery,” another dubious term.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Cross-checking those cases with mine, I find twice their
number online and at least 30 catastrophic spinal injuries are now known to
exist for 2010, thanks to a pair of cases reported by the UNC team, of a
12-year-old youth-league player with transient paralysis and a 13-year-old
rendered quadriplegic of contact at a school football practice.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Overall, the Mueller-Cantu reports for 2010 omit some 15
spinal cases I have for American football, including 3 paralyzed school players
who have largely recovered motor function and touch sensitivity through surgery,
healing and rehabilitation.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Mueller and Cantu likewise underreport cases of brain
hemorrhages in football 2010, logging 7 presently while missing at least 5 teen
victims currently reported online. Also overlooked is the NFL “chain-gang”
official struck by a speeding player along a sideline in New Orleans; the
middle-aged man suffered a severe head injury and was hospitalized for weeks.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;At least 2 apparent cardiac cases, survivors, are missed in
the UNC report for last year: a 50-year-old Texas man who collapsed while
playing flag football and a Hawaii teenager stricken during practice at school.
Both were revived by bystanders who employed CPR and portable automated external
defibrillators (AEDs).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Bottom line, the Mueller-Cantu report for 2010 presently
omits at least 22 catastrophic-injury survivors—along with omitting known
football fatalities such as a youth player killed of contact in Philadelphia,
Quadaar White, and a college player in Minnesota, Ben Bundy, dead of brain
aneurysm suffered during a team workout.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Tough critique of research by Mueller and Cantu aside, I commend
them for assembling a foundation for catastrophic-injury information on modern
American football.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Foremost, limitations dog any collection effort, including
my review based in tapping the jet streams of Internet search mode.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The problems of locating information on bodily catastrophe
in American football begin with the incalculable cases never reported publicly,
by any medium, for reasons including privacy concern, medical misdiagnosis, and
even victim ignorance of injury like “walking” spinal fracture, of which an
untold number occurs.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Moreover, media of all types will not or cannot report every
grave injury in the vast domain and populace of American football, encompassing about five million players among tens of thousand programs across 50 states. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;For injury events made public or emerging in even scantest
detail, attritional effects weigh further on the communication.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;A significant portion of local print and broadcast news in
America does not reach posting online, and then cyber flow is divided among
content providers like subscription databases and Google, the monster search
engine that nevertheless cannot access everything Internet. Finally, many
online pages are removed after a period of posting.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;This report continues with my annotated list of 2011
survivor cases in catastrophic injury of American football.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;I am forwarding these cases to medical authorities and other
parties with interest in the focus, such as risk assessors, for soliciting
their review and comment. Dr. Cantu and Professor Mueller are on the list of
recipients.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;I urge other media to do the same, contact experts regarding
the cases below, which are public information.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Look for updates on this blog and elsewhere.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="font-weight: bold; "&gt;&lt;font style="font-size:18px"&gt;&lt;/font&gt;73 Survivor Cases of Catastrophic Injury in American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;From Reports Retrieved in Google &lt;font style="font-size: 16px; "&gt;Search &lt;/font&gt;Through December
21&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;By Matt Chaney, &lt;u&gt;&lt;font color="blue"&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/u&gt;
&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h1 style="page-break-after:avoid"&gt;&lt;i style="font-size: 16px; font-weight: normal; "&gt;Note: List below does not include
17-20 football-related fatalities in 2011, retrieved from online thus far, such
as 4 deaths of head injuries from contact, along with more than 50 player
survivors of grave conditions such as blood clots, femoral artery rupture,
heatstroke, internal organ rupture/laceration, staph infection or MRSA, and
peripheral nerve damage/paralysis.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 16px; "&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;!--[endif]--&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h1 style="page-break-after:avoid"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 16px; "&gt;Online Report of Comatose Youth Player,
Preschooler, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 29, circa&lt;/b&gt;: An unidentified“Tiny Mite” player,
5-years-old, Hawaii, reportedly fell comatose at a hospital following a head
injury. The child was injured while participating in “Tiny-Mite” division of
Oahu Pop Warner football, for ages 5, 6 and 7, according to KHON-TV. Oahu
doctor Josh Green said, “Five might be a little young. I’m concerned about it."&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Reports of Brain Hemorrhage and Surgery, American Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;March 19&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Logan Weber, 21, Iowa, offensive guard for Coe College, experienced
severe headaches while stretching for weightlifting. Weber was hospitalized
within 24 hours for brain bleeding linked to “arteriovenous malformation,” or
AVM, a congenital condition. Surgery was performed to insert a shunt and Weber
was hospitalized for 20 days. He recovered, returned to college, but ceased
playing football, serving instead as student coach for the Coe team. Source: &lt;i&gt;Cedar
Rapids Gazette&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;May 18&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Josh
Mercer, teenager, Louisiana, senior-to-be linebacker for Alexandria Senior High
School, was injured while tackling a teammate in spring practice. Hospitalized
for brain bleeding, Mercer was initially released after a few days but his
condition worsened and he was readmitted to intensive care. Surgery was
performed 10 days post-injury and Mercer began recovery, quickly completing
physical therapy. He was released from hospital then completed a scheduled 12
weeks of speech therapy in half the time. Mercer could not play football this
year but serves as a student coach for the school, according to
TheTownTalk.com.&lt;b&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 5&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Brennan Barber, 17, South Carolina, defensive lineman for Mid-Carolina
High School, was injured by a reported “routine” helmet hit during a scrimmage
and collapsed minutes later. Surgery was performed for brain bleeding. Barber
began walking three days later and was released from the hospital within a
week. He is undergoing therapy and is expected to make strong recovery. Source:
&lt;i&gt;The State&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Tucker Montgomery, 17, Tennessee, receiver/linebacker for Tri-Cities
Christian School, was injured in helmet-to-helmet contact while running the
football during a 6-man game. Surgery was performed for brain bleeding. Montgomery
remained comatose for more than a month. Still hospitalized on Oct. 25,
Montgomery was conscious and responding to some commands, according to reporter
Preston Ayres. Montgomery faced “a long road to recovery,” Ayres reported.
Sources: WCYB-TV, TriCities.com, &lt;i&gt;Johnson City Press.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 10&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Dominic Morris, 21, Nebraska, running back for Chadron State College,
injured by reported “glancing” contact from an opponent’s facemask during a
game. Surgery was performed on brain bleeding that had caused a blood clot.
“Following the operation… Morris was alert and showed no signs of any ill
effects from the injury,” states a CSC release. Morris was discharged from
hospital on Sept. 12 for recovery at home in California. Sources: Chadron State
College, &lt;i&gt;Omaha World.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Robby Mounce, 17, Texas, running back/receiver and honors student at
Community Christian School, suffered brain bleeding and collapsed during a
6-man game. Surgery was performed and Mounce began therapy while in critical
care. Progress has been slow but steady and Mounce was recently able to return
home for a period, including the Thanksgiving holidays. He wears an eye patch
and has difficulty moving his right side, and on Dec. 7 the teen was admitted
to a rehabilitation facility for daily therapies. “One of the things they will
work on with Robby is stabilizing his walking and balance,” his mother Janet
Mounce reports. Lengthy recovery remains. Sources: KDFW-TV, &lt;i&gt;Mineral Wells
Index&lt;/i&gt;, and Janet Mounce on CaringBridges.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Zeth Shouse, 17, Nevada, tight end/defensive end for Elko High School,
suffered brain bleeding during a game and collapsed. Multiple surgeries were
performed.&amp;nbsp; The honors student remained
hospitalized on Oct. 21, when his father, Todd Shouse, reported that Zeth was
able to swallow and had begun therapies. Sources: KENV-TV, &lt;i&gt;Reno
Gazette-Journal.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Adrian Padilla, 17, California, safety for Oxnard High School, collapsed
following head contact during a game. Surgery was performed for brain swelling
of a reported severe concussion. Padilla was released from hospital on Oct. 4
and attended the Oxnard football game days later; he walked onto the field for
the opening coin flip wearing street clothes and protective helmet. Padilla
told media he suffered a concussion in football two weeks prior to the Sept. 16
injury. The teen continued schoolwork at home for remainder of the semester.
Sources: &lt;i&gt;Ventura County Star&lt;/i&gt;, Concussion Inc. blog, and ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Adam Ingle, 17, Kansas, quarterback/linebacker for Valley Center High
School, was injured in helmet-to-helmet contact during a game. Surgery was
performed for brain bleeding. Family members say Ingle likely was concussed
three days before game injury, during football practice, but the player did not
inform anyone of his headaches, reported blogger Irvin Muchnick. By early
October Ingle was home and attending school events, with recovery work
remaining. Sources: Concussion Inc. blog, &lt;i&gt;Wichita Eagle&lt;/i&gt;, and KSN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Bobby Clark, 17, Idaho, lineman/linebacker for Priest River Lamanna High
School, collapsed while leaving the field during a game. Surgery was performed
for brain bleeding. District superintendent Mike McGuire said Clark might have
mentioned headaches in the week leading to his injury, unbeknownst to coaches
and school officials. At least 9 players on the team have been diagnosed with
concussion this season, among 45 players in the small school, officials said. A
local TV station reported Clark was among 3 diagnosed concussion cases on the
team the night he was airlifted for emergency surgery. Clark was hospitalized
about six weeks then transferred to a rehabilitation facility for therapies
that will continue through December, at least. His mother, Julie Clark, writes
a detailed, vivid journal online about Bobby’s ordeal, and she reports he is
talking, eating, socializing and re-acclimating to school subjects such as
math; he walks regularly, although with assistance for difficulty in moving his
right side. Bobby and family members hope for his release from inpatient
therapy by early January, to coincide with pending surgery to replace the piece
of skullcap removed at injury, then he could return home. “So today I am
praying that his mental status and physical status come together quickly in the
next 3 weeks,” Julie Clark posted on Dec. 8, “and that surgery will happen at
the right time when his body and mind are ready. I have patience. It’s what has
gotten me this far, so I’m not impatient; I just want for everything to fall
into place at the same time for his well-being. This is something too important
to rush.” Sources: Julie Clark on CaringBridge.org, WASWX-TV, &lt;i&gt;Spokane
Spokesman-Review&lt;/i&gt;, and &lt;i&gt;Bonner County Daily Bee&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Shelton Dvorak, 17, Nebraska, fullback/linebacker for Pierce High
School, collided with multiple opponents while running the football during a
game. Moments later he collapsed, suffering a brain bleed. A week after
surgery, Dvorak was released from ICU and hospital to a rehabilitation center,
where he progressed markedly in a few weeks, solo walking, exercising, eating
and conversing with visitors. Dvorak returned home on Oct. 27 in strong
recovery mode, resuming activities such as attending football games and going
hunting with family members. Follow-up surgery replaced the skullcap piece and
Dvorak continued his comeback, returning to school in mid-November. “Shelton is
a living miracle,” a family member posted on Nov. 21. “He is doing things that
everyone prayed he would do.” Sources: Dvorak Family on CaringBridges.org,
KETV.com, &lt;i&gt;Lincoln Journal Star&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Norfork Daily News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Dillon Lackhan, teenager, Arizona, senior lineman/linebacker for Valley
Christian High School, suffered brain bleeding of a headshot during a game.
Surgery was performed and Lackhan was conscious within a few days, eating and
conversing. “Dillon shows positive signs for recovery, but a long-term
prognosis is not clear,” school athletic director Marlin Broek stated in an
Oct. 6 email, reported sportswriter Richard Obert. Sources: AZCentral.com,
MyFoxPhoenix.com and &lt;i&gt;East Valley Tribune&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; An
unidentified teenager, Massachusetts, a wide receiver for Sandwich High School,
complained of wooziness following contact during a game and a trainer called
for medical attention. “The player later underwent emergency surgery to remove
a blood clot in his brain,” reported Michael J. Rausch, on Oct. 14. “The boy is
now home and recovering well from his injury.” Source: &lt;i&gt;Sandwich Enterprise&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 13&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Dennis Pena, teenager, California, sophomore player for Los Angeles High
School, suffered a head injury and collapsed during a junior varsity game.
Surgery was performed for a brain hemorrhage, and David Craft, LAHS athletic
director, said Pena’s prognosis was “supposed to be good.” Source: &lt;i&gt;Los
Angeles Times&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Reports of Vessel Rupture and Stroke, Surgery in
American Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 6&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Connor Laudenslager, teenager, Pennsylvania, senior offensive/defensive
tackle for Line Mountain High School, was stricken of a blood clot at beginning
of indoor practice, causing stroke. Laundenslager, 6-foot, 270 pounds, was
hospitalized for emergency brain surgery then made “remarkable progress,” said
coach Mike Carson, moving quickly through therapies and returning to school. By
mid-October Laudenslager was working out with teammates and hoping to be
cleared to resume football, although that did not occur in 2011. Laudenslager
wants to play football in college. Sources:&amp;nbsp;
NewsItem.com, TNonline.com and &lt;i&gt;Pottsville Republican Herald&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 23&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Dylan Mercadante, 16, Vermont, receiver/defensive back for Montpelier
High School, suffered a ruptured blood vessel in his neck during the second
half of a game, causing strokes. The injury possibly stemmed from contact on
his team’s first kickoff of the game. Following surgery, Mercadante was
hospitalized for month then continued therapies as an outpatient. “His recovery
has been faster than expected, but he faces a lengthy rehab,” reported Tom
Herzig, on Nov. 3. Mercadante plans to graduate with his class and attend
college. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Montpelier Bridge&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Barre-Montpelier Times Argus.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Reports of Brain Bleeding or Swelling, No Surgery, American Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Feb. 14&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Neiron Ball, 19, linebacker for the University of Florida, experienced
headaches following a workout and was hospitalized the following day for a
burst blood vessel of the brain linked to a congenital malformation of arteries
known as AVM. Ball was released from ICU after five days and in March began
“radial” treatment described as a non-intrusive procedure, similar to radiation
for cancer. Ball did not play football last season, and a relative said his
future in the game was uncertain. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Orlando Sentinel&lt;/i&gt; and
YardBarker.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 19&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Alan
Mohika, 17, Hawaii, quarterback for Damien Memorial High School, was injured by
contact during a game, rose and walked off, then fell into seizure. Mohika
suffered brain bleeding and was hospitalized in ICU for a reported severe
concussion. No surgery was necessary and the teen was discharged from hospital
after five days. Mohika returned to school in mid-September but did not play
football. He hoped to return to sports. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Honolulu Star-Advertiser&lt;/i&gt;,
HawaiiNewsNow.com and KITV.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Matt
Ringer, 15, California, running back for Central Catholic High School, suffered
an apparent concussion during a tackle. Later he was hospitalized for a
detected brain bleed, although fully conscious. No surgery was necessary and
Ringer was released from hospital within 48 hours. He returned to school but
not football. Source: &lt;i&gt;Modesto Bee&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 7&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Jadon
Adams, 16, Kansas, running back for Beloit High School, collapsed during a game
and was hospitalized for brain swelling. Doctors sedated Adams as treatment and
discontinued the drugs as swelling subsided within 24 hours, and no surgery was
necessary. The teen entered a rehabilitation hospital on Oct. 21 and made
steady progress, according to updates by family friend Steph Barrett. Adams was
released on Dec. 2 and is continuing therapies at home, where he has resumed
schoolwork with a tutor, according to reports. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Salina Journal&lt;/i&gt;,
KAKE-TV, and Steph Barrett on CarePages.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Reports of Skull Fracture in American Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;April 2&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Lamont Baldwin, 17, Washington, D.C., touted receiver for Carroll High
School, suffered a fractured skull and other injuries in a four-player
collision during&amp;nbsp; private camp without
pads and helmets in Virginia. Baldwin was hospitalized in ICU for two days and
could not return to school for the remaining semester, facing months of
recovery. When injured, Baldwin was a top college prospect reportedly being
recruited by several major programs; he did not play football in 2011. Sources:
&lt;i&gt;Washington Post&lt;/i&gt; and NBCWashington.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Report of Head and Neck Injury With Nerve Damage in Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 12&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Spencer Eller, 14, Missouri, wide receiver/cornerback at Lee’s Summit
North High School, was struck in back of his neck by a teammate’s helmet during
a practice drill. Eller was hospitalized with paralysis through his right side
and legs. “The doctors diagnosed Spencer with a brain injury, a spinal cord
injury, vertigo and muscle and nerve damage,” reported Miranda Wycoff. Imaging
tests were negative for cranial swelling, and Eller was released to go home
with outpatient therapy. Six weeks after injury, the teen was walking but with
a cane while still experiencing numbness through his right side; pain radiated
everywhere, including migraine headaches preventing his sleep. At October’s
end, Eller’s family hoped for his condition to improve enough for a return to
school, but doctors remained cautious of his complex injury. “When he went in
for the CAT scan and the MRI nothing was broken and there was no bleeding in
the brain,” said Cheryl Eller, the teen’s mother, in a report of Oct. 26. “It
makes it harder to understand because you can’t even see it.” Source: &lt;i&gt;Lee’s
Summit Journal&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Reports of Spinal Injury Requiring Surgery, American Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;May 7&lt;/b&gt;: &amp;nbsp;Rob
Marrero, 31, Pennsylvania, semi-pro player for the Mountain Top Reapers,
suffered a broken neck and severed spinal cord during a game. Friends reported
after surgery that Marrero is paralyzed permanently from chest down. Marrero,
married and a father of two, continues treatment and therapy. Source: &lt;i&gt;Lehighton
Times News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;May 27&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Jeremy Bingham, 34, Arizona, fractured cervical and thoracic vertebrae
during a game in pads and helmets between alumni of two local high schools. He
was injured colliding with another player. Doctors diagnosed no paralysis in
Bingham and surgery was performed to stabilize the C7 and T1 vertebrae. Bingham
is married and the father of four. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Eastern Arizona Courier&lt;/i&gt; and
the Bingham Family on Blogspot.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 1&lt;/b&gt;: Torell Troup, 24, New York, defensive
lineman for the Buffalo Bills, sustained a reported “minor fracture” in his
spine during an NFL preseason game. Troup missed several games while playing in
about six before placed on injured reserve for the season. Troup was reportedly
scheduled for surgery on Dec. 16; Google had no further update at time of this
blog posting.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 18&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Nick Collins, 28, Wisconsin, free safety for the Green Bay Packers, ruptured a lumbar disc during a collision in an NFL game. Cervical-fusion surgery was performed and Collins faces lengthy rehabilitation. Doctors expect full recovery for normal lifestyle, but Collins hopes to resume pro football. Sources:&amp;nbsp;&lt;i&gt;Milwaukee Journal Sentinel&lt;/i&gt;&amp;nbsp;and Channel3000.com.
&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 23&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Corpio Dennard, 16, Alabama, receiver/running back for Saks High School,
suffered a broken neck during a game while being tackled from behind, pinning
his arms and sending him into ground headfirst. Dennard experienced no
paralysis and walked to the sidelines, but coaches did not return him to the
game. The next day his mother sent him for a doctor’s exam and Dennard was
hospitalized, with X-rays showing fractures in his 5th and 6th cervical
vertebrae. Surgery was performed on Sept. 25, for stabilizing the spine with
plate and screws. “The doctors that saw him were just amazed that he got up and
walked off the field,” Saks coach Clint Smith told reporter Joe Medley. Dennard
said, “If I had gone back in the game, I don’t know where I’d be right now. I’d
probably be paralyzed or even dead.” Dennard has begun 6-to-12 months
rehabilitation and doctors expect he can return to sports, although probably not
football. Source: &lt;i&gt;Anniston Star&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 29&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Luis Morales, teenager, Texas, junior player for Vega High School,
suffered fracture of the C6 vertebra while colliding with bleachers during a
junior varsity game. Surgery was performed in Texas, and Morales was flown to
California for specialized rehabilitation on Oct. 13. Reports state the teen is
paralyzed from waist down while also hardly able to move his arms. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Amarillo
Globe-News&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;High Plains Observer&lt;/i&gt; and ConnectAmarillo.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 1&lt;/b&gt;: Shontrelle Johnson, 19, Iowa, running back
for Iowa State University, suffered a reported “neck injury” in a game and was
sidelined for the season, with no paralysis reported. Surgery was performed on
Nov. 22 and Johnson faced lengthy recovery, according to ISU coach Paul Rhoads,
who said the player’s possible return to football was uncertain.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 7&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Porter Hancock, 16, Utah, running back/linebacker for South Summit High
School, suffered a broken neck and paralysis while making a tackle in a game.
“Porter finished off the tackle. It was nothing big,” said South Summit coach
Jerry Parker. “He turned his head the wrong way.” During surgery on Oct. 8,
doctors removed two cervical discs and inserted a stabilizing plate. Hancock
was released from hospital on Dec. 16 and remains paralyzed from chest down.
Sources: &lt;i&gt;Deseret News&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Salt Lake Tribune&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Park City Record&lt;/i&gt;,
KSL.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 20&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Hunter Casebolt, 13, Arkansas, defensive player for Elkins Junior High
School, fractured two cervical vertebrae in a helmet-to-helmet collision during
a game. No paralysis occurred and surgery was performed to stabilize the
fractures. Casebolt was released from hospital after one week, wearing a collar
brace. Sources: WriteForArkansas.org, 4029TV.com and KFSM-TV.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 21&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Anthony Conner, 23, Kentucky, cornerback for the University of
Louisville, fractured a cervical vertebra when his helmet struck the knee of an
opponent during a game. No paralysis occurred and surgery stabilized the
fracture. Conner was released from hospital within days, wearing a collar
brace. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Louisville Courier-Journal&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Syracuse Post-Stan&lt;/i&gt;dard
and WDRB-TV.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 22&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Aaron Smith, 35, Pennsylvania, defensive end for the Pittsburgh
Steelers, was diagnosed with damage to cervical discs and placed on NFL injured
reserve for the season. Surgery was performed around Nov. 15, fusing the
damaged discs, and Smith’s future in football is unknown. Sources: ESPN.Go.com,
Steelers.com and &lt;i&gt;Pittsburgh Post-Gazette&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 26&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Joe
Aulisio, adult, Ohio, a sports reporter for WKBN-TV, suffered fractures of two
cervical vertebrae of accidental contact with football players during practice
at Liberty High School. No paralysis occurred and surgery stabilized the neck
column, according to &lt;i&gt;The Warren Tribune Chronicle&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 29&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Carlton Downs, adult, West Virginia, senior safety for Concord
University, fractured his C5 vertebra during a game. No paralysis occurred and
surgery stabilized the cervical break. Downs was released from hospital within
days and wore a neck brace to begin therapy, according to &lt;i&gt;The Bluefield
Daily Telegraph&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Nov. 4&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Christian Hurt, teenager, North Carolina, quarterback/defensive back for
Starmount High School, suffered CV fracture while being tackled in a game. No
paralysis occurred and surgery stabilized the fracture. Hurt was released from
hospital within days and wears a halo brace, according to &lt;i&gt;The Yadkin Ripple&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Nov. 5&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Tyler
Vitiello, 17, New Jersey, running back/defensive end for Saddle Brook High
School, suffered a fractured CV while returning a kickoff during a game.
Initially paralyzed in his lower body, Vitiello underwent surgery and was
standing with assistance after a week, then walking two weeks post-injury. He
was released from a rehabilitation hospital in December and wears a collar
brace, according to &lt;i&gt;The Bergen Record&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Nov. 6&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Donnovan Hill, 13, California, running back/linebacker for the Lakewood
Lancers of the Lakewood Pacific Junior Football and Cheer program, fractured
his C4&amp;nbsp;vertebra while trying to make a tackle. Surgery stabilized
the injury, paralysis remained in Hill’s extremities. Doctors predict
incomplete recovery. Sources: KTLA-TV, KCAL-TV, KNBC-TV and
LakewoodFootball.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Dec. 8&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Chris
Hoke, 35, Pennsylvania, nose tackle for the Pittsburgh Steelers, was diagnosed
with a reported “neck injury” and placed on NFL injured reserve for the season.
Surgery was performed on Dec. 14, and Hoke’s football future is uncertain.
Sources: &lt;i&gt;Pittsburgh Post-Gazette&lt;/i&gt; and The Associated Press.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Dec. 18&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Johnny Knox, 25, Illinois, wide receiver for the Chicago Bears, suffered
fracture of a reported vertebra “facet joint” in his back during contact in an
NFL game. Surgery stabilized the injury and Knox faces at least four months of
rehabilitation, according to &lt;i&gt;The Chicago Tribune&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Reports of Spinal Fracture Without Surgery, American Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Note: Football cases of spinal fracture often involve no
displacement of vertebrae or puncture of spinal cord, resulting in no paralysis
or other acute alert, and in fact unknowing victims can function normally for
long periods after injury, including playing tackle football. For such injury
that is diagnosed and treated, recovery is often strong to complete. Among
severe or catastrophic injuries in tackle football, diagnosed spinal fracture
without displacement qualifies among least serious types, and undoubtedly a
portion each year will never be reported or associated with the sport. Some
spinal-injured football players return to full contact in the same season, even
quickly, as did several in 2011, youths and adults. For this section, available
details are fewer and less precise, and no case involves mention of surgery. No
paralysis was reported in a case unless otherwise noted.&amp;nbsp; Additional cases of spinal fracture for the
football year, yet unpublicized, will become public in the future.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;March, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Kendric Cook, 20, Mississippi, tight end for Mississippi State
University, was diagnosed with stenosis of the cervical spine, narrowing of the
neck column encasing the spinal cord, which could be adversely affected by
football contact, including death. Cook ceased playing football and became a
student coach in the program, according to &lt;i&gt;The Clarion Ledger&lt;/i&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;April, circa&lt;/b&gt;: John Goode, 22, Illinois, fullback for
Southern Illinois University-Carbondale, was injured while blocking a teammate
in a drill during spring practice. Doctors diagnosed bulging discs in the
lumbar spine, along with damage to a pelvis joint, and Goode could not return
to football. In mid-September he began a 14-week rehabilitation program that
effectively ended his playing career, according to &lt;i&gt;The Carbondale Southern&lt;/i&gt;.
&lt;b&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;June 25&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Evan
Gray, teenager, California, senior running back for Poway High School, suffered
three fractured vertebrae during a fall in pass-league competition. Following
rest and rehab, Gray returned for Poway’s football season but was sidelined for
a reported fractured kneecap. Sources: Damian Gonzalez on MaxPreps.com and &lt;i&gt;Poway
News Chieftan&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Jeff
Wozniak, teenager, Indiana, sophomore quarterback for Morton High School,
suffered fractured vertebrae, broken neck bones and bruised spinal cord in
practice when “hit under his chin during a drill and driven backward,”
initially leaving him paralyzed, reports sportswriter Steve Hanlon. Doctors
fitted Wozniak with a steel halo head brace, requiring drilling of screws but
not open surgery. In ICU he progressively regained feeling and motor function
and in two weeks left the hospital for a rehabilitation facility, where he was
also released after two weeks. He continues outpatient therapy and hopes to
play football again. Source: NWTimes.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 10, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Mario Crawford, 21, Virginia, running back for Old Dominion University,
sustained fracture of the C1 vertebrae in a preseason practice, striking his
helmet on a medicine ball in a drill. A CT scan revealed the injury, two weeks
post-injury, and Crawford was likely sidelined for the season, wearing a collar
brace, according to &lt;i&gt;The Hampton Roads Virginian-Pilot&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 20, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Devin Mahina, adult, Utah, redshirt sophomore tight end for Brigham
Young University, sustained a fractured vertebrae in a preseason scrimmage.
Initially the injury was not diagnosed and Mahina practiced football for about
10 days, until doctors found it by CT scan on Aug. 30, sidelining him for the
year. Mahina wore a collar brace. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Deseret Sun&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Salt Lake
Tribune&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 25&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Will
Rishell, teenager, Connecticut, junior quarterback/safety/kicker for RHAM High
School, suffered fractures of lumbar vertebrae in a preseason scrimmage.
Rishell was sidelined until Oct. 22, when he played in a game and re-injured
his lower back. Rishell did not play football again in 2011, according to &lt;i&gt;The
Norwich Bulletin&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 26&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Dustin Newman, teenager, Alabama, junior player for Pike Liberal Arts
Academy, sustained a fractured thoracic or T5 vertebrae during a kickoff. He
wore a collar brace for three months, reportedly. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Troy Messenger&lt;/i&gt;
and WAKA.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Kellen Bernard, 15, Texas, running back/linebacker for Palmer High
School, sustained a fractured lumbar vertebra on a hit while returning a punt.
He reportedly had temporary paralysis and was expected to recover. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Ennis
Daily News&lt;/i&gt; and WFAA-TV.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2&lt;/b&gt;: Jerram Rojo, 17, Texas,
quarterback/linebacker for Marfa High School, was injured running the ball in a
game, with his heading striking the ground. He walked off the field then was
hospitalized, where a CT scan revealed fracture of the C6 vertebrae. Rojo wore
a collar brace and did not resume football in 2011. Sources: Jerram Rojo on
Facebook.com and &lt;i&gt;The Big Bend Sentinel&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Sam Scholting, teenager, Missouri, junior offensive tackle for Mexico
High School, suffered a broken vertebrae and was sidelined, coach Nick Hoth
told &lt;i&gt;The Mexico Ledger&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Frank de Braga, teenager, Nevada, senior running back/safety for Fallon
High School, suffered a fractured T3 vertebrae and brain concussion while
making a tackle. Initially unconscious, the teen had movement before transport
to hospital, where he spent the overnight under observation. De Braga was
cleared to return to play two weeks later and finished the season in the Fallon
lineup, according to &lt;i&gt;The Lahontan Valley News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 10&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Brian Tyms, 22, Florida, receiver for Florida A&amp;amp;M University,
sustained a fractured vertebra during a game. He returned to playing football
on Oct. 1 and finished the season. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Tallahassee Democrat&lt;/i&gt; and The
Associated Press.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 11&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Ron
Bartell, 29, Missouri, cornerback for the St. Louis Rams, sustained fractures
of the C7 vertebrae in an NFL game. Bartell wore neck braces for three months
and was declared healed by doctors. He expects to return to football. Sources:
101Sports.com and &lt;i&gt;The St. Louis Post-Dispatch&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Scott Thibeault, teenager, Maine, senior running back/linebacker for
Mountain Valley High School, suffered two fractured vertebrae and was
sidelined. He returned to playing football on Oct. 14 and finished the season.
Sources: &lt;i&gt;Portland Press Herald&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Scarborough Leader&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 17, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Matt Lindamood, 21, West Virginia, fullback for Western Virginia
University, had a recurring neck injury of “stingers” and numbness checked out
by MRI, and doctors found stenosis of the cervical vertebrae, narrowing of the
spinal canal that affects many football players while threatening only a few
with potential grave consequences of added impacts. One doctor determined
Lindamood should cease playing football and consider surgery, but another
examining specialist concluded the athlete could still compete, finding no
degeneration in his motor and sensory function. Lindamood returned to the team
and finished the season, according to &lt;i&gt;The Charleston Daily Mail&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 24&lt;/b&gt;: &amp;nbsp;Derek Hayden, 22, Georgia, safety for Georgia Southern University,
fractured his C1 vertebra during helmet-to-helmet contact in a game. Hayden was
fitted with a halo brace and released from hospital within days. He did not
return to football in 2011, according to &lt;i&gt;The Savannah Morning News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Deangelo Peete, 17, Michigan, linebacker for Livonia Franklin High
School, fractured his C1 vertebrae in three places during a helmet-to-helmet
collision in a game. A halo brace was fitted to stabilize the injuries and
Peete was released from hospital within days, according to WJBK-TV.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Cody Ashcraft, teenager, Missouri, senior receiver for Scott City High
School, sustained a fractured cervical vertebra in a game, according to &lt;i&gt;The
Southeast Missourian&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 8&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Chris
Thompson, 20, Florida, running back for Florida State University, suffered
fractures of the T5 and T6 vertebrae while being tackled in a game and was
hospitalized overnight. Thompson wore a collar brace as he began rehab,
sidelined for the season. He hopes to play football again, according to &lt;i&gt;The
Orlando Sentinel&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 14&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Sean
Walsh, teenager, California, senior offensive guard/defensive tackle for
Saratoga High School, suffered a reported “broken back” in a game. Walsh was
sidelined for remainder of the football season. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Saratoga Falcon&lt;/i&gt;
and &lt;i&gt;Saratoga News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;b&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 28, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Ronald Tolbert, teenager, Georgia, sophomore defensive tackle for Mt.
Zion High School, suffered a reported “cracked vertebrae” playing football and
was sidelined, according to &lt;i&gt;The Times-Georgian&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Nov. 4&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Andrew Barr, teenager, Michigan, senior running back for Portland High
School, suffered fracture of his C1 vertebra and a concussion during a hit in a
game. Barr was fitted with a neck brace and released from the hospital within
days, sidelined for the football season, according to &lt;i&gt;The Lansing State
Journal&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Nov. 4&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Hunter Harden, teenager, Tennessee, junior running back for Munford High
School, suffered a fractured CV during a game, reportedly “dumped onto his head
and shoulders” while trying to catch a pass, according to &lt;i&gt;The Paris
Post-Intelligencer&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Report of Staph Infection in Spinal Column, American Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 10&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Aaron Thibodeaux, 19, Louisiana, defensive lineman for University of
Louisiana-Lafayette, sustained a concussion in helmet-to-helmet contact during
a game. Moreover, the collision injured Thibodeaux’s back and reportedly
“reawakened” dormant methicillin-resistant staphylococcus, or MRSA, which had
infected the player’s elbow in the preseason, and it formed a cyst in his
spinal canal. Hospitalized a week in intensive care, Thibodeaux survived the
infection and did not suffer paralysis like an Arkansas teen football player in 2010. Doctors determined Thibodeaux should cease
playing football, according to &lt;i&gt;The Shreveport Times&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Online Reports, Survivors of Cardiac Arrest and Heart Attack, Football 2011&amp;nbsp;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;May 19&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Teddrick Lewis, 15, Louisiana, player for Breaux Bridge High School,
collapsed on the sidelines during a spring football scrimmage, his heart
stopped. Coach Paul Broussard employed a portable automated external
defibrillator, or AED—after having trained in a mock drill with his team and
school personnel weeks earlier—to restart the heartbeat and save Lewis’ life.
“Because we had a plan in place, we knew exactly what to do,” Broussard said.
Lewis was hospitalized for a week and has since recovered for normal activity,
but doctors advise he not return to contact sport. Sources: KATC-TV and ZOLL
Medical Corporation.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 22&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Unidentified teenager, Missouri, eighth-grade player for Waynesville Middle
School, collapsed of cardiac arrest during afternoon practice. Local fire and
ambulance personnel responded and restored the boy’s heartbeat. “The
defibrillator devices were absolutely what saved him,” said Mike McCort, of the
ambulance district. Source:&lt;i&gt; Pulaski County Daily News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Ross
Palmer, 17, Idaho, receiver/cornerback for American Falls High School,
collapsed of apparent cardiac arrest while running wind sprints at practice.
Two coaches began CPR while another fetched a portable defibrillator, then they
correctly ignored a directive not to use the device, from responding
paramedics, reports journalist Patty Henetz. “If [the stricken player] had not
been shocked, no way would he have come out of that,” said cardiac surgeon Dr.
Brian Crandall. Three days post-incident, surgeons implanted a self-activating
stimulator in Palmer’s chest. Henetz reported “if Ross’ heart goes into
ventricle fibrillation arrest—quivering instead of beating—the implantable
cardiac defibrillator, or ICD, will shock his heart back into action.” Source: &lt;i&gt;Salt
Lake Tribune&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
David Wilganowski, 17, Texas, touted lineman for Rudder High School,
collapsed of cardiac arrest during a game. Rudder certified athletic trainer
Jamie Woodell revived the heartbeat with an AED and staff performed CPR, saving
the teen. Wilganowski was hospitalized 10 days, and surgery placed an ICD
device in his chest. An honors student, aspiring engineer, Wilganowski is
formerly a prized football recruit at 6-foot-5, 240 pounds and athletic. He
will not play football again, but Rice University reportedly pledges to honor
its scholarship offer. Sources: KBTX-TV, KCEN-TV and &lt;i&gt;Bryan-College Station
Eagle&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Brett Greenwood, 23, Iowa, former University of Iowa safety just released
by the Pittsburgh Steelers of the NFL, suffered a reported heart attack during
an individual workout at his former high school in Bettendorf. Personnel of
Pleasant Valley High were present and likely kept the athlete alive until
paramedics arrived, media report. School athletic director Randy Treymer said,
“The school nurse ran a defibrillator where our athletic trainer was working on
Brett. … They kept pushing with the defibrillator and CPR. If they weren’t
around, who knows what could have happened?” Doctors placed Greenwood in
medically induced coma and on life support, and he was hospitalized in ICU for
about two weeks. Greenwood was transferred to a specialized care facility where
he remains, reportedly awake, talking and walking. Lengthy recovery work
remains. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Quad City Times&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Daily Iowan&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 20&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Alex Templeton, 13, Texas, a linebacker for Azle Junior High School,
went into cardiac arrest of contact during a game. Templeton chased down an
opponent near the sideline, making the tackle from behind, and the player’s
cleat jabbed his chest. The seventh-grader stood up, looked at the grandstands
and collapsed. A coach performed CPR while a nurse who was a spectator
administered a portable AED owned by the school; Templeton lay still until the
defibrillator restored heartbeat, rousing him. “Seeing the boy spring back to
life was an emotional experience for all those involved,” Edwin Newton
reported. Templeton is recovering and hopes to play football again in about two
years, when doctors might grant permission, but his dad, Matt Templeton, may
not: “I don’t want him to play, but we will have to make the decision later,”
the father said. Azle school officials, meanwhile, have ordered 11 additional
defibrillators, intending to station one for every athletic activity of the
district.&amp;nbsp; Sources: &lt;i&gt;Azle News&lt;/i&gt;,
WFFA-TV and DFWCBSLocal.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Ty
Egan, 8, Illinois, youth-league player in LeRoy, was sprinting open for a
touchdown when he slowed and collapsed, his heart having stopped. An ambulance
was on site and medical personnel were watching as spectators, and they
scrambled in response. But only oxygen was administered before the
grade-schooler revived, resuming normal pulse and heartbeat. An
electrophysiologist later told the parents their son was in cardiac arrest and
a miracle saved him, not oxygen. Doctors are restricting Egan from all sports
except golf in the future, reports Randy Kindred, &lt;i&gt;The Bloomington Pantagraph&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Additional Reports of Injury for Expert Review as Catastrophic,
American Football 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;July 16&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Regina Pickel, adult, Tennessee, a teacher in the Bradley County School
District, suffered a severe head injury during her son’s football scrimmage at
Bradley Central High School. Pickel was sitting along the sideline when struck
by the helmet of a diving player, causing profuse bleeding of a head
laceration. Pickel was conscious and hospitalized in intensive care, according
to &lt;i&gt;The Cleveland Daily Banner&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 23&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Ikenasio Nuku, teenager, Washington, senior running back for Mount Ranier
High School, sustained a reported serious injury of contact during a game. Nuku
was removed from the field strapped on a long board and hospitalized, but his
parents have not allowed release of further information, according to &lt;i&gt;The
Seattle Times&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;October, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Jesse Winn, teenager, Utah, senior running back for Emery High School,
sustained a reported neck injury that sidelined him for the season, according
to &lt;i&gt;The Emery County Progress&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 10&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Josh
Inhof, 15, Wisconsin, a center/defensive end for West Bend East High School,
sustained a likely concussion, undiagnosed, during a collision at practice.
Three days later, during a game, Inhof sustained one or more hits that rendered
him unresponsive on a sideline. The unconscious teen was airlifted to a hospital,
where he remained two days and was released, according to &lt;i&gt;The Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 14&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp; Sam
Casinelli, teenager, California, junior wide receiver/defensive back for La
Costa Canyon High School, sustained a neck injury during a game and was
hospitalized, with no paralysis, according to CHS-TV. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 14&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Keegan Speas, teenager, Oklahoma, sophomore wide receiver for McGuinness
High School, sustained a contact injury during a game that left him prone on
the field for about 30 minutes. No paralysis occurred and Speas was transported
to a hospital, according to IrishOnDeck.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 24&lt;/b&gt;:&amp;nbsp;
Alton Brunson, 13, Florida, player on a youth-league team in Miami,
suffered temporary paralysis of a helmet-to-helmet hit during a game. Brunson
regained complete mobility while hospitalized for about a week, according to
WSVN-TV.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Matt Chaney is a writer, editor, teacher and restaurant
worker living in Missouri, USA. His 2001 graduate thesis for an MA degree at the
University of Central Missouri is qualitative media analysis of 466 football
reports, historical print coverage of anabolic steroids and HGH in American
football, largely based on electronic search among thousands of news texts from
the 1970s through 1999. For more information, including contact numbers and his
2009 book, &lt;/i&gt;Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football, &lt;i&gt;visit
the homepage at&lt;/i&gt; &lt;u&gt;&lt;font color="blue"&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/u&gt;.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>HGH Testing Debate and The NFL: Author Interview</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/11/02/hgh-testing-tempest-in-the-nfl-author-interview.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2011-11-02:fd3f88c7-8806-486c-8d1e-5c5e4c530df7</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="HGH and testing" />
		<category term="Transcript" />
		<updated>2011-11-02T14:55:23Z</updated>
		<published>2011-11-02T14:55:23Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&lt;font style=""&gt;&lt;/font&gt;Posted Wednesday, November 2, 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;i&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;I recently enjoyed answering questions from &lt;b&gt;Stefan Fatsis&lt;/b&gt;, of &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Slate&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;, in an email Q&amp;amp;A with the journalist and
author&lt;b&gt;&lt;/b&gt;, &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&lt;i&gt;his queries regarding the current NFL
debate over HGH testing. The text of our prepared discourse follows here.
Meanwhile, follow Stefan on his football-season co-op with &lt;/i&gt;Deadspin&lt;i&gt;
writers, as they debate the issues in NFL roundtable; listen for him on NPR,
for sports comments and reports; and check out Stefan’s acclaimed book &lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font face="Arial"&gt;A Few Seconds of Panic: A Sportswriter Plays in the
NFL&lt;i&gt;, recounting his Plimptonian quest as kicker for the Denver Broncos.&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222"&gt;&amp;nbsp;
Matt Chaney&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Fatsis: Q.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;In layman's terms, why
do you believe the WADA HGH test that the NFL is pushing is “suspect”?&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 9pt; background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Chaney: Well, suspicion begins on the real problem for HGH blood
testing as it stands today: The fact that American medicine and credible
medical bodies abroad have yet to see a democratic, scientific, straight-up&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i&gt;independent&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i&gt;peer review&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;of this purported breakthrough in
doping detection—a WADA scientist’s patented immunoassay for GH-isoform ratios
in human blood—or this potential goldmine “test” that generates from closed
European research and secretive WADA engineers who remain virtually
inaccessible.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Even WADA associates like HGH-testing pioneer Dr. Peter
Sonksen, London, hardly know what’s up. Sonksen, creator of the GH-biomarker
test that&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i&gt;is&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;open to independent review but WADA
yet avoids, told me he hasn’t associated with former colleague Dr. Christian
Strasburger since about 1999. Sometime around the Sydney Olympics, Strasburger,
having become a full-time scientist of WADA, patented the assay for GH isomers.
From the start, Sonksen says, Strasburger’s insurmountable problem has been a
detection window of only hours, requiring drug informants and Draconian
“whereabouts” tracking of athletes to typically log a positive result for use
of bio-cloned or recombinant human growth hormone. “You have to take a blood
sample within 24 hours of their injecting it,” Sonksen told me.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Dr. Don Catlin, endocrinologist and our foremost American
expert on anti-doping methodology and tools, can’t get access to Strasburger
and the in-house WADA studies allegedly establishing validity and reliability
of the GH-isoform test. WADA officials in Canada say to just trust them, but
Catlin doesn’t yet in America. “You’ve got to have hard-core evidence…,” Catlin
told me. “ ‘Here’s the study. Here’s what we did. Here’s what we found. Here’s
the [data on] false-positive [results]. Here’s the false-negative.’ ”&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Catlin and Sonksen say WADA would likely be challenged to
prove validity and reliability of Strasburger’s test in American trial
court—and the anti-doping agencies know it. Sonksen is a longtime associate of
WADA and the IOC, a charter member of the anti-doping establishment worldwide,
yet he hammers anti-doping officials and their disregard for transparent
scientific protocol: “I think there’s a certain fear among the, ah, [WADA]
politicians that if it comes to a case in court [against the GH-isoform], they
won’t win it,” Sonksen told me.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Q. Can every scientist drafted to work for WADA (or USADA) be in the bag somehow, or simply be willing to compromise scientific standards? Why, given the legitimate public concern and outcry over doping in sports, would they move forward with an unreliable test or tests?&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;You kiddin’ me? These are&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font class="apple-converted-space" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i style="color: rgb(34, 34, 34); font-family: Arial; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);"&gt;sports medicine&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font class="apple-converted-space" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;people—or else they’re “independent
scientists” directly hired, paid, funded, whatever, by the anti-doping agencies
and sports organizations. Do you think they have a contract or association with
powerful sport and anti-doping if they speak sensibly, telling us anti-doping
will never turn back rampant drug use among athletes? These are the same type
of people who tell us we can properly detect and manage football’s inherent
brain injuries through “concussion testing.”&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;So-called scientists and doctors have pandered to politics of
anti-doping and sport since the 1980s at least in America. The NFL’s hireling
or associate “experts” have become dime a dozen, selling us their false hopes
for preventing systemic drug use and brutality. These people come from everywhere
anymore, and shamelessly. And if you don’t play ball, like Catlin won’t, then
you scrounge for funding in your research, like he does now. Or you’re just a
sports idiot with a doctorate who wants to believe the complex, irreversible
problems of athletics can be fixed. And dumb media parrot the mere talk. It’s
all become a pathetic joke, an American travesty of truth and public
perception.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;And the public &lt;i&gt;does not&lt;/i&gt; care about doping in sport,
especially American football, the sport perhaps most conducive to drug use on
earth, from steroids and Growth to speed and painkillers.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;The moral bleating of grandstanding politicians and
ill-informed media does not qualify as public outcry. We bitch as a public
about gas prices, not drugs in our football.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font face="Arial"&gt;Q. If you were
the NFL and the players union, what would you do on this matter? Wait for a
test? Or is testing, for HGH anyway, futile and beside the point?&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;font face="Arial"&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;All of the silliness can end immediately if WADA and the NFL
will do what the players and union demand: Practice simple American scientific
transparency so Dr. Stasburger’s HGH test for WADA can be independently vetted
for validity and reliability—or not.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Catlin and Sonksen, for example, both make their validating
research available for peer review, including to scientists of player unions.
The documents of Sonksen’s GH-biomarker and Catlin’s carbon-isotope ratio scan
for synthetic testosterone are available for peer analysis and replication. Any
American worker would demand as much for undergoing a blood test, especially if
a positive result meant loss of work and pay.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;All that said, yes and repeating, I think anti-doping as it
stands for now and in the foreseeable future is hopeless for turning back
muscle doping in American football. The historical and contemporary evidence is
clearly laid out in my 2009 book,&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i&gt;Spiral
of Denial&lt;/i&gt;. If I were a football player today, for example, especially of
the NFL, I would be utterly confident in beating Catlin’s CIR and I would find
the ways to beat Sonksen’s biomarker, were it deployed by WADA and the league.
Strasburger’s isoform would be of non-consequence for stopping my HGH use, and
if chopsticks ever caught a fly in me, so to speak, I would crush that test in
trial court.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Q. Where do you stand on the efficacy of HGH? The reliability
of existing tests aside, should sports organizations even bother testing for
it?&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Clinical studies have found rHGH injections can change fat to
muscle, among some measurable effects, but my belief of the drug’s
performance-enhancing nature is based on anecdotal evidence offered by users
I’ve known and in published accounts. College and pro athletes testify of
recuperative effects for injecting bio-tech growth hormone while weightlifters
and football players say the substance builds mass when used in complement with
androgenic chemicals, synthetic testosterone and/or anabolic steroids. Also
note the bio-tech GH analogues available today, such as IGF-1 and
growth-hormone-releasing peptides, which athletes and bodybuilders readily use
and the anti-doping agencies are hopeless to fight.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Q. Given your anecdotal conclusions that HGH has some effects, do you believe it would be good to remove the drug from football were it possible?&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Absolutely, prevention of synthetic performance-enhancing
substances is my foremost goal, which is often lost, about me, in my points on
lousy testing to-date and in the foreseeable future.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Listen, I’ve waited for effective anti-doping in football
since about 1980, when I seriously wanted to try college football and was
seriously afraid of all the drug-using players in the game by then, covering
the big-school rosters in particular.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;The problem, testing of blood or urine isn’t working, isn’t
close to working, and will surely never work, and the people selling this crap
know that! But you think some yak from WADA or USADA will admit as much, still
intending to hold his or her job?&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Now, to credit of such people, they’re told to stop a Death
Star and given a pop gun. The anti-doping efforts, from teen studies to
testing, have never had a chance for pitiful funding to start, as Dr. Catlin
can attest, as Penn State epidemiologist Charles Yesalis can attest, along with
so many other researchers and officials. We haven’t seen the billions of
dollars needed in mere &lt;i&gt;startup&lt;/i&gt; for anti-doping, just to plausibly
develop and deploy some of these ideas for success or failure. As we stand,
anti-doping operates on about $300 million to $400 million annually, U.S. dollars, covering
research and development to detection applications, &lt;i&gt;worldwide&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Q. And one non-HGH question: Briefly tell me your backstory again. How'd you get so involved in the issue? And why does it matter so much to you?&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoBodyText2" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;I don’t know why I’m still around the football issues of
doping and injuries, to be frank, and I likely won’t be much longer. I’m 51
with a family and don’t get paid or funded by anyone, and my former vocation of
sportswriting is no help; American football’s partner media want little to do
with my work, from TV networks down to the smallest newspapers. Sales of my
book are horrendous. I drive old cars, wear old clothes and clip coupons. My
only source of income presently is kitchen jobs.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;What sort of thrust me here today is my background as an
athlete and coach. I injected synthetic testosterone to gain size and power as
a college football player, at Southeast Missouri State in 1982, and later as a
student coach I helped a player obtain testosterone—and really didn’t want to
commit any of the acts. I felt I had to for remaining in football.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;Within a few years, as a sportswriter, I decided that any real reform must begin with open discussion, among all parties and without punishing anyone. I'm still waiting for that moment. And my prime concern is athletes, especially kids; I want the truth declared for them, about football's terrible dangers, if not their parents. Lousy, hopeless testing, for our discussion here, only serves to cover football's 50-year-old doping problem, and only players suffer the consequences.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font face="Arial"&gt;Q. And, here's a
left-field question: How do you feel about NFL football as a sport—not as a
business run by Goodell, not vis a vis HGH or brain injury—but as a sport, as
an entertainment?&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;I think the NFL and big-time NCAA football together
constitute the single-most valuable entertainment vehicle in America. And the
essential reason is sport violence. Football is “contact ballet” set amid a
social spectacle, says Michael Oriard, former NFL lineman and renowned cultural
analyst. Football is athleticism in the face of annihilation. That’s why we
play and why we watch, damn the casualties, largely kids. My advice, if anybody
really wants to “save kids” from drugs in football, or head injuries, don’t let
them play this crazy game. Forget the football mythology, especially quick
fixes.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 13.45pt 0in;"&gt;&lt;font style="background-color: white;" color="#222222" face="Arial"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Email me at &lt;/i&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com. &lt;i&gt;For more information, visit the homepage at &lt;/i&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>Catastrophic Injuries Soar on Football in 2011</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/10/15/grim-gridiron-catastrophic-injuries-soar-in-football-of-2011.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2011-10-15:134c5267-22ae-426a-b33f-56588bfb85cf</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="Football Catastrophic Injuries" />
		<updated>2011-10-16T04:51:57Z</updated>
		<published>2011-10-16T04:51:57Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px"&gt;Review of Survivor Cases Online&amp;nbsp;Confirms Unusually High Rate&lt;br&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;By Matt Chaney&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 20px"&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Posted Sunday, October 16, 2011&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Amid the second autumn of America’s neo-campaign for Safer Football, the extreme sport is lethal as ever in 2011 and on pace for its worst year in decades, confirms a review of casualty reports online.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;As usual, teenagers constitute the large majority of football victims, among at least 60 cases of &lt;i&gt;catastrophic&lt;/i&gt; injuries striking players since February—fatalities and survivors of subdural hematoma, stroke, paralysis, cardiac arrest and more emergencies—documented by this writer through search of Google banks under numerous Boolean word commands.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Comparing football numbers of a year ago, 41 catastrophic cases were logged for all of 2010 by the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research, a think tank funded by football organizations that compiles data recognized as authoritative.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;And there’s more mayhem online this year, including at least 5 survivor cases of heatstroke or heat-related collapse that may meet criteria for inclusion in the National Center survey, results to be posted online next spring by the University of North Carolina.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Heatstroke &lt;i&gt;fatalities&lt;/i&gt; are included in annual catastrophic data, for example, while worst-scenario survivors can sustain brain damage if body cooling does not commence soon enough.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;See my annotated list of survivor cases below.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;div&gt;Meanwhile, life-threatening cases of football 2011 nevertheless &lt;i&gt;unqualified&lt;/i&gt; for National Center statistics involve conditions such as a teen player’s ruptured femoral artery and another’s destroyed kidney, resulting of collisions, along with blood clots in two players following major knee injuries. Still another developed blood clots following surgery on groin muscles, sending him back to the operating table. This athlete, Nermin Delic at the University of Kentucky, underwent a third surgery related to blood clotting, removal of a rib.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Reports of at least 125 emergency cases in football this year are available online, with the large majority involving ambulance or life-flight transport.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My numbers are likely conservative, too, given limitations of this review including the following: a) online databases do not include a significant portion of daily print and broadcast news; b) magazines and newspapers increasingly charge subscription rates for online access, especially small-market or rural publications; c) many online news pages are taken down after short posting; d) Google does not access all daily news online; e) and an unknown amount of football survivor cases are publicized in scant detail or not at all [although burgeoning social media are closing much of the blackout, with blasts of texts, Tweets and Facebook posts, for example, as emergencies occur at football sites].&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Even football fatalities slip by reviewers employing electronic search, like one collision death in 2010, youth-league player Quadaar White, 15, whose case remains omitted from the National Center report online.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;I focus here on survivor players of grave football injuries in 2011, based on my list of 61 cases online already, with 11 weeks remaining in the calendar year.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My documented cases include about 45 that appear strong for meeting catastrophic criteria of the National Center, pending follow-up and qualification by lead researcher Dr. Robert Cantu, the Boston neurosurgeon and NFL expert on brain trauma.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;That 45 catastrophic number would almost &lt;i&gt;double&lt;/i&gt; Cantu’s survivor tally of a year ago.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Cantu and NFL commissioner Roger Goodell team to champion “safer football”—an old term first employed for so-called game reform a century ago—through rule changes, penalty enforcement, “concussion testing,” statutory law and “behavior modification” of players that allegedly teaches “proper” hitting without head contact.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In 2010, first year of the modern campaign, Dr. Cantu logged 24 survivors of catastrophic injuries in football, including 13 who made so-called complete recoveries. His 2009 report lists 42 survivors, while he gathered 57 such cases in 2008, the high mark for the National Center’s posted reports since 1984.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In coming days I’ll solicit injury researchers and other experts for their responses to my review, including Dr. Cantu.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: rgb(255,255,255); FONT-SIZE: 12px" class="Apple-style-span" color="#222222" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p style="MARGIN: 1.12em 0px" class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: medium" class="Apple-style-span" color="#000000" face="'Times New Roman'"&gt;For additional notes on the list below, foremost and repeating, it does not include football fatalities in 2011, like 16-year-old Ridge Barden, lineman for Phoenix High School in New York, killed on Oct. 14 by subdural hematoma of "blunt force" trauma incurred that Friday night in a game upstate. The teen is American football's third collision death confirmed by autopsy this year [thus far I have found reports of 16 deaths of players, mostly teenagers but including a 7-year-old, to likely qualify for Dr. Cantu’s confirmation as football-related fatalities, along with an additional 3 or 4 meriting his consideration].&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p style="MARGIN: 1.12em 0px" class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: medium" class="Apple-style-span" color="#000000" face="'Times New Roman'"&gt;For football survivor cases, The National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research classifies such casualty as either&amp;nbsp;&lt;i&gt;non-fatal&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font size="+0"&gt;, involving “permanent severe” functional disability, or&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;i&gt;serious&lt;/i&gt;&lt;font size="+0"&gt;, with no permanent functional disability.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font size="+0"&gt;Beyond the list below, s&lt;/font&gt;earch online for additional cases of serious football injury that could qualify as catastrophic in 2011, such as spinal bruising and transient paralysis and head injuries causing comatose states longer than concussion.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;And check out the National Center’s website, &lt;a href="http://www.unc.edu/depts/nccsi/"&gt;http://www.unc.edu/depts/nccsi/&lt;/a&gt;, for information and context—if not injury qualifications that altogether jibe—among reports on decades of the catastrophic events ever-looming, for tackle football and more contact sport of modern America.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;!--RADEDITORSAVEDCOMMENT[if !supportEmptyParas]--&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;!--RADEDITORSAVEDCOMMENT[endif]--&gt;&lt;!--?xml:namespace prefix = o /--&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Survivors of Catastrophic or Grave Injury in American Football, Cases 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;From reports retrieved in Google Search through October 15, 2011&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;By Matt Chaney, &lt;a href="mailto:mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com"&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/a&gt; &lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Report of Comatose Youth Player, Age 5, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 29, circa&lt;/b&gt;: Unnamed “Tiny Mite” player, 5-years-old, Hawaii, reportedly fell comatose at a hospital following a head injury. Child was injured while participating in division of Oahu Pop Warner football for ages 5, 6 and 7, Brianne Randle reports for KHON-TV. Oahu doctor Josh Green said, “Five might be a little young. I’m concerned about it.” &lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" size="3"&gt;Online Reports of Brain Hemorrhage and Surgery, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;March 19&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Logan Weber, 21, Iowa, offensive guard for Coe College, experienced severe headaches while stretching for weightlifting. Weber was hospitalized within 24 hours for brain bleeding linked to “arteriovenous malformation,” or AVM, a congenital condition. Surgery was performed to insert a shunt and Weber was hospitalized for 20 days. He has recovered but no longer plays football, serving instead as student coach for the Coe team. Source: &lt;i&gt;Cedar Rapids Gazette&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 5&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Brennan Barber, 17, South Carolina, defensive lineman for Mid-Carolina High School, was injured by a reported “routine” helmet hit during a scrimmage and collapsed minutes later. Surgery was performed for brain bleeding. Barber began walking three days later and was released from the hospital within a week. He is undergoing therapy and is expected to make strong recovery. Source: &lt;i&gt;The State&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Tucker Montgomery, 17, Tennessee, receiver/linebacker for Tri-Cities Christian School, injured in helmet-to-helmet contact running the football during a 6-man game. Surgery was performed for brain bleeding. On Oct. 3, a hospital spokesman reported Montgomery remained comatose with a “very, very long road to recovery.” Sources: TriCities.com, &lt;i&gt;Johnson City Press.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 10&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Dominic Morris, 21, Nebraska, running back for Chadron State College, injured by reported “glancing” contact from an opponent’s facemask during a game. Surgery was performed on brain bleeding that had caused a blood clot. “Following the operation… Morris was alert and showed no signs of any ill effects from the injury,” states a CSC release. Morris was discharged from hospital on Sept. 12 for recovery at home in California. Sources: Chadron State College, &lt;i&gt;Omaha World.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;: Robby Mounce, 17, Texas, running back/receiver for Community Christian School, suffered brain bleeding during a 6-man game and collapsed. Surgery was performed. Mounce, an honors student, remains under critical care while undergoing therapy in a rehabilitation facility. Progress is slow and a long recovery is expected. Sources: KDFW-TV, &lt;i&gt;Mineral Wells Index&lt;/i&gt;, and Janet Mounce on CaringBridges.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Zeth Shouse, 17, Nevada, tight end/defensive end for Elko High School, suffered brain bleeding during a game and collapsed. Multiple surgeries were performed.&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Shouse, an honors student, remained hospitalized in a coma on Oct. 8. Source: &lt;i&gt;Reno Gazette-Journal.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Adrian Padilla, 17, California, safety for Oxnard High School, collapsed following head contact during a game. Surgery was performed for brain swelling of a reported severe concussion. Padilla was released from hospital on Oct. 4 and attended the Oxnard football game days later; he walked onto the field for the opening coin flip wearing street clothes and protective helmet. Padilla told media he suffered a concussion in football two weeks prior to the Sept. 16 injury. The teen, with more surgery pending, is continuing schoolwork at home for remainder of the semester. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Ventura County Star&lt;/i&gt;, Concussion Inc. blog, and ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Adam Ingle, 17, Kansas, quarterback/linebacker for Valley Center High School, was injured in helmet-to-helmet contact during a game. Surgery was performed for brain bleeding. Family members say Ingle likely was concussed three days before game injury, during football practice, but the player did not inform anyone of his headaches, reports blogger Irvin Muchnick. Ingle is progressing well at home and attending school events, but lengthy recovery is expected. Sources: Concussion Inc. blog, &lt;i&gt;Wichita Eagle&lt;/i&gt;, and KSN.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Bobby Clark, 17, Idaho, lineman/linebacker for Priest River Lamanna High School, collapsed while leaving the field during a game. Surgery was performed for brain bleeding. District superintendent Mike McGuire said Clark might have mentioned headaches in the week leading to his injury, unbeknownst to coaches and school officials. At least 9 players on the team have been diagnosed with concussion this season, among 45 players in the small school, officials say. A local TV station reports Clark was among 3 concussion cases diagnosed on the team the night he was airlifted for emergency surgery. The teen remains hospitalized in critical care but a ventilator was removed and he is alert and improving, undergoing physical therapy, his mother reports online. A long recovery is expected. Sources: Julie Clark on CaringBridge.org, WASWX-TV, &lt;i&gt;Spokane Spokesman-Review&lt;/i&gt;, and &lt;i&gt;Bonner County Daily Bee&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Shelton Dvorak, 17, Nebraska, fullback/linebacker for Pierce High School, collapsed during a game. Surgery was performed for brain bleeding. Dvorak was released from ICU a week later and entered a rehabilitation center, where he’s progressing markedly, including solo walking, exercising—such as free lunges, squats—eating and conversing with visitors. But swelling remains along with complications like headaches, and Dvorak faces more surgery. Sources: Dvorak Family on CaringBridges.org, &lt;i&gt;Lincoln Journal Star&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Norfork Daily News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Dillon Lackhan, teenager, Arizona, senior lineman/linebacker for Valley Christian High School, suffered brain bleeding of a headshot during a game. Surgery was performed and Lackhan was conscious within a few days, eating and conversing. “Dillon shows positive signs for recovery, but a long-term prognosis is not clear,” stated school athletic director Marlin Broek, in an Oct. 6 email to sportswriter Richard Obert. Sources: AZCentral.com, MyFoxPhoenix.com and &lt;i&gt;East Valley Tribune&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 13&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Unnamed teenager, California, sophomore player for Los Angeles High School, collapsed during a junior varsity game. Surgery was performed for a brain hemorrhage and the teen remained hospitalized in critical condition the following day, according to &lt;i&gt;The Los Angeles Times&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports of Vessel Rupture and Stroke in American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 6&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Connor Laudenslager, teenager, Pennsylvania, senior offensive/defensive tackle for Line Mountain High School, was stricken of a blood clot at beginning of indoor practice, causing stroke. Laundenslager, 6-foot, 270 pounds, was hospitalized for emergency brain surgery then made “remarkable progress,” said coach Mike Carson. A Sept. 30 report states Laudenslager could be cleared to resume football this season. Sources:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;NewsItem.com, TNonline.com and &lt;i&gt;Pottsville Republican Herald&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 23&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Dylan Mercadante, 16, Vermont, receiver/defensive back for Montpelier High School, suffered a ruptured blood vessel in his neck during the second half of a game, causing strokes. The injury possibly stemmed from contact on his team’s first kickoff of the game. Coach John Murphy said Mercadante passed a “concussion test” administered by athletic trainer Jennifer Lahr before his collapse and she still attempted to sideline the player; Lahr said the player reentered the game against her command, reports sportswriter Anna Grearson. Mercadante spent a week in ICU then was moved to a rehabilitation facility, where he remains. Long recovery is expected. Source: &lt;i&gt;Barre-Montpelier Times Argus&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports of Brain Bleed or Swell, No Surgery, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Feb. 14&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Neiron Ball, 19, linebacker for the University of Florida, experienced headaches following a workout and was hospitalized the following day for a burst blood vessel of the brain linked to a congenital malformation of arteries known as AVM. Ball was released from ICU after five days and in March began “radial” treatment described as a non-intrusive procedure, similar to radiation for cancer. Ball is not playing football this season. A relative says Ball is healthy but his football future remains uncertain. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Orlando Sentinel&lt;/i&gt; and YardBarker.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 19&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Alan Mohika, 17, Hawaii, quarterback for Damien Memorial High School, was injured by contact during a game, rose and walked off, then fell into seizure. Mohika suffered brain bleeding and was hospitalized in ICU for a reported severe concussion. No surgery was necessary and the teen was discharged from hospital after five days. Mohika, who returned to school in mid-September, reportedly sustained a concussion last year and isn’t playing football this season. He hopes to return to sports. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Honolulu Star-Advertiser&lt;/i&gt;, HawaiiNewsNow.com and KITV.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Matt Ringer, 15, California, running back for Central Catholic High School, suffered an apparent concussion during a tackle. Later he was hospitalized for a detected brain bleed, although fully conscious. No surgery was necessary and Ringer was released from hospital within 48 hours. He is not playing football this season, but apparently recovery is strong thus far. Source: &lt;i&gt;Modesto Bee&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 7&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Jadon Adams, 16, Kansas, running back for Beloit High School, collapsed during a game and was hospitalized for brain swelling. Doctors sedated Adams as treatment and discontinued the drugs as swelling subsided within 24 hours, determining that no surgery was necessary. The teen has not fully regained consciousness while making inconsistent responses to verbal and physical stimulation, but family members see positive signs in his eye openings and body movements. And he was moved from ICU into his own room a week after injury. Doctors are unsure why Adams remains mostly unresponsive, but they believe his brain swell wasn’t caused by a football collision, reports journalist Gary Demuth. “They felt a previous problem, perhaps with the addition of the football game, could have caused this health issue to surface,” said Steph Barret, a nurse and friend of the player’s family. Several specialists are examining Adams. “Based on his CAT scan, he should be sitting up and talking,” Barrett said. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Salina Journal&lt;/i&gt; and Steph Barrett on CarePages.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports of Skull Fracture, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;April 2&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Lamont Baldwin, 17, Washington, D.C., touted receiver for Carroll High School, suffered a fractured skull and other injuries in a four-player collision during&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;private camp without pads and helmets in Virginia. Baldwin was hospitalized in ICU for two days and could not return to school for the remaining semester, facing months of recovery. When injured, Baldwin was a top college prospect reportedly being recruited by several major programs. Baldwin is not playing football presently, and available information is limited. Doctors were optimistic for Baldwin’s return to football as of last report in April: &lt;i&gt;Washington Post&lt;/i&gt; and NBCWashington.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports of Spinal Fracture With Surgery, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;May 7&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Rob Marrero, 31, Pennsylvania, semi-pro player for the Mountain Top Reapers, suffered a broken neck and severed spinal cord during a game. Friends reported after surgery that Marrero is paralyzed permanently from chest down. Marrero, married and a father of two, continues treatment and therapy. Source: &lt;i&gt;Lehighton Times News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;May 27&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Jeremy Bingham, 34, Arizona, fractured cervical and thoracic vertebrae during a game in pads and helmets between alumni of two local high schools. He was injured colliding with another player. Doctors diagnosed no paralysis in Bingham and surgery was performed to stabilize the C7 and T1 vertebrae. Bingham is married and the father of four. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Eastern Arizona Courier&lt;/i&gt; and the Bingham Family on Blogspot.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 23&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Corpio Dennard, 16, Alabama, receiver/running back for Saks High School, suffered a broken neck during a game while a tackler grabbed from behind, pinning his arms and sending him into ground headfirst. Dennard experienced no paralysis and walked to the sidelines, but coaches did not return him to the game. The next day his mother sent him for a doctor’s exam and Dennard was hospitalized, with X-rays showing fractures in his 5th and 6th cervical vertebrae. Surgery was performed on Sept. 25, for stabilizing the spine with plate and screws. “The doctors that saw him were just amazed that he got up and walked off the field,” coach Clint Smith told reporter Joe Medley. Dennard said, “If I had gone back in the game, I don’t know where I’d be right now. I’d probably be paralyzed or even dead.” Dennard has begun 6-to-12 months rehabilitation and doctors expect he can return to sports, although probably not football. Source: &lt;i&gt;Anniston Star&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 29&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Luis Morales, teenager, Texas, junior player for Vega High School, suffered fracture of the C6 vertebrae while colliding with bleachers during a junior varsity game. Reports state the teen is paralyzed from waist down while hardly moving his arms. Surgery was performed in Texas, and Morales was flown to California for specialized rehabilitation on Oct. 13. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Amarillo Globe-News&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;High Plains Observer&lt;/i&gt; and ConnectAmarillo.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 7&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Porter Hancock, teenager, Utah, running back/linebacker for South Summit High School, suffered a broken neck and paralysis while making a tackle in a game. “Porter finished off the tackle. It was nothing big,” said South Summit coach Jerry Parker. “He turned his head the wrong way.” Surgery on Oct. 8 removed two discs and inserted a stabilizing plate. Hancock remained paralyzed from chest down as of news reports on Oct. 10. Prognosis is uncertain. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Deseret News&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Salt Lake Tribune&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Park City Record&lt;/i&gt;, KSL.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports of Spinal Fracture, No Surgery, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Note: Football cases of spinal fracture often involve no displacement of vertebrae or puncture of spinal cord, resulting in no paralysis or other acute alert, and in fact unknowing victims can function normally for long periods after injury, including playing tackle football. For such injury that is diagnosed and treated, practically complete recoveries are frequent. Among severe or catastrophic injuries in tackle football, diagnosed spinal fracture without displacement qualifies among least serious types. Some injured players rehabilitate and return to full contact in the same season, even quickly, such as a few high-school players this year. For this section, available details are fewer and less precise in some cases.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;June 25&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Evan Gray, teenager, California, senior running back for Poway High School, fractured three vertebrae in a fall during pass-league competition. Following rest and rehab, Gray returned for Poway’s football season but is currently sidelined with a reported fractured kneecap. Sources: Damian Gonzalez on MaxPreps.com and &lt;i&gt;Poway News Chieftan&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Jeff Wozniak, teenager, Indiana, sophomore quarterback for Morton High School, suffered fractured vertebrae and neck bones and a bruised spinal cord in practice when “hit under his chin during a drill and driven backward,” initially leaving him paralyzed, reports sportswriter Steve Hanlon. Doctors fitted Wozniak with a steel halo head brace, requiring drilling of screws but not open surgery. In ICU he progressively regained feeling and motor function and in two weeks left the hospital for a rehabilitation facility, where he was also released after two weeks. He continues outpatient therapy and hopes to play football again. Source: NWTimes.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 10, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Mario Crawford, 21, Virginia, running back for Old Dominion University, sustained fracture of the C1 vertebrae in a preseason practice, striking his helmet on a medicine ball in a drill. Doctors could not determine a diagnosis for two weeks, until CT scan revealed the injury. Crawford expects to wear a neck brace 6-to-8 weeks and will not return to football this year, according to &lt;i&gt;The Hampton Roads Virginian-Pilot&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 15-20&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Devin Mahina, adult, Utah, redshirt sophomore tight end for Brigham Young University, sustained a fractured vertebrae in a preseason scrimmage. Initially the injury was not diagnosed and Mahina practiced football for about 10 days, until doctors found it by CT scan on Aug. 30, sidelining him for the year. At last report, Mahina will wear a neck brace until further evaluation. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Deseret Sun&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Salt Lake Tribune&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 26&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Dustin Newman, teenager, Alabama, junior player for Pike Liberal Arts Academy, sustained a fractured thoracic or T5 vertebrae during a kickoff. He will wear a neck brace until about November’s end. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Troy Messenger&lt;/i&gt; and WAKA.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Kellen Bernard, 15, Texas, running back/linebacker for Palmer High School, sustained a fractured lumbar vertebrae on a hit while returning a punt. He reportedly had temporary paralysis and at last report was expected to recover. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Ennis Daily News&lt;/i&gt; and WFAA-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2&lt;/b&gt;: Jerram Rojo, 17, Texas, quarterback/linebacker for Marfa High School, was injured running the ball in a game, his heading striking ground. He walked off the field then was hospitalized, where a CT scan revealed fracture of the C6 vertebrae. As of diagnosis, Rojo would wear a neck brace for six weeks then be examined for possible surgery, Sterry Butcher reports for BigBendNow.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2, circa&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Sam Scholting, teenager, Missouri, junior offensive tackle for Mexico High School, suffered a broken vertebrae and was expected to be sidelined six weeks, coach Nick Hoth told &lt;i&gt;The Mexico Ledger&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Frank de Braga, teenager, Nevada, senior running back/safety for Fallon High School, suffered a fractured T3 vertebrae and brain concussion while making a tackle. Initially unconscious, the teen had movement before transport to hospital, where he spent the overnight under observation. De Braga was cleared to return to play two weeks later and remains in the Fallon lineup, according to &lt;i&gt;The Lahontan Valley News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 10&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Brian Tyms, 22, Florida, receiver for Florida A&amp;amp;M University, sustained a fractured vertebrae during a game. He returned to football and played in a game on Oct. 1. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Tallahassee Democrat&lt;/i&gt; and The Associated Press.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 11&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Ron Bartell, 29, Missouri, cornerback for the St. Louis Rams, sustained&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;fractures of the C7 vertebrae in an NFL game. He is recovering wearing a neck brace and will undergo months of rehab, hopeful of playing again, according to &lt;i&gt;The St. Louis Post-Dispatch&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 16&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Scott Thibeault, teenager, Maine, senior running back/linebacker for Mountain Valley High School, suffered two fractured vertebrae and was expected to miss at least four weeks of play. Source: &lt;i&gt;Portland Press Herald&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 18&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Nick Collins, 28, Wisconsin, free safety for the Green Bay Packers, ruptured a lumbar disc during collision in an NFL game. Cervical-fusion surgery was performed and Collins faces lengthy rehabilitation. Doctors expect full recovery for normal lifestyle, but Collins hopes to resume pro football. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Milwaukee Journal Sentinel&lt;/i&gt; and Channel3000.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Deangelo Peete, 17, Michigan, linebacker for Livonia Franklin High School, fractured his C1 vertebrae in three places during a helmet-to-helmet collision in a game. He was hospitalized, a head halo brace was fitted to stabilize the injury, and within days Peete was walking. The teen will wear the halo brace for three months, according to WJBK-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Cody Ashcraft, teenager, Missouri, senior receiver for Scott City High School, sustained a fractured cervical vertebrae in a game, according to &lt;i&gt;The Southeast Missourian&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 8&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Chris Thompson, 20, Florida, running back for Florida State University, suffered fractures of the T5 and T6 vertebrae while being tackled in a game and was hospitalized overnight. Thompson is walking and wearing a neck brace for 6-to-12 weeks, then starts rehab. He hopes to play football again, according to &lt;i&gt;The Orlando Sentinel&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold" class="Apple-style-span" size="4"&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports, Survivors of Heatstroke and Related Illness, Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;July 11&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Jordan Hawthorne, South Carolina, sophomore lineman for Greenville High School, was stricken during morning team workout as local temperature would later reach the mid-90s and about 100-degree index. Hawthorne, listed as 5-foot-10, 200-pound defensive lineman, reportedly passed out but regained consciousness before transport by ambulance to a local hospital, where at last report he spent the overnight in ICU. Source: WPSA-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Ciani Davis, 17, Texas, offensive/defensive lineman for his 6-man team at Advantage Academy Charter School, collapsed of heatstroke in morning practice. Paramedics measured 108-degree body temperature for the teen, listed at 6-foot-4 and 350 pounds, and he was placed in medically induced coma for 48 hours. Davis was hospitalized for a week, mostly in ICU, and began outpatient rehabilitation. Sources: WFAA-TV and KDFW-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Dustin Snow, 17, Ohio, offensive tackle for Wauseon High School, collapsed during team lunch break after practice. The 6-foot-1, 285-pound teen slipped off a chair, tried to stand up, then a teammate caught his fall. Emergency response resulted in helicopter life-flight to Cleveland, where Snow was hospitalized in critical condition before he began to recover. His father, Bob Snow, said, “It was a nightmare the first 24 hours.” Dustin Snow, a 4.0 student ranked No.1 in his senior class, was discharged from hospital after a week and soon spoke with reporter Bill Bray. “I barely remember [Aug. 2] practice,” Snow told Bray, of the hours leading to his collapse, continuing: “It was severe dehydration. … The first thing I remember I was waking up in the hospital with the [ventilator] tube in my mouth. … I was really freaking out. … I had so much lactic acid in my body that they had to put a room full of fluids in my body. They had seven IV bags hooked up to me at one time. My kidney function was very close to dead as was my liver function. That started to affect all my other organs and my stomach began having problems functioning as well. I couldn’t digest food and it was really bad.” Snow will no longer play football; in addition to his heat illness, he has learned of “an extra bone growth in the back of my head,” discovered during hospitalization, which doctors warn could damage his spinal cord on impact. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Wauseon Reporter&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Toledo Blade&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 10&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Clay Huskey, 14, Alabama, player for Buckhorn High School, collapsed of heatstroke during a water break at afternoon practice. Coaches applied ice to Huskey’s body while awaiting paramedics. The teen was hospitalized for three weeks, including 17 days in ICU, as chronicled on Facebook by a deep thread of relatives, friends and more followers. For about a week Huskey was basically comatose, wracked by high fever and body pain, then had to overcome a lung infection and surgery. Upon his hospital release at day 21, Huskey faced “a lot of physical therapy,” Denise Sisco Shockley reported online, “and he will be out of school another 4-6 weeks, but he is healing. Thank you, God, for answering our prayers!” Sources: Shockley on Facebook.com and WAFF-TV.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Clay Callahan, teenager, Ohio, junior lineman for Conneaut High School, was stricken as primarily 100-degree heat and humidity sent six players to local hospitals from a game between his school and Champion High. Callahan was unconscious in critical condition, hospitalized on ventilator for an overnight before discharge after about a week. Candy Oliveira, identifying herself as a relative of Callahan on Facebook, wrote on Sept. 7: “I have been to other high school football games and have seen large ice coolers with towels soaked… . My nephew showed multiple signs of HEAT STROKE prior to his unconsciousness.” Callahan, whom his aunt described as “very lucky,” returned to the Conneaut team for the Oct. 14 game, reports sportswriter Don McCormack. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Ashtabula Star Beacon&lt;/i&gt;, WJW-TV, Oliveira on Facebook.com, InAshtabula.com, and Conneaut Area City Schools.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports, Survivors of Cardiac Arrest, Heart Attack, Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;May 19&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Teddrick Lewis, 15, Louisiana, player for Breaux Bridge High School, collapsed on the sidelines during a spring football scrimmage. Coach Paul Broussard employed a portable automated external defibrillator, or AED—after having trained in a mock drill with his team and school personnel weeks earlier—to restart the heartbeat and save Lewis’ life. “Because we had a plan in place, we knew exactly what to do,” Broussard said. Lewis was hospitalized for a week and has since recovered for normal activity, but doctors advise he not return to contact sport. Sources: KATC-TV and ZOLL Medical Corporation.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 22&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Unnamed teenager, Missouri, eighth-grade player for Waynesville Middle School, collapsed of cardiac arrest during afternoon practice. Local fire and ambulance personnel restored the boy’s heartbeat. “The defibrillator devices were absolutely what saved him,” said Mike McCort, of the ambulance district. As of Aug. 26, the teen was hospitalized, according to &lt;i&gt;The Pulaski County Daily News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Ross Palmer, 17, Idaho, receiver/cornerback for American Falls High School, collapsed of apparent cardiac arrest while running wind sprints at practice. Two coaches began CPR while another fetched a portable defibrillator, then they correctly ignored a directive not to use the device, from responding paramedics, reports journalist Patty Henetz. “If [the stricken player] had not been shocked, no way would he have come out of that,” said cardiac surgeon Dr. Brian Crandall. Three days post-incident, surgeons implanted a self-activating stimulator in Palmer’s chest. Henetz reported “if Ross’ heart goes into ventricle fibrillation arrest—quivering instead of beating—the implantable cardiac defibrillator, or ICD, will shock his heart back into action.” Source: &lt;i&gt;Salt Lake Tribune&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;David Wilganowski, 17, Texas, touted lineman for Rudder High School, collapsed of cardiac arrest during a game. Rudder's certified athletic trainer, Jamie Woodell, revived the heartbeat with an AED and staff performed CPR, saving the teen. Wilganowski was hospitalized 10 days and surgery placed an ICD device in his chest. An honors student, aspiring engineer, Wilganowski is formerly a prized football recruit at 6-foot-5, 240 pounds and athletic. He will not play football again, but Rice University reportedly pledges to honor its scholarship offer. Sources: KBTX-TV, KCEN-TV and &lt;i&gt;Bryan-College Station Eagle&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 9&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Brett Greenwood, 23, Iowa, former University of Iowa safety just released by the Pittsburgh Steelers of the NFL, suffered a reported heart attack during an individual workout at his alma mater high school in Bettendorf. Personnel of Pleasant Valley High were present and likely kept the athlete alive until paramedics arrived, media report. School athletic director Randy Treymer said, “The school nurse ran a defibrillator where our athletic trainer was working on Brett. … They kept pushing with the defibrillator and CPR. If they weren’t around, who knows what could have happened?” Doctors placed Greenwood in medically induced coma and on life support, and he was hospitalized in ICU for about two weeks. Greenwood was transferred to a specialized care facility where he remains, reportedly awake, talking and walking. Medical treatment continues and a likely lengthy recovery. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Quad City Times&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Daily Iowan&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 20&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Alex Templeton, 13, Texas, a linebacker for Azle Junior High School, went into cardiac arrest of contact during a game. Templeton chased down an opponent near the sideline, making the tackle from behind, and the opponent’s cleat jabbed his chest. The seventh-grader stood up, looked at the grandstands and collapsed. A coach performed CPR while a nurse who was a spectator administered a portable AED owned by the school; Templeton lay still until the defibrillator restored heartbeat, rousing him. “Seeing the boy spring back to life was an emotional experience for all those involved,” Edwin Newton reported. Templeton is recovering and hopes to play football again in about two years, when doctors might grant permission, but his dad, Matt Templeton, may not: “I don’t want him to play, but we will have to make the decision later,” the father said. Azle school officials, meanwhile, have ordered 11 additional defibrillators, intending to station one for every athletic activity of the district.&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Sources: &lt;i&gt;Azle News&lt;/i&gt;, WFFA-TV and DFWCBSLocal.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 1&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Ty Egan, 8, Illinois, youth-league player in LeRoy, was sprinting open for a touchdown when he slowed and collapsed, his heart having stopped. An ambulance was on site and medical personnel were watching as spectators, and they scrambled in response. But only oxygen was administered before the grade-schooler revived, resuming normal pulse and heartbeat. An electrophysiologist later told the parents their son was in cardiac arrest and a miracle saved him, not oxygen. Doctors are restricting the boy from all sports except golf in the future, reports Randy Kindred, &lt;i&gt;The Bloomington Pantagraph&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports, Survivors of Blood Clot, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;April&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Nermin Delic, 19, Kentucky, defensive lineman for the University of Kentucky, underwent emergency surgery for a blood clot. The life-threatening condition followed his operation to repair a torn groin muscle, an injury from spring football. “In the second week of April, I was walking to class and my arm was turning blue,” Delic told reporter Drew Brantley. “They told me I had a blood clot. I spent eight days in the hospital. I had some internal bleeding and a two-foot tube down my throat. It made me realize some things.” Soon after, Delic had surgery to remove a rib, and he chose to leave football and the university. In July, however, the 6-foot-5, 260-pound athlete announced he would return to UK and the football program in 2012. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Dalton Daily Citizen&lt;/i&gt;, BleedBlueKentucky.com and &lt;i&gt;Lexington Herald-Leader&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Aug. 27&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Jacy Dike-Pedersen, 16, California, fullback/linebacker for California School for the Deaf, experienced difficulty breathing in a scrimmage; two days later, an arm became swollen. Doctors found blood clots in his upper body and Dike-Pedersen entered ICU for drug treatments and then surgery to remove a rib. The 6-foot-3, 185-pound honors student now takes blood-thinning medicine, and he returned to school on Sept. 19, although finished with football this year. If the blood clots clear in the future, Dike-Pedersen might return to football, reports Phil Jensen, &lt;i&gt;The Oakland Tribune&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 2&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Tyler Story, teenager, Texas, receiver/linebacker for Decatur High School, sustained a severe knee injury in a game; later a blood clot developed and the teen underwent emergency surgery lasting five hours. A family member reported damage to the artery and nerves, and Story stayed weeks in ICU. He was recently discharged from hospital, but surgery for the knee injury is pending. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Wise County Messenger&lt;/i&gt; and Jeff Jones on Blogspot.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Oct. 8&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Andrew Gonnella, 21, Maryland, 6-foot-5, 290-pound offensive guard for the University of Maryland, suffered a dislocated knee in a game that included compound bone fracture, leading to surgery that night. Three days later, Gonnella had a blood clot and was hospitalized. Sources: &lt;i&gt;Washington Times&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Baltimore Sun&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports of Organ Rupture and Damage, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 23&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Taygen Schuelke, 17, South Dakota, running back for Newell High School, suffered a ruptured kidney during a game. He was hospitalized in ICU a few days then moved to a regular room to begin physical therapy. Schuelke was released after about a week and is home for a slow recovery. Two years ago, Schuelke fractured his C7 vertebrae in rodeo competition. Sources:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;&lt;i&gt;Rapid City Journal&lt;/i&gt; and Jan Swan Wood for TSLN.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 23&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Luke Bewley, 17, Montana, halfback/linebacker for Hellgate High School, suffered a lacerated kidney while blindsided in a reportedly “clean” but hard hit from a blocker. Bewley was hospitalized in critical condition and surgeons implanted a stint to redirect liquids away from the damaged kidney. He was discharged from hospital within a week and doctors expect a rapid recovery. Bewley aspires to play basketball in the coming season and also return to football next year, reports Jamie Kelly for &lt;i&gt;The Missoulian&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 24&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Zach Sheffield, 18, Kansas, cornerback for Olathe South High School, sustained a destroyed kidney from contact during a game. This case is among many of 2011 demonstrating how quickly emergency can accelerate beyond anyone’s control at the common football setting—and typically mortal danger threatens a student player. For the Sheffield catastrophic injury, &lt;i&gt;Kansas City Star&lt;/i&gt; sportswriter Tod Palmer provides a vivid account available online… Sheffield fell on the run, pursuing a ball-carrier during a Saturday road game, and his twisting body struck the opponent’s flexed knee in impact that damaged his left kidney irreparably. Sheffield trotted off the field, short of breath he later recounted, then collapsed in apparent distress. No one could readily diagnose the problem, including trainers and coaches, and no ambulance was immediately available, so the dying player was loaded into a family automobile. His dad, Bret Sheffield, sped off for an ER five miles away through metro traffic. The father “drove like a man possessed” to make it, Palmer wrote, continuing: “He recalls weaving across a median at one point then speeding down the shoulder on I-435 west, which was backed up because of weekend construction. … Zach described the pain as excruciating, ‘probably a 9 out of 10,’ he said. Doctors could barely move him off the gurney to the CT machine, because the pain was so intolerable. … All the hospital’s medical staff could do was stop the bleeding to the burst kidney, which now felt like an inflating balloon in his abdominal cavity, and wait for his other kidney to begin working double-time.” Surgery removed the destroyed kidney and Zach Sheffield remained hospitalized on Sept. 30, slowly recovering, as Palmer’s report was posted at &lt;a href="http://www.kansascity.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.kansascity.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 30&lt;/b&gt;:&lt;font size="+0"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Derek Wall, 13, Utah, student at Pleasant Grove Junior High School, suffered severe internal injuries from contact during intramural flag football, an after-school program on campus. The injured boy’s father, James Wall, said, “They had to do exploratory surgery on him—he’s got a 10-to-12 inch cut on his stomach now, perforated bowels, his pancreas is bruised, there’s some liquid in his lungs, they had to take out his gall bladder, his appendix. Everything was just kind of bruised up.” A week following the incident, Derek Wall was recovering although unable to eat or drink without help, and would remain hospitalized for weeks longer, reports Emiley Morgan, &lt;i&gt;The Deseret News&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;h1&gt;&lt;font style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class="Apple-style-span"&gt;Online Reports of Femoral Artery Rupture, American Football 2011&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Sept. 3&lt;/b&gt;: Jacob Rainey, teenager, Virginia, touted quarterback for Woodberry Forest School, projected as a top college recruit in 2013, suffered femoral artery burst of a leg during a preseason scrimmage, among contact injuries when he was tackled from behind. Doctors amputated the lower leg on Sept. 10. Sources: &lt;i&gt;The Daily Progress&lt;/i&gt;, The Associated Press, and MaxPreps.com.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Matt Chaney is a writer, editor, teacher and restaurant worker living in Missouri, USA. For more information, including about his 2009 book, &lt;/i&gt;Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football, &lt;i&gt;visit the homepage at&lt;/i&gt; &lt;a href="http://www.fourwallspublishing.com/"&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>WADA Stonewalls NFL Players on Suspect HGH Test</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/08/26/wada-stonewalls-nfl-players-on-suspect-hgh-test-2.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2011-08-26:fdcd93de-9831-4197-a8d9-5c03e0746142</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="HGH and testing" />
		<category term="News Analysis" />
		<updated>2011-08-26T12:46:37Z</updated>
		<published>2011-08-26T12:46:37Z</published>
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&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;A name=OLE_LINK4&gt;&lt;/A&gt;&lt;A name=OLE_LINK3&gt;&lt;/A&gt;&lt;A name=OLE_LINK2&gt;&lt;/A&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 20px"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 18px"&gt;Union memos reveal runaround by &lt;FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 18px"&gt;WADA&lt;/FONT&gt; and NFL&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;By Matt Chaney&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;Posted Friday, August 26, 2011&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;This story of&amp;nbsp;skullduggery follows the classic theme of what looks like, walks like, talks like, &lt;I&gt;often&lt;/I&gt; &lt;I&gt;isn’t&lt;/I&gt;.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;It features contemporary names and concepts in NFL news, of purported wisdom, science and integrity, and illusion, smoke and mirrors, when black is actually white, or the seeming good guys bad, and so forth.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;This is about NFL management and players, which party is really to blame for the serious dispute over beleaguered, so-called Olympic testing for recombinant human growth hormone—a growing fight preventing full ratification of the new collective bargaining agreement celebrated as ending the lockout and restoring America’s beloved football season.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Long-short, the problem party of HGH testing is &lt;I&gt;not&lt;/I&gt; the players and union, per the imagination of dumb sportswriters and politicians.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;In reality the players are getting railroaded over HGH blood testing, or were, and they refuse to play along, as PA officials have clarified for months in private communication with the league, according to current union memos obtained by Chaney’s Blog.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Shady dealing begins with the quasi-governmental entities World Anti-Doping Agency and American arm USADA, which are funded by government and sport organs. WADA-USADA bureaucrats incessantly promote their closed “science” for dubious synthetic GH detection that’s ripped mercilessly by independent experts worldwide.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“WADA refused to provide scientific information justifying the reliability of their HGH test (validation studies, population studies, performance testing between labs, etc.),” states an union email circulated among members Wednesday afternoon, following a meeting of NFLPA representatives with anti-doping and league officials at WADA headquarters in Montreal.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“We leave here with more questions than answers,” the union memo continues. “The quality of player care is non-negotiable and we will continue to press for all the relevant data. We want to ensure that any testing meets the highest standards and has scientific consensus.” &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Obfuscation is also game plan for NFL management, especially commissioner Roger Goodell and his frontman on the issue, attorney Adolpho Birch, senior vice president of law and labor policy. Goodell and Birch utter nonsense on HGH testing, for more than a year running, only to go unchallenged by sport reporters who parrot the misinformation.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;League officials blatantly misled the union before Wednesday’s confab in Canada, promising to finally produce documentation on the controversial GH “isoform” test, validation studies withheld by WADA at least seven years, including from NFLPA experts who’ve filed specific requests since April.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Obviously the league promise proved phony in Montreal, where no missing data were forthcoming Wednesday, and longtime observers of WADA and its in-house isoform immunoassay would only expect as much.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Critics like preeminent testing engineer Dr. Don Catlin in Los Angeles, a former tester for Olympic and pro sports who operates the non-profit Anti-Doping Research laboratory.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Catlin has waited for scientific information on the GH-isoform test since before WADA deployment at the Athens Olympic Games in 2004. “You want to see &lt;I&gt;the data&lt;/I&gt;,” Catlin told me in 2007. “A scientist says, ‘Fine, show me the data, show me the paper that’s been [peer] reviewed and published.’ ”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“You’ve got to have hard-core evidence…,” Catlin continued: “ ‘Here’s the study. Here’s what we did. Here’s what we found. Here’s the [rate of] false-positive. Here’s the false-negative.’ ”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“I never pay any attention to what they say [WADA officials],” Catlin dismissed. “I only pay attention to what’s published. And if there’s something published in peer-review literature on the [HGH] test, I’ll know all about it.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;What of the mysterious WADA studies, I wondered then, that supposedly establish test validity and reliability?&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“Well, they’re always being conducted,” Catlin said. “I hear of them. But with so much I’ve heard over the years, I just go way back and believe only what I can touch and feel myself.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“It’s in the interest of a sport organization to say they have a test, because they don’t look very good when they don’t have a test. I have a letter from WADA, two years old [circa 2004], saying a test for growth hormone will be released shortly,” Catlin noted. “You lose credibility when you speak before you’re sure.” &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Epidemiologist Charles E. Yesalis of Penn State, an ScD and foremost expert on sport doping, discussed WADA defiance of scientific protocol for implementing faulty approaches in punitive anti-doping, with only athletes punished for the scattered positive results, among countless false-negatives.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“I’m just astounded,” Yesalis, avowedly conservative, told me in February 2010 as NFL and MLB officials started chirping favorably about WADA blood testing for growth hormone.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“I mean, if you’re going to ruin somebody’s life, and if you don’t have [vetted methodology] totally locked up, to me that is immoral and unethical,” Yesalis said. “I’d rather see five million cheaters compete than see scientists bastardizing themselves.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;I interviewed Catlin again about the isoform, with no essential change in play since we spoke three years previous—&lt;I&gt;nothing&lt;/I&gt; substantially improved about testing method and instrument since their patenting by WADA prior to Athens.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;And despite the first reported positive result on Feb. 22, 2010, for British rugby player Terry Newton, 31, who admitted HGH use uncontested and accepted a two-year suspension under WADA guidelines.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;An informant had fingered Newton for no-notice testing, the typical way for detection through the isoform’s laughable window of but a few hours to perhaps a day.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“Well, if you know the guy’s going to shoot up this morning, and you arrive at noon, OK,” Catlin remarked, caustically. “Glad it works that way.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“They can’t do much about the detection window,” Catlin said of the isoform’s great insurmountable limitation, if not debunking factor. “That’s the nature of the test.” &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Scientific literature still lacked credible review on the WADA isoform, then six years in use with some 1,500 negative results until Newton, and Catlin wasn’t surprised.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Who &lt;I&gt;would&lt;/I&gt; want to vouch for this lousy, unvalidated application? No credible scientist or other authority, anywhere on the planet.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“It is simply not a useful test, no matter how you cut it or spin it,” Catlin said.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;*&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; * &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;For almost five months, the NFL Players Association has asked WADA and the league to provide simple validating information for the GH-isoform assay, a blood test used on athletes for punitive anti-doping since 2004, according to recent union documents obtained by this blog and an Aug. 9 letter to WADA quoted by Juliet Macur of &lt;I&gt;The New York Times&lt;/I&gt;..&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Union officials, in the final week leading to Wednesday’s face-to-face with WADA and the NFL, beseeched anti-dopers and league brass to come clean, produce any substantial research data on the isoform.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Apparently, the question arises whether WADA even has a formal article on its closet research. An Aug. 19 union letter to Birch at the NFL states: “we understand… that no technical document exists on the isoform test. If our understanding is incorrect, and a technical document exists either in final or draft form, we renew our request for those documents.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;That letter to Birch last Friday, written by NFLPA associate general counsel Heather M. McPhee, channels mounting union frustration with WADA and NFL management—and players’ skepticism and mistrust for alleged HGH testing.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;McPhee informed Birch the union had “concerns” about management conduct and WADA cooperation. Birch’s agenda for the Montreal meeting did not provide for ample discussion of the scientific controversy, McPhee emphasized, particularly since union experts supposedly were to receive and review critical documents on spot.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;McPhee noted recent materials the PA received from both the NFL and WADA were essentially useless, largely irrelevant to questions at hand, perhaps even “mistakenly included.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“We emphasize that the vast majority of these items consist of papers or abstracts that involve a different [rHGH] test—the marker test—and not the isoform test the NFL is currently proposing.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;McPhee noted the August materials received “again [do not] include the [agency] validation studies, reference and population studies, and validation studies conducted by each WADA [accredited] laboratory that uses the isoform test.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;In closing, McPhee reiterated dire need for union experts to review literature prior to the discussion time Birch scheduled for the impending meeting, an hour in Montreal, absurdly short. “For this reason, again, we continue to strongly encourage you to provide the information,” McPhee implored of Birch in New York.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Birch apparently didn’t reply to McPhee in Washington for four days, until Tuesday, on eve of everyone’s gathering in Montreal—and of course without the necessary documents on WADA testing..&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;McPhee fired right back to Birch by email Tuesday, tactfully scolding on several points, including the reality that issue discussions would only have to continue.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“It is apparent that we will not receive the information that we requested from both WADA and the NFL prior to the meeting tomorrow,” McPhee wrote. “In light of that circumstance, it is impossible for the substantive issues regarding this matter to be resolved tomorrow, and we need to plan for additional meetings in the near future.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;In addition, McPhee corrected Birch for his public misstatements regarding what the union and players have agreed upon thus far: “your statement that the NFLPA made two testing proposals, most recently three weeks ago, is not accurate.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“In early August, [the] NFLPA engaged in negotiations in response to the League’s proposal,” McPhee wrote, “but as you know, the NFLPA clearly stated that any agreement regarding HGH testing is contingent on the NFLPA’s satisfaction with rigorous independent analysis and assessment of the test that the NFL has proposed for use on players.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;By Wednesday north of the border, NFLPA representatives had literally chased WADA yaks and NFL sidekicks to Montreal, but for no avail. Once again, an earnest party hit wall in quest for WADA disclosure on its notorious HGH testing.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“WADA won’t show the numbers,” Catlin had already surmised, a year ago. “They recognize, rightfully, that as soon as they do show the numbers, there could be difficulty.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;*&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;The epitome of fluffy NFL rhetoric on blood testing, mostly inaccurate, has been statements by Adolpho Birch, league attorney assigned to the issue.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;In dialogues with reporters, Birch portrays suspect HGH detection as “solution” for protecting NFL players and even impressionable youths, ensuring “clean competition and a level playing field.” He claims the league welcomes input from “all expertise,” but, he adds “the program we have designed will be effective and will meet any sort of scrutiny that will be put on it.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Birch claims HGH testing “has been used by the top labs for years now and has withstood legal challenge upon appeal.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Regarding ever-present expert rebuke and adverse evidence of GH-isoform test efficacy, Birch says: “From our perspective, there are no significant detractions to its effectiveness or reliability.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“We believe, like every other test we have ever used, we will be able to improve that [detection] time. All tests evolve as the science and the technology evolves. We expect [the isoform] to be the same way. It is a far different thing than unreliability, which would be something that would promote a false-positive [result], something you absolutely cannot have in the context of drug testing.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“There has been zero indication from anyone since sort of the dawn of this test that false-positives are an issue,” Birch says, wholly false.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;In fact, many indie experts—including Catlin, Yesalis, University of Texas biostatistician Donald A. Berry, and former BALCO doping guru Victor Conte—argue that false-positives have yet to be ruled out, given insufficient information made public to date.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Anti-doping agencies even acknowledge the fact, with an NFLPA letter, quoted by &lt;I&gt;The Times&lt;/I&gt;, inquiring about “WADA’s acceptance of a 1 in 10,000 false-positive rate” for the GH-isoform.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Meanwhile, contrary to Birch’s version, the WADA test has &lt;I&gt;not&lt;/I&gt; faced challenge in a courtroom of law, democratic or otherwise, nowhere yet.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;The appeal process that Estonia skier Andrus Veerpalu presently follows, as one of 5 known positive-result cases among some 4,000 HGH assays since the Athens Games, is confined to the kangaroo arbitration cells of elite amateur sport. Veerpalu, age 40, is the only athlete reported to formally contest the WADA test so far.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Newton, the unfortunate first known to test positive, committed suicide last year within months of the announced result, and Berry took exception from afar, hearing the news in America.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;In 2008, Berry, the data expert, shredded anti-doping as generally bad science in a widely read review he authored for &lt;I&gt;Nature&lt;/I&gt; journal. “If conventional doping testing were to be submitted to a regulatory agency such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to qualify as a diagnostic for a disease, it would be rejected,” Berry told science writer Brian Alexander, reporting for MSNBC.com.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Last year I notified Berry of Newton’s death, and the normally reserved scientist blasted circumstances of modern athletes, those clean or “cheating,” for entrapment perpetuated and driven by questionable or invalid anti-doping that somehow skirts law, ethics, fairness—wherever, whenever deemed necessary by an official few so powerful, of sport, media and government.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“Terry Newton’s plight should be a wake-up call to all,” Berry wrote to me and others, by email. “As a society we cannot take this issue lightly. What many regard to be a small penalty can be a death sentence.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“Are we trying to save sport? High-level sport? At what cost? Is it worth it? Quite obviously we’re ruining people’s lives. Perhaps we should be exacting such extreme penalties to save sport so we can be entertained by athletes on what we like to think is a level playing field. But a few people should not be making this decision for the rest of us. And the entire process of labeling people with the stain of cheater should be defensible and not cloistered.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“Are we trying to save the bodies of young people?” Berry continued. “If so, is the tack we’ve taken even remotely reasonable? And is the trade-off of bodies saved and lives ruined appropriate, even if our tack is eventually successful?”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“I don’t pretend to have the answers to these questions, but they must be debated much more broadly than presently, with the pros and cons of the various approaches clearly delineated and widely publicized.”&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;“And, oh yes, we must get the science right,” Berry affirmed in conclusion, “and we must appropriately and adequately fund research in this area so we have a chance of getting it right.”&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;I&gt;Matt Chaney is a writer, editor, teacher and restaurant worker living in Missouri, USA. Email him at&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;A href="mailto:mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/A&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;. &lt;I&gt;For more information, including about his 2009 book,&lt;/I&gt; Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football, &lt;I&gt;visit the homepage at&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;A href="http://www.fourwallspublishing.com/"&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/A&gt;&lt;FONT size=+0&gt;. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>'Ordinary' Football Disables and Kills at Schools, Colleges</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/06/29/the-unsafe-game-at-schools-and-colleges.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2011-06-29:83965345-9691-4369-8c56-0cfb7413f5df</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="News Analysis" />
		<updated>2011-06-29T22:25:00Z</updated>
		<published>2011-06-29T22:25:00Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;h1 style="line-height:normal"&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: normal; "&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;pre&gt;&lt;h1 style="line-height:normal"&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: normal; "&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;/pre&gt;&lt;pre&gt;&lt;h1 style="line-height:normal"&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" face="Arial"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/h1&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/pre&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;By Matt Chaney&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Posted Wednesday, June 29, 2011&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;This is Part 5 of an analysis series titled &lt;/i&gt;Brain
Trauma Dictates Epic Football Reform, &lt;i&gt;which will culminate with independent
recommendations for steps imperative to the blood sport’s survival at public
schools, colleges, and likely the professional level.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Believe what you’re seeing, parents, in tackle football. Use
common sense and drop your sentiment for the game mythologized as pure, essential Americana.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Tackle football is simply blood sport, not the glorious
rite of manhood and education you’re always led to believe. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;No, collision football is not beneficial for kids overall,
and it turns brutal at competitive levels that begin far below
professional football, incidentally, on any field where aggressive competitors
roam, predators of all ages—who become prey too at some point to the
game’s perpetual maw, battering themselves down if not falling to peer
attackers.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;An American football player can only hope to leave the sport
on his own volition, because forcible exit by injury is neither kind nor
prideful, ranging from orthopedic maiming to rattled brain cells, to, yes,
spinal paralysis or death for the most unfortunate.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“This crazy game will hurt you; this ain’t no party, this
ain’t no disco,” said David Meggyesy, book author, former head-hunting NFL
linebacker, and retired players union official, referencing the Talking Heads
classic “Life During Wartime.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Nothing, no one will ever change the extreme danger of
tackle football—no rules, no education or “awareness,” no experts with their
theories and snake-oil “testing” for preventing concussions, steroids or
whatever risk.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Understand, parents, &lt;i&gt;never&lt;/i&gt; can football be but fundamentally
violent and terribly unsafe, whether staged in your town or on television, and
whether it’s your own flesh and blood on that field or someone else’s.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;If that doesn’t grab you, know this: Football costs the
public foremost for its fun of destructing bodies by the thousands, human damages amounting to billions of
dollars annually. The game and its profiteers don’t carry the carnage, just us,
society at-large, paying already and forever for today’s mass of living
football wounded, children to elderly.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Most importantly, reject football officials who
always claim control of the latest health concern, like muscle
doping in recent decades and brain injuries in the present. Every so-called
prevention of football danger ends up a sham if not scam, and players suffer real consequences.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Last year, for example, football organs and their medical experts, from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to his associate Dr.
Robert Cantu, claimed a “culture change” and “awareness” toward "safer" football—reviving the sport’s antiquated response during injury crisis—but
fatalities remained virtually unchanged.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;At least 17 young Americans died of football during 2010,
according to news reports and injury research, compared to the official 18
recorded for 2009.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Six of those players died of collisions in 2010, ranging in
age from 11 to 21, three more than the previous year, proving no
fundamental shift in football brutality.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Nothing could’ve saved Zach Shaver, an 18-year-old defensive
tackle rendered comatose by a turf hit during a team scrimmage at Tarleton
State University in Stephenville, Texas, March 27, 2010. The 6-foot-2,
280-pound freshman battled an opponent while the two fell over other players,
slamming Shaver’s head to ground with the offensive lineman atop him.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“It looked like an ordinary football play,” said witness
Brad Keith, local sports editor. “An assistant coach said that the offensive
lineman said Shaver fell limp in his arms.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Shaver was air-lifted to a hospital but didn't regain consciousness; he died of the head injury two days later, survived by his
parents and a sister.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Six weeks later, during spring scrimmage at Eastern Oregon
University in LaGrande, safety Dylan Steigers came off the field after making a
tackle and told a coach he’d taken a headshot. Then he began vomiting and
seizing.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Steigers was suffering a subdural hematoma, massive
hemorrhaging of blood vessels in the brain. The 21-year-old was placed on life
support and died the next day, leaving a 2-year-old daughter in his wake.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Steigers’ former high-school coach in Montana, Pete Joseph,
said, “He played the game the way it should be played. He had excellent
physical tools, he played the game hard, he played the game fast, and he loved
football.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
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&lt;/font&gt;*&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;American football likely isn’t long for present form,
pervasive and carried by the public in expenses from operations to healthcare.
Not in this litigious, cash-poor country.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Too many health risks impact players and families, including
drug abuse, cardiac disease, heatstroke, orthopedic disabilities and, of
course, brain trauma and damage, says epidemiologist Charles E. Yesalis,
professor emeritus at Penn State University.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“To me, it’s either a tsunami or perfect storm on the
horizon with football,” said Yesalis, a foremost expert on muscle drugs in
sport, during a telephone interview in December, when he surmised that head
injuries had surpassed doping as an issue.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Yesalis noted boxing’s immense popularity of the past, when
thousands of schools and colleges hosted pugilism and it commanded prime-time
telecasts, until medical findings indelibly stamped the hazards in public
conscience and turned-off too many people, especially parents.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“How many white middle-class parents today let their kids
box?” emphasized Yesalis, whose father was a top amateur boxer. “How many
boxing teams still remain at colleges? How many in high schools?”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“You have to view it in that milieu: What happened in boxing
and our risk-adverse culture today. For me it’s a no-brainer: Parents today are
dramatically more risk-adverse than were the parents of my generation or my
dad’s generation.” &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Then there’s our litigious society today,” Yesalis
continued, “and all the costs within the maelstrom regarding healthcare, how
that plays into this [sport head injuries]. And the overall economy. When’s the
last time your heard of a school district that was flush with money?”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“So the notion that the thousand-dollar helmets, for
example, are going to save the day? Even those are not scientifically
validated.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Kids comprise the biggest annual body count for football, as
the overwhelming majority of participants, with more than 1 million playing at 15,000 schools and 3 million in youth leagues. Children and adolescents far lead in
casualties minor to severe, with medical facilities having treated about
920,000 for football injuries in 2007, according to a government report.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Research methods on injuries nationwide vary in construct,
always subject to error for collection limitations, but the data clearly
establish a long-standing public health menace in tackle football, especially
for juveniles.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Researchers at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus,
Ohio, recently concluded football-related injuries among youths increased 27
percent over an 18-year period from 1990.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In the study’s final year, 2007, hospital emergency rooms
treated 346,772 injuries of players ages 6 to 17, including about 97,000
serious orthopedic cases such as bone fractures, joint dislocations and tendon
tears. The ERs handled 8,631 diagnosed concussions, per the report.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Adolescents aged 12 to 17 years old suffered a greater
proportion of the injuries (78 percent),” a release states, “and were more
likely to sustain a concussion or be injured at school when compared to younger
players.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Hospital ERs treated a daily average of almost 2,000
juvenile injuries during football season 2007, and investigators condemned the average of 57 concussions. “The potential long-term consequences of this
type of injury make this an unacceptable rate,” said study co-author Lara
McKenzie, professor of pediatrics at Ohio State University College of Medicine.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Annual concussions are incalculable in close terms, but an
estimated 43,000 to 67,000 occur in high-school football, according to the
National Athletic Trainers’ Association.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Catastrophic injuries involve the central nervous system,
trauma to spinal cord, brain or both. Last year at least 7 American football
players were paralyzed of spinal injuries without complete recovery, 5 at high
schools and 2 at colleges, while at least 4 were brain-injured without full
recovery, all at high schools, according tor the annual report by the National Center for
Catastrophic Sport Injury Research at University of North Carolina.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The center is the American football’s official clearinghouse
of worst-case reports, based at UNC since 1965, with famed neurosurgeon Dr. Cantu serving as medical director since 1987. The researchers’ inexact
method is to gather news accounts of catastrophic football injuries,
assisted by a national network of spotters such as coaches, trainers, doctors
and organizers, with everyone utilizing electronic search and transmission for
collection and reporting.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The center records 1,021 collision deaths in football over
the last 80 years, along with 722 deaths of “indirect” game conditions such as
heatstroke. More than 1,400 of those fatalities since 1931 were players for
schools and community programs like youth leagues.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The data are profound but incomplete, for the Catastrophic
Injury Center cannot account for every case across the vast realm of
tackle football. Prior to Internet explosion of the 1990s, a portion of reports
was assuredly overlooked in the old, limited process of locating and “clipping”
from newspapers, magazines and journals.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Even with e-search, the Injury Center missed at least one
collision fatality in football during 2010—Quadaar White, age 15—for its new
annual report posted on the UNC site, listing only 5 such deaths for the year
as of posting for this analysis.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;White died on Aug. 31 in a Philadelphia hospital after
suffering a neck injury in practice for a youth team comprised of boys 13 to
15, one of five squads in a community program of Upper Darby, Pa.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The smallish White shot low into a collision at practice,
helmet out front for proper football leverage, and his head struck the knee of
another boy. He lay motionless, not breathing by the time paramedics arrived,
and he died seven days later, survived by parents and nine brothers and
sisters.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Tony Jackson, a coach in the Wildcats program, said of
White: “He was fast. He was aggressive. He knew how to tackle.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;A blog promoting lawsuit services addressed the White
tragedy, stating “a Philadelphia personal injury attorney might argue that
there was negligence in the incident, which can be grounds for a personal
lawsuit.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Both amateur and professional athletes can be held civilly
liable for the injuries they inflict on other athletes, even with contact
sports like hockey and football,” the legal ad continued. “With recreational
football teams, the sporting institutions or coaches can also be held liable
for injuries or fatalities of athletes.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Last season 2 football deaths involved rare “second-impact”
brain trauma to the juvenile victims, cases demonstrating the hopelessness of
alleged safety net known as concussion management.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;An 11-year-old boy in Muskego, Wis., Evan Coubal, was
apparently concussed during a youth-league scrimmage on Aug. 25. The injury
wasn’t detected initially, and a week later Coubal struck his head on a contact
sled for football during recess at his school. The second impact “exacerbated
the earlier undiagnosed injury,” Jane Ford-Stewart reported for Community
Newspapers, Inc., and the boy was rushed to a hospital, where he died on Sept.
5.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Nathan Stiles, 17, of Spring Hill, Kan., died of a subdural
hematoma on Oct. 29 after returning to football from a diagnosed concussion
he’d sustained four weeks previous. Although the brain hemorrhage killed the
teen, Dr. Cantu confirms a re-bleed of the initial concussion also occurred,
according to pathology results of his colleagues at Boston University.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Stiles had returned to football after his family doctor’s
interpretation of concussion guidelines cleared the youth as asymptomatic,
ready again for collisions, reports &lt;i&gt;The Kansas City Star&lt;/i&gt;. The youth’s
parents, Ron and Connie Stiles, did not respond to an interview request from
this writer.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
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&lt;/font&gt;*&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Episodic concussion is only one concern of brain trauma for
tackle football, attests a chorus of contemporary medical experts, along with decades of case studies of "dementia pujilistica" in pro boxers.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“We know, from the literature in boxing, the problem is not
necessarily these major concussive events,” Yesalis said. “What can be of
greater damage is the constant hitting short of concussion.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Every blow to the head is dangerous,” neuropathologist Dr.
Bennet Omalu told Congress a year ago. “Repeated concussions and
sub-concussions both have the capacity to cause permanent brain damage.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;A long-held assumption of medicine—holding that
sub-concussive or mild repetitive head impacts of contact sport can cause
neural degeneration—is jelling into expert indictment against tackle football,
particularly upon milestone findings of imaging studies with prep players at
Purdue University.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Purdue researchers employ advanced MRI to detect
sub-concussive brain trauma in active football players, in real time, as the
teens absorb collisions to become cognitively impaired while appearing
asymptomatic.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Diffusion tensor imaging sees “functional” changes of brain
regions caused by impacts milder than concussion, the disruptions and
redirections of liquid through white-matter axon fibers that are stretched and
sheared, thus altering chemical flow among neuron cells comprising the grey
matter at cerebral surface. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The Purdue fMRI research and modern pathology of football
brain damage are helping finally place repetitive head blows above concussion
for medical priority in the sport. “What’s come to the fore is the risk of
repetitive minor hit injuries,” said neurosurgeon H. Hunt Batjer, who co-chairs
the NFL Head, Neck and Spine Committee.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Although many football fans are slow to grasp issue complexities—like most mainstream
media and parents—many doctors aren’t waiting to propose
epic remake of the game, beginning with dramatically reducing contact exposures.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“I don’t see that there’s any way of lowering the incidence
of this without changing the way the game is played,” said neuropathologist Dr.
Ann McKee. “I’m sure it’s going to be incredibly unpopular, but it’s going to
have to be a game that maybe isn’t such a violent sport, that doesn’t have the
thousands of sub-concussive hits that occur in every season.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;L. Syd M. Johnson, postdoctoral fellow in neuro-ethics at
Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, has researched brain trauma and policy in
hockey and tackle football. "Preventing the
kinds of chronic head impacts that are just part of the game would be impossible
without radically altering the game of football,” Johnson stated in email&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;So do juvenile players accumulate enough hits for risk?&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Does the football impacts of school and youth leagues cause brain
damage?&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Both McKee and Omalu have found early stages of &lt;i&gt;chronic traumatic encephalopathy&lt;/i&gt;, or CTE, in the
brain cells of deceased 18-year-olds, former prep football players dead of
other causes, and the alert spreads to other youth sports like boxing. Experts
agree the brain is most vulnerable in development, until the ages of 14 to 16.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“The real question we are going to have to ask is when is it
that the body is too young in order to engage in contact activity,” said Dr.
Byran Wasson, a physician for the U.S. Amateur Boxing Association. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Eric Nauman, engineering professor and co-head of the
imaging and collision studies at Purdue, notes exposures of football contact
for teens far exceed numbers for higher levels of the game. “In the NFL,
players take, on average, 50 blows to the head per week,” Nauman said.
“High-school players may, however, take upwards of 160 blows per week.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Chris Nowinski, concussion author and co-founder of the
Sports Legacy Institute [SLI], advocates reducing football contact. “I don’t
think the jury’s out at all on whether high-school exposure’s enough for CTE,”
he told &lt;i&gt;Boston Magazine&lt;/i&gt;. "We’ve seen it in a kid who’s just 18. We just
haven’t looked at a lot of 40- and 50-year-olds who just played high-school
football. If it starts in your teen years and it just progresses, some
percentage of kids are walking out of high-school football with CTE already in
their brain. And probably the earlier they started, the higher their
risk. If you played from 6 to 16, that’s probably just as bad as someone who
plays in the NFL [and competes from ages] 14 to 24. Maybe worse, because the
young brain is, again, more sensitive.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;College football is prime suspect for brain injury and
long-term disease en masse, and the NFL certainly wants to research a possible
distinction, proposing to study 100 to 150 of its retirees for comparison with
“an age-matched and position-matched study of football player who played NCAA
but not the pros,” Batjer said.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Harry Carson, Hall of Fame linebacker and retirees' advocate,
has his gripes with the NFL and union about head injuries, but he believes
lower levels of football are problematic too. Carson reports being “inundated”
with contacts from former college and prep players experiencing permanent
cognitive problems.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Their emails bring me to a point of understanding that
there are some major problems with concussions sustained in contact sports (but
especially football) that have not been adequately addressed by anyone,” Carson
wrote on his blog.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Nowinski, a former Harvard defensive tackle and WWE
performer, criticizes the NCAA for inaction on brain injuries. “They’ve been
completely absent from this conversation,” he said at a March symposium on
legal questions for sports.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;A total of 16,277 concussions were reported in NCAA football
of 2009, according to &lt;i&gt;The Daily Kansan&lt;/i&gt;, among programs in division
classifications I, II and III. The NCAA is one of three collegiate federations for tackle football in the United States, with an estimated total of 75,000
players competing annually.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Chronic traumatic encephalopathy is confirmed in two cases
involving NCAA football: Mike Borich, a former receiver and coach dead of a
drug overdose, and 21-year-old defensive end Owen Thomas, who committed suicide
last year at the University of Pennsylvania.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Mike Borich played football in college, but did not play
football professionally,” reported the research team of McKee at Boston
University and the SLI. “He died at age 42 after exhibiting a pattern of
erratic behavior throughout much of his adult life. His college playing career
included stints with Snow College and Western Illinois University in the 1980s.
He was known to have approximately 10 concussions during his college football
career with no subsequent concussions or head injuries after college.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Mr. Borich’s brain revealed less pathology overall than
many previous cases of confirmed CTE [from the NFL], but was consistent with
CTE nonetheless.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;McKee group findings in the Thomas case were released to &lt;i&gt;The
New York Times&lt;/i&gt;, which broke the major story last September as brutal NFL
hits and concussions were raising public scrutiny on head injuries in football.
“A brain autopsy of a University of Pennsylvania football player who killed
himself in April [2010] has revealed the same trauma-induced disease found in
more than 20 deceased National Football League players, raising questions of
how young football players may be at risk for the disease,” Alan Schwarz reported
for &lt;i&gt;The Times&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Neuropathologist Dr. Daniel Perl reviewed the BU
results, remarking, “This is a call for a broader range of research into this
problem that extends beyond the heavy duty NFL level of athletics.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Thomas hanged himself in an off-campus apartment as spring
football concluded and he was elected team captain at Penn. Six-foot-two and
240 pounds, Thomas was a highly aggressive football player, relishing head
contact but without sustaining a diagnosed concussion in the sport he played since
age 9.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“It really shows us that you don’t need to have had known or
reported concussions to develop this brain disease,” BU neurologist Robert
Stern told CNN. “It really shows us that those multiple, repetitive
sub-concussive blows to the head that are experienced by so many athletes in
many different sports can bring on the beginnings of this disease.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Thomas “loved to hit people,’ his mother, the Rev. Kathy
Brearley, told &lt;i&gt;The Times&lt;/i&gt;. “He loved to intimidate,” she said. “It’s kind
of sad. We all love football. We all love watching. We all love these great
hits.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;What would be regarded a “proper” hit by promoters of
“safer” football, without direct helmet-on-helmet contact, resulted in concussion and
paralyzing injury on Nov. 20 for Jesse Reising, a Yale senior linebacker and
honors student. Reising was set to become a Marine officer when he collided
with Harvard running back Gino Gordon in the season finale for both teams.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“His helmet ended up hitting my shoulder pad, and my helmet
hit his shoulder pad,” Reising told Jim Fuller of &lt;i&gt;The New Haven Register&lt;/i&gt;.
“That created a motion when my shoulder went downward; my head went to the side
and stretched a lot of nerves in my neck, and that is what caused a lot of the
damage.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;A few months later, Reising still had not regained feeling
and motor function in his deltoid muscle, capping the right shoulder, with
bicep and rotator-cuff muscles also affected. Thus the Marine Corps determined
he was no longer needed.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“My low point when the reality of the situation really sunk
in, how much of a turn my life is going to take, was probably the conversation
I had with my recruiter [dropping] me from officer’s candidate school,” Reising
said. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Reising graduated from Yale on May 23, majoring in economics
and political science with a 3.75 grade-point-average. He recently underwent
surgeries on the nerve damage and will work as a contractor in Afghanistan,
still hopeful of recovering enough to someday serve in the Marines.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Elsewhere, Minnesota, doctors are perplexed in the case of a
former college football player struck by degenerative syndrome. Scott
Wierschem, 51, is a former offensive lineman at St. Cloud State, a NCAA
Division II school, whose progressive condition has forced retirement from his
25-year career in corrections.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Doctors have yet to diagnose the ailment, described as a
neuro-physical disorder, but Wierschem’s speech is slurred and he avoids hard
food for fear of choking. His body core is particularly weakened, so he doesn’t
stand upright long and walks with a cane.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;No one knows if brain or spinal injuries are at root of the problem,
and in the past Wierschem had no diagnosed trauma involving football. “I’d
block low, at the knees,” Wierschem said of college football, speaking recently
with &lt;i&gt;The West Central Tribune&lt;/i&gt;. “I suppose my helmet took a lot of hits.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In Canada, a 2009 brain study of former college football
players who were concussed detected long-term problems, although all 19
subjects led productive, active lives. The former concussed players had a mean
age of 60.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;College football’s heavyweight conferences have taken heat
from Congress for concussion mismanagement, as brain trauma became jock issue du jour in the news. Politicians have summoned officials,
athletes and experts for well-publicized hearings of head injuries in multiple
sports, and lawmakers ripped the NCAA.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Naturally, the NCAA responded with revised policy on
so-called mild traumatic brain injury, new concussion guidelines for member
institutions that include requiring removal of a symptomatic athlete from
competition until evaluation and clearance by a specialist. In addition, all
athletes must sign a pledge to self-report “their injuries and illnesses to the
institutional medical staff, including signs and symptoms of concussion,”
states an NCAA release.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The measures lack punitive teeth, since no association bylaw
was enacted, and offer minimal protection to athletes—reflecting all policy and
state law yet enacted for head injuries in sport.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;And enforcing consistency of standards among universities, such as confirming a staffs of qualified medical personnel for brain injury
and management, is virtually impossible on part of the NCAA.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Unsurprisingly, concussion controversy marked the collegiate
year in men’s and women’s sports. At the University of Missouri, medical staff
came under question for quickly returning head-injured basketball stars to
action, male and female.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Concussion management and assessment is not a perfect
science by any means,” Dr. Chris Farmer, MU athletics physician, told &lt;i&gt;The
Columbia Daily Tribune&lt;/i&gt;. “It is a mix of subjective data, objective data and
professional judgment.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Authorities of brain trauma like Dr. Omalu and Dr.
Lester Mayers, director of sports medicine at Pace University, recommend
concussed athletes be minimally sidelined from one to three months, depending
on age and diagnostic tools. They contend recovery of brain trauma
should begin with strict isolation, meaning no physical or mental
stimulation—including no “concussion testing”—for several days if not weeks. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;About 85 percent of concussed football players of all ages
currently return to contact within two weeks. Computerized testing like ImPACT,
panned by independent reviewers as invalid for years, usually begins for the
athlete within 48 hours of injury. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The NCAA recommends “the return-to-play progression should
occur in a step-wise fashion,” but the association provides no time frame and points to expert disagreement over recovery, stating: “How quickly [an
athlete] moves through this progression remains controversial.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Matt Chaney is a writer, editor, teacher and restaurant
worker living in Missouri, USA. Email him at&lt;/i&gt; &lt;a href="mailto:mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com"&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/a&gt;.
&lt;i&gt;For more information, including about his 2009 book,&lt;/i&gt; Spiral of Denial:
Muscle Doping in American Football, &lt;i&gt;visit the homepage at &lt;/i&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.fourwallspublishing.com/"&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 14px; "&gt;References&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Alessi, A. (2010, December 17). Telephone interview with
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Bachman, R. (2011, February 12). Concussions, an injury
rising among teen athletes, more profound and enduring than previously known.
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Bauer, L. (2011, May 15). To family, Nathan Stiles’ death
was part of God’s plan. Kansas City Star.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Benson, R.R. (2010, January 4). Testimony of Randall R.
Benson, M.D., assistant professor of neurology, Wayne State University. In
Committee on The Judiciary, U.S. House of Representatives, (2009, October 28,
&amp;amp; 2010, January 4). Legal issues relating to football head injuries, Part I
&amp;amp; II, (Serial No. 111-82). Washington, DC: Committee on The Judiciary.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Benson, R.R., Meda, S.A., Vasudevan, Z.K, Govindarajan,
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Benson, R.R., Gattu, R., Zhifeng, K., Haacke, E.M. (2010,
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Blount, R. (2011, April 13). Concussion symptoms hard to
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Blumbergs, P.C., Scott, G., Manavis, J., Wainwright, H.,
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Boxing Brain. (1973, November 24). Boxing and the brain.
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Brewin, B. (2011, March 16). Battlefield brain-injury
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Breen, P. (2010, October 4). High school pupil suffers
spinal injury on football pitch. &lt;a href="http://www.seriousinjurylaw.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.seriousinjurylaw.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Briggs, D. (2011, February 27). No messing with the head at
MU. Columbia Daily Tribune.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Brix, S. (2011, January 21). Local schools implement
concussion testing programs to ensure safety of student athletes. North Shore
Sun.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Branch, A. (2010, April 1). Tarleton football player died of
brain injury, ME rules. Ft. Worth Star-Telegram.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Broglio, S.P., Macciocchi, S.N., Ferrara, M.S. (2007, June).
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Broglio, S.P., Puetz, T.W. (2008, November 1). The effect of
sport concussion on neurocognitive function, self-report symptoms and postural
control: A meta-analysis. Sports Medicine, 38(1).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Bryant, H. (2010, October 27). The risky business of
football’s future. ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Byers, B., &amp;amp; Self, J. (2010, August 14). S.C. teen dies
after football scrimmage. Rock Hill Herald.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Buckner, C. (2010, October 7). McLouth receiver loses part
of his leg. Kansas City Star, p. B7.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Cantu, R. (2010, December 21). Telephone interview with
author.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Carpenter, B. (2011, March 18). Study finds youth boxing
injuries on the rise. &lt;a href="http://www.the33tv.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.the33tv.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Carpenter, L. (2007, April 25). ‘Brain chaser’ tackles
effects of NFL hits. Washington Post.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Carson, H. (2010, February 23). It’s becoming clearer to
me…. . &lt;a href="http://www.harrycarson.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.harrycarson.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Chaney, M. (2001). Sports writers, American football, and
anti-sociological bias toward anabolic drug use in the sport. Warrensburg, MO:
Graduate School of Communication, Central Missouri State University.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Chaney, M. (2009). Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in
American Football. Warrensburg, MO: Four Walls Publishing.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Cheers, I.M. (2010, October 26). Head injuries raise
questions about safety of football. PBS NewsHour Extra.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Cleary, L. (2011, January 26). Concussions remain a gray
area. &lt;a href="http://www.nbcwashington.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.nbcwashington.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Clover, J., &amp;amp; Wall, J. (2010, January). Return-to-play
criteria following sports injury. Clinics in Sports Medicine, 29(1).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;College Coaches. (2010, October 29). College coaches: Don’t
blame us for helmet hits. Sports Illustrated.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Collins, M.W., Lovell, M.R., McKeag, D.B. (1999). Current
issues in managing sports-related concussion. Journal of The American Medical
Association, 282(24).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Colombo, M. (2010, September 16). JSPS insurers to pay Max
Gilpin’s parents $1.75 million settlement. WHAS.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Committee on The Judiciary, U.S. House of Representatives,
(2009, October 28, &amp;amp; 2010, January 4). Legal issues relating to football
head injuries, Part I &amp;amp; II, (Serial No. 111-82). Washington, DC: Committee
on The Judiciary.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Comper, P., Hutchison, M., Magrys, S., Mainwaring, L., &amp;amp;
Richards, D. (2010, October). Evaluating the methodological quality of sports
neuropsychology concussion research: A systemic review. Brain Injury, 24(11).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Concussion Tests. (2011, March 6). Panel suggests concussion
tests for Butte players. &lt;a href="http://www.ktvq.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.ktvq.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Conferences Criticized. (2010, February 2). Conferences
criticized over concussion policies. The Associated Press.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Cronin, T. (2011, May 16). Doctor: Football must change
rules to protect players. Chicago Sun-Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Death Lawsuit. (2010, February). Family of late Chapel Hill
football player files wrongful death lawsuit. Chapel Hill Herald-Sun.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Deford, F. (2010, October 13). Schools forfeit games,
putting safety above football. NPR.org.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;DeKosky, S.T., Ikonomovic, M.D., &amp;amp; Gandy, S. (2010,
September 30). Traumatic brain injury—Football, warfare, and long-term effects.&lt;font color="#666666"&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Doherty, J. (2010, October 18). Concussion test tests
patient’s patience. &lt;a href="http://www.nwitimes.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.nwitimes.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Duff, M. (2009, July 14). Management of sports-related
concussion in children and adolescents. ASHA Leader.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Echemendia, R.J., Herring, S., &amp;amp; Bailes, J. (2009).
British Journal of Sports Medicine, 43.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Eckner, J.T., Kutcher, J.S. (2010, Jan-Feb). Concussion
symptom scales and sideline assessment tools: A critical literature update.
Current Sports Medicine Reports, 9(1).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Ehrlich, C. (2010, November 12). A relentless opponent
stalks the locker room. New York Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Eliminate Football. (2009, November 25). Superintendent’s
decision to eliminate football stands. &lt;a href="http://www.indychannel.com."&gt;www.indychannel.com.&lt;/a&gt; &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Ely, D. (2010, November 23). Schools seek ways to protect
athletes. ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Emmons, M. (2010, August 21). Concussions among high school
football players a major concern. San Jose Mercury News.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Epstein, D. (2011, November 1). The damage done: While
concussive hits dominate the debate, a groundbreaking new study suggests that
minor blows—and there can be hundreds each game—are just as traumatic. Sports
Illustrated.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Epstein, D. (2011, April 13). Unique study explores
cumulative effect of hits in high school football. Sports Illustrated.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Evan, F. (2010, November 1). Early warning: Even at PeeWee
level, coaches struggle to balance safety concerns with teaching toughness.
Sports Illustrated.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fargen, J. (2010, September 26). Schools face high price of
keeping athletes safe. Boston Herald.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Finder, C. (2011, January 2). Former football player’s
concussion has altered his life. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fishman, L. (2010, September 7). Teen dies after football injury.
philadelphiapersonalinjuryblog.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fitz, G. (2011, April 3). ImPACT tests coming to a high
school near you. Nashua Telegraph.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Ford-Stewart, J. (2010, October 11). Community helps family
deal with boy’s death. &lt;a href="http://www.mymuskegonow.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.mymuskegonow.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fujita, S. (2011, January 26). Telephone interview with
author.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fuller, J. (2011, February 12). One hit changed everything
for Jesse Reising. New Haven Register.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fuller, J. (2011, May 22). Yale’s Jesse Reising still making
big plans. New Haven Register.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Galvan, K. (2010, November 18). Mom says school handled
son’s injury the wrong way. &lt;a href="http://www.myfoxhouston.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.myfoxhouston.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Gavett, B.E., Stern, R.A., &amp;amp; McKee, A.C. (2011,
January). Chronic traumatic Encephalopathy: A potential late effect of
sport-related concussive and subconcussive head trauma. Clinics in Sports
Medicine, 30(1).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Gholson, N. (2010, March 29). Former Rider player dies as
result of practice accident. Times Record News.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Goodell Announces. (2009, November). Goodell announces
latest developments relating to concussion prevention and treatment. NFL.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Goodell Talks. (2010, October 23). Goodell talks about big
hits. Scout.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Gray, A. (2010, November 1). A football player goes down,
unconscious: Where’s the ambulance? Virgin Islands Daily News.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Green, R. (2010, February 2). High-school athletes need
legal protection from concussions. Hartford Courant.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Gregory, S. (2010, February 8). Problem with football: Our
favorite sport is too dangerous: How to make it safer. Time.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Grindel, S.H., Lovell, M.R., &amp;amp; Collins, M.W. (2001,
July). The assessment of sport-related concussion: The evidence behind
neuropsychological testing and management. Clinical Journal of Sports Medicine,
11(3).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Guskiewicz, K. (2011, January 8). Telephone interview with
author.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Guskiewicz, K.M., McCrea, M., Marshall, S.W., Cantu, R.C.,
Randolph, C., Barr, W., Onate, J.A., &amp;amp; Kelly, J.P. (2003). The NCAA
concussion study: Cumulative effects associated with recurrent concussion in
collegiate football players. Journal of The American Medical Association,
290(19).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Habib, H. (2010, October 23). Concussion Q&amp;amp;A for
parents: Should I let my child play football? Palm Beach Post.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Hack, D. (2006, December 14). Former Steeler’s family wins
disability ruling. New York Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Halchin, L.E. (2008, April 8). Former NFL players: Disabilities,
benefits, and related issues. Washington, D.C.: Government and Finance
Division.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Hamilton, J. (2011, February 2). Doctors throw flags on high
school concussions. &lt;a href="http://www.npr.org.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.npr.org.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Hoag, C. (2010, November 1). Will they play again next year?
Do the penalties of playing football as a kid outweigh the rewards? Mokena
Patch.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Hobson, K. (2010, September 24). How worried should parents
be about concussions in young athletes? blogs.wsj.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Hobson, M. (2010, October 27). NFL looking to avoid possible
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&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Hruby, P. (2010, October 22). Future shock: The death of
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Sports Illustrated, p. 17.&lt;/p&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>Research of NFL Brain Trauma Sputters Along</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/06/23/research-for-nfl-brain-trauma-sputters-along.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2011-06-23:7ab8523e-72df-4b3c-a601-5c75b46c9f52</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="News Analysis" />
		<updated>2011-06-23T13:18:00Z</updated>
		<published>2011-06-23T13:18:00Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;&lt;FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 16px" class=Apple-style-span&gt;&lt;B&gt;Epidemiologic Study Nowhere in Sight for Afflicted Players&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;&lt;B&gt;By Matt Chaney&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Posted Thursday, June 23, 2011&amp;nbsp;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;&lt;?xml:namespace prefix = o /&gt;&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;&lt;I&gt;This is Part 4 of an analysis series titled &lt;/I&gt;Brain Trauma Dictates Epic Football Reform, &lt;I&gt;which will culminate with independent recommendations for steps imperative to the blood sport’s survival at public schools, colleges, and likely the professional level.&lt;/I&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;&lt;!--RADEDITORSAVEDCOMMENT[if !supportEmptyParas]--&gt;These days the NFL talks good game about addressing and managing brain injury in players, for its official feeds to pliant popular press. Meanwhile, the league’s historical, ongoing actions and low-profile rhetoric tell the subtle, same old truth.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The NFL still doesn’t want to know much about brain trauma and lasting damage, especially among living players, in real time.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;League and union officials claim 17 years of research into cerebral trauma and degeneration, but questions of longstanding urgency remain unaddressed, particularly for risk and outcome in living players.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Information leading to or confirming system culpability for brain damage in individuals is somehow avoided, as always. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;By the 1990s, NFL management and union had heard reports of emotional duress and cognitive impairment among retirees, including the case of full-blown dementia in former linebacker Dale Meinert, confined to a nursing home in his 50s. But no scientific evidence yet linked brain damage to tackle football, even at pro level.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Professional boxing was identified as culprit though. Medical literature tied that blood sport to cognitive decline in athletes since 1928, for repetitive head impacts, and thus cast suspicion upon tackle football, the modern, head-ramming pro game—including in view of some NFL doctors.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“Think about boxing,” Bills team physician Richard Weiss said in 1992, as Jets All-Pro receiver Al Toon retired following his ninth diagnosed concussion in eight NFL seasons. “Suffering a large number of concussions over a period of years more than likely leaves some permanent residue.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The NFL established a concussion committee and research arm in 1994, and soon the issue took spotlight through head injuries of marquee talents Troy Aikman and Steve Young, among star quarterbacks sidelined by shattering hits.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The boxing analogy came up again, conjured this time by Dr. Joseph Waeckerle, a Chiefs physician who served on the NFL concussion committee. Chronic brain trauma “becomes cumulative,” Waeckerle said. “A great example would be a boxer. That may occur to other professional athletes who suffer many concussive syndromes.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Independent researchers followed the boxing trail of brain damage right to pro football, cases of NFL retirees.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Esteemed neurologist Dr. Barry Jordan, authority on boxing trauma, co-authored a 2000 study that observed a minimum “two different mechanisms may contribute to the development of chronic cognitive dysfunction in [tackle] football players,” episodic concussion &lt;I&gt;and&lt;/I&gt; thousands of asymptomatic traumas of lesser impacts over time. The report, published in &lt;I&gt;Neurosurgery&lt;/I&gt;, continued:&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“First, cognitive impairment secondary to concussion may be cumulative. Football players occasionally experience concussive events through typical contact sport collisions, i.e., head-to-head, head-to-body, head-to-ground, and head-to-goal post collisions. Second, football players may experience sub-concussive events through these same collisions during play and practice/training sessions. For professional boxers, CTBI [chronic traumatic brain injury] has been associated more strongly with career length than with the number of knockouts and concussions, suggesting that sub-concussive blows are an important primary environmental mechanism of neurological dysfunction.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Another student of brain trauma, neuropathologist Dr. Bennet Omalu, had consumed the extensive library of CTBI cases in pro boxers, prepping him for a milestone football discovery in 2002: pathological evidence of brain damage in a deceased NFL player.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Omalu, a then-unknown deputy medical examiner in Pittsburgh, anticipated and found brain disease of repetitive impacts at cellular level during full autopsy of Steelers legend Mike Webster, a Hall of Fame center dead of cardiac arrest at age 50. Omalu named the football condition &lt;I&gt;chronic traumatic encephalopathy&lt;/I&gt;, or CTE.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Omalu’s research group followed with more confirmations of CTE in deceased NFL players, as did a separate team at Boston University, under direction of neuropathologist Dr. Ann McKee.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;By 2010 CTE was confirmed in more than a dozen NFL players examined postmortem by the Omalu and McKee teams, for case studies endorsed throughout medicine. Yet NFL loyalist experts doggedly disputed the evidence, as they had since the Omalu report on Webster published five years before.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Dr. Waeckerle of the NFL, who today serves on brain-injury committees for both the league and union, has labeled the CTE cases “anecdotal” and “marginally good” science.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Waeckerle, a renowned authority in emergency trauma who endured harsh criticism as brain researcher for the NFL—as co-author of discredited league studies involving controversial doctors Joseph Maroon, Elliot Pellman and Ira Casson—basically dismisses pathology of neural disease the vast majority of experts accept as convincingly linked to collision football.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Waeckerle instead promotes highly speculative theory for CTE in NFL players, like abuse of anabolic steroids or street drugs. He says a dire research question is whether some athletes are genetically predisposed for having their brains bashed-in by football contact. And he doesn’t point to CTBI in boxing anymore, for comparison to the NFL problem.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Waeckerle even had Webster under watch during the final season of the player’s 17-year pro career, 1990 with the Chiefs, when the battered lineman may have already begun cognitive decline, according to family members, doctors and other witnesses.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;In a November profile of Waeckerle published by &lt;I&gt;The Pitch&lt;/I&gt; weekly of Kansas City, writer David Martin reported: “Waeckerle isn’t ready to say football is killing guys like Mike Webster. Maybe it’s genetics. Maybe it’s steroids. Maybe it’s a combination of things. ‘We don’t know if there’s a cause and effect yet,’ he says. ‘We’re studying it.’ ”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Regarding cerebral risk and injury outcome of pro football, Waeckerle has estimated conclusions of NFL research are still a decade away, some possibly long as 30 years.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;*&lt;FONT style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/FONT&gt;*&lt;FONT style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/FONT&gt;*&lt;FONT style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/FONT&gt;*&lt;FONT style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/FONT&gt;*&lt;FONT style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/FONT&gt;*&lt;FONT style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/FONT&gt;*&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Nate Jackson is an ex-pro football player, dashing and single at 32, a talented writer with his first book contract—and he detects no cognitive alarms, thank you, after playing seven seasons in the vicious NFL.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Jackson feels fine mentally and physically, happy and enthused for a new craft and future beyond football. But he does contemplate the possibility of brain damage, like practically every peer of the contemporary NFL, players past and present.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“I don’t think about it too much. I try not to worry much about it,” said Jackson, former wide receiver and tight end, during a telephone interview. “I don’t think there’s much I can do about it at this point. I don’t think I was a head-banger for long enough, you know…” He paused, added, “But I don’t know. I don’t know.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Lasting and typically progressive cognitive impairment is obvious in many NFL retirees and documented in several, ailments that begin for some as young as Jackson and spread wider through the older generations.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The mildest cases can be undetectable to lay people, but the known worst include an extraordinary three retirees with deadly ALS that manifested in their 30s, along with early onset dementia in men like John Mackey, Hall of Fame tight end diagnosed at 60.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Sylvia Mackey believes her husband’s condition is because of football, and she has seen the signs in his NFL peers. “Every year, he would go back to the Hall of Fame ceremony, and, every year that I went back, I noticed that more and more players—and these were Hall of Fame guys—had dementia,” she said on &lt;I&gt;PBS NewsHour&lt;/I&gt; in 2009. “And I thought, there’s something wrong with this picture. It’s just too much of a common thread right here in this small group.” Sylvia Mackey estimated “plenty” of retired players suffer dementia.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Critics of autopsy-based NFL research contend large-scale epidemiological study of living players is urgently needed, valid random clinical trial conducted by a multidisciplinary team of experts and preferably free from influence by the likely funding sources of football. Large control groups must be assembled and quickly, among challenges, say observers such as epidemiologist Charles E. Yesalis, ScD, professor emeritus of Penn State University.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“There are four or five epidemiologic methods to apply the study to any disease state, prospective or retrospective,” said Yesalis, a foremost researcher of drug use by athletes. “It would obviously be good to have a top epidemiologist involved, and I don’t think I’m saying that in a self-serving manner because I’m retired and I have no interest in doing any work.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“Part of the problem for investigators, other than your clinical study of acute effects, is you get into money need and who’s going to fund it?”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;No party among the NFL, the NFLPA and NCAA has yet to support such ambitious, costly research while the government has expressed no interest, and other potential sponsors aren’t forthcoming at moment.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Smaller studies are underway, nevertheless, and findings and expert opinion increasingly suggest epidemic parameters for cognitive impairment in players of pro football, if not those of collegiate, school and youth levels.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The NFL sphere includes at least 13,000 to 16,000 living retirees, and surveys since the 1980s show excessive rates of diagnosis for depression and Alzheimer’s disease in the population. Medical evaluation of individuals and small groups finds brain disorders, and anecdotal information accumulates as dozens of retirees disclose experiences and concerns in public, such as during news interviews and testimony at congressional hearings.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Neuropsychologist Robert Stern, co-director of the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy at Boston University, recently discussed the condition with NFL retirees in California. “It’s a progressive neurodegenerative disease,” Stern told them. “It’s a disease that gets started early in life and gets worse with repeated blows to the head.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Stern’s presentation sobered former NFL linebacker Charles Anthony. “This was a real awakening and educational meeting that some of my friends probably should have come to,” Anthony told &lt;I&gt;The San Mateo County Times&lt;/I&gt;. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;With the recent necropsy results of former safety Dave Duerson, dead at 50 as one of several NFL suicides in recent years, Boston researchers have found CTE in 14 of 15 players examined postmortem. More than a hundred living players have pledged donation to this “NFL brain bank” and are participating in longitudinal cognitive assessment until death, but the hopeful study will require many years of building to ever produce meaningful data on scope and consequences of problem. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;No epidemiological observations can be made of case studies limited by participant numbers and biases, for constituting a representative sample of the NFL population or any in football.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The NFL-funded Sports Legacy Institute at BU and its research rival Brain Injury Research Institute, of West Virginia University, both solicit brain donors and families without random selection while the player parties typically have their agenda.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“There’s a tremendous selection bias, so you can’t make any conclusions about the incidence or prevalence of disease,” Dr. McKee of BU and the SLI recently told &lt;I&gt;The New York &lt;/I&gt;Times, discussing pathology for CTE to date.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“A family is much more likely to donate the brain of a loved one if they have even the smallest suspicion that something was wrong,” McKee said. “If they were perfectly confident that the [player was] functioning 100 percent normally, they’re less likely to go through the process.” &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Regardless of paltry attempt at assessing risk and outcome thus far, authoritative consensus around tackle football—or common sense—sees brain trauma as widespread in the collision sport and irremovable, leaving lasting damage in countless players of multiple levels. McKee’s team has found early-stage CTE in two players who were 18 and 21 at their deaths. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“I am scared that [CTE] can be more common than we thought,” Stern said of the NFL, where he expects “many more” cases to emerge.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Dr. Omalu detects impairment signs in virtually every NFL retiree he encounters. “But what happens is that these players are usually ashamed to acknowledge that they are having problems, but when you interact with them, when you engage them, you would find out there is something going on,” Omalu said.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Dr. Daniel Amen, the popular psychiatrist and CEO of Amen Clinics, Inc., says every person is at risk, any age, upon merely participating in organized football with helmets and pads. During a PBS telecast of his show, &lt;I&gt;The Amen Solution&lt;/I&gt;, the doctor declared that “if you played football, you probably have some sort of brain damage.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Amen’s independent research group recently found high rates of impairment in 100 NFL players both active and retired, for its study based on SPECT imaging.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;While some experts question efficacy of SPECT for brain analysis, the Boston group likewise employs the imaging in research, and Amen makes believers of retirees he diagnoses with radiology and treats with his supplements.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Count Terry Bradshaw as a faithful patient, the Hall of Fame quarterback and TV-film personality who spent a week at the Amen Clinic and follows the doctor’s prescriptions for brain therapy, like online puzzles and supplements.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Bradshaw made headlines by revealing his deteriorating cognitive condition in April. While a former star quarterbacking peer of Bradshaw is rumored to suffer disorder privately, the Steelers great and NFL analyst discussed his brain damage in a first-person post on the Fox Sports Website.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“Why did I go public?” Bradshaw wrote in his conversational style. “Well, I thought it would be good for a lot of players for this to get out, for me to tell my story because I was a quarterback. I know how much my late center Mike Webster suffered. I can only imagine what a lot of defensive players from my era are going through.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Bradshaw frankly admitted a “horrible concentration problem for a while now” that affects him at work. “Toward the end of last season on the Fox pregame show, maybe the last six weeks, I really started to forget things.” Estimating number of his own head injuries as a player, Bradshaw recalled “numerous” that included six diagnosed concussions.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Working now at 62, Bradshaw’s memory loss makes him “jittery at times,” he attested. “It was driving me crazy [last season] that I couldn’t remember something that I studied the night before. All it did was trigger my anxiety and all of sudden everything would snowball on me. I know I have depression and it’s a horrible disease. This memory loss just made my depression worse.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Openness about personal brain issues is a modern trend among former players, and many NFL retirees wield it against owners and union in the terrible dispute over disability and pension.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;But former star linebacker Harry Carson went public in the mid-1990s, a few years after his diagnosis for “post-concussion syndrome” and as a lone wolf attacking the football culture. Even fellow retirees were skeptical, for their ignorance and denial of brain trauma caused by the sport.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“One problem is that a lot of players who suffer from it have no clue what they’re dealing with,” Carson told &lt;I&gt;Sports Illustrated&lt;/I&gt; in 2001. “I’ve talked to players I’ve played with and against. Once I went public with this concussion thing, they were looking at me as being sort of brain-damaged, drooling and all this stuff. But it is an injury just like one to your knee or hip.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Carson said then he suffered of severe headaches, inattentiveness, short-term memory loss and vision problems. He figured he sustained a minimum 15 concussions over his 13 seasons in the NFL, all with the Giants.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The year following this &lt;I&gt;SI&lt;/I&gt; interview, Carson, a successful businessman, attended the funeral of a former foe he admired, Webster, and he further considered the possible depths for cerebral destruction in a football player. Later, Carson followed progression of the landmark lawsuit by Webster family members, who won retroactive payments plus interest from the Bert Bert/Pete Rozelle Retirement and Disability Plan.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Then Carson used his platform as Hall of Fame inductee to speak out at Canton in 2006. Beginning his unprepared enshrinement speech, Carson graciously remarked he could not appreciate the honor “until I get one or two things off of my chest.” Pointedly addressing league and union officials, Carson said, “You got to look out for [retirees]. If we made the league what it is, you have to take better care of your own.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Carson has continued to learn about brain injury in football, and speak, write on his blog. The public honesty about his own problems has encouraged hundreds of former players to contact him, from all levels of the game.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“Every player who ever played football understands the physical risk that they take when they play,” Carson, 57, recently told &lt;I&gt;The Bergen Record&lt;/I&gt;. “Now if you asked me a long time ago, knowing what I know now, I probably would analyze the physical risks and [still have] played. Now if you told me [then] what the neurological risks were? I probably would have to give you a much different answer.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“I can see those who played the game prior to me and the issues they’re going through. And those are serious neurological issues like dementia, Alzheimer’s, ALS. I’m probably headed in that same direction.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, ALS or “Lou Gehrig’s Disease,” is on the worry radar of NFL players young and old. A 2010 study headed by McKee linked CTE with the motor neuron disease in deceased retirees and a boxer, and recent news heightens concern, reports that two former NFL players have been diagnosed with ALS, totaling three known cases among living retirees.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The Boston group’s report defines ALS as “a fatal progressive degeneration of motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord,” and researchers generally agree the disease manifests through nature and nurture, “a complex interaction between multiple genetic and environmental risk factors.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;For many researchers, the prime suspected impetus is a subject’s history of impacts to the head and spine, such as blows sustained in contact sports like tackle football and soccer. On review of literature, McKee et al stated that “trauma to the [central nervous system] emerges as one of the strongest and most consistent contenders for initiating the molecular cascades that result in ALS, as well as other neurodegenerative processes, such as Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;McKee found and associated CTE with the diagnosed ALS that killed two former NFL linebackers, Wally Hilgenberg, who died at 66, and Eric Scoggins, dead at 49. Examining the brains and spinal cords, McKee identified diffuse toxic tauopathy in distinct patterns and abnormal concentrations of the DNA-binding protein known as TDP-43, which could result of chemical cascades caused by repetitive blows.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The study was published in &lt;I&gt;Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology&lt;/I&gt;, and McKee proposed her group had discovered a new syndrome they named &lt;I&gt;chronic traumatic encephalomyelopathy&lt;/I&gt;, or CTEM.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;McKee said, “The significance of this finding is that not all ALS-like disease attacks out of the blue—sometimes it’s because of our choices in life.” The Boston researchers suggested Lou Gehrig might have died of CTEM generated by multiple concussions he sustained in tackle football, as a youth and college player, rather than of ALS, his namesake disease.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The study was highlighted in popular press while garnering lukewarm response from some medical experts. Critics cited the small number of cases in the study and the method of autopsy analysis that limited understanding for early stages of neural degeneration in the subjects.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“The researchers are drawing inferences that may not be true,” Dr. Carmel Armon, neurology professor at Tufts University, told &lt;I&gt;Neurology Today&lt;/I&gt;. Armon noted both CTE and ALS typically involve accumulation of TDP-43, but he was unconvinced that meant one condition leads to the other.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;A high incidence of ALS diagnosis among NFL retirees is hardly disputed, however, even if experts may not agree on exact rate. Since the 1980s, five former pro football players are known to have died following diagnosis, including the historic cluster of three victims from the 1964 San Francisco 49ers: quarterback Bob Waters, running back Gary Lewis, and linebacker Matt Hazeltine.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Today, three NFL retirees live with ALS diagnosis: former running backs Steve Smith and Kevin Turner, ages 46 and 41, respectively, and a 33-year-old whose identity remains undisclosed.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“Playing NFL football was a dream come true,” Turner said last year, as he volunteered for research in Boston. “I just never thought in 20 years I would be fighting for my life.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;An NFL player is eight times more likely for ALS diagnosis than the average American, Boston researchers calculate. The disease often begins with motor loss of shoulders and arms before spreading to other muscle groups. In the end, speaking, swallowing and voluntary breathing become laborious then lost; Smith, for example, was diagnosed in 2002 and remains alive through a ventilator.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“ALS or CTEM may be the most difficult diseases in existence to watch,” McKee said. “They are slow, agonizing deteriorations that are witnessed helplessly by loved ones.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;All told, cognitive misfire strikes many if not most NFL retirees, and maddening mysteries will endure as questions rise for more players and families.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;But sound expert assumption gains traction on good evidence, like threat of sub-concussive blows in football. Medical experts of multiple specialties increasingly concur that repetitive head impacts are most harmful, not concussions, and rationale follows that risk of brain damage rises in commiserate with a player’s exposures over time, especially on the line.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;The concept unnerves many college players past and present, and it can haunt pro players and retirees, but it does provide direction amid brain trauma’s plethora of uncertainty.&lt;/P&gt;
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&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Nate Jackson doesn’t feel clouded by cerebral impairment, but the budding author wonders what’s ahead because of his NFL past and entire football career.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Jackson made the Denver game roster in 2003 as an undrafted free agent from Menlo College, where he dominated Division III competition as a 6-foot-3 wide receiver. Early on the Broncos moved Jackson to tight end and he beefed up a few pounds to 235, yet about 30 short of good heft for the position.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Jackson battled for five seasons in the NFL trenches, taking on gigantic D-linemen and linebackers, drilling everybody with his facemask, and getting blasted in return. That period in pro football was Jackson’s most violent on the gridiron, obviously.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“As soon as I became a tight end, my whole football experience changed,” Jackson said. “Then it was all about, for me, sticking my head in there and banging away at these guys. It was kind of a normal experience to have [trauma symptoms like] a little headache or be a little woozy. And it was just something I dealt with, part of my reality.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Jackson believes he had one concussion in the NFL, undiagnosed, and none in college or high school. He sustained thousands of sub-concussive or recurring blows, from youth to manhood, but many other players of the league are longer for heavy combat. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“I’m sure there’s a lot of guys out there, who did it for 15 or 20 years, who are probably experiencing [impairment] symptoms,” Jackson said. “But I don’t know how to quantify it. We don’t know enough. We’re all just kind of guinea pigs, this generation of football that gets more and more intense every year, with bigger, faster and stronger players every year. And so these impacts are more intense every year.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“We’re probably not going to really know for another 20, 30, 40 years. I hope that I’m going to be OK. I think I will. I feel like I have all my wits about me. I don’t feel demented and I don’t feel depressed or anything like that. So I think I escaped without those symptoms.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“But…,” Jackson added, “you never know.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Experts concur that answers won’t be available anytime soon for living players like Jackson.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“There’s so many things that you could study, and chances are virtually none of them has been done,” said epidemiologist Yesalis, during a recent telephone interview. “One thing you could do is a prospective study. You could take NFL retirees versus people who did not play college or professional football, and look at the difference in incidence of disease states that may be the result of multiple concussions, or multiple chronic brain traumas.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;A similar study frame reportedly is underway at University of North Carolina, funded by the NFL, but control groups are small.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Legit epidemiologic studies are pricey and complicated, noted Yesalis, who co-directed the first national research of steroid use among teens. “Who’s going to pay for that study of NFL players or former players? Number one, it’s unlikely the NFL will. It’s unlikely the NCAA will.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Yesalis says government funding for vital research is possible. “But keep in mind how protracted the process is for them—meaning the feds, who are trying to cut back expenditures because of the horrible financial situation of the country—to identify [football brain trauma] as a problem, to getting proposals submitted, to funding them, to doing the research and publishing it.”&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;“You’ve got a five-year time span there, at least.”&amp;nbsp;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;&lt;I&gt;Matt Chaney is a writer, editor, teacher and restaurant worker living in Missouri, USA. Email him at &lt;/I&gt;&lt;A href="mailto:mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com"&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/A&gt;. &lt;I&gt;For more information, including about his 2009 book, &lt;/I&gt;Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football,&lt;I&gt; visit the homepage at&lt;/I&gt; &lt;A href="http://www.fourwallspublishing.com/"&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/A&gt;.&lt;/P&gt;
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&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Robinson, A. (2002, September 24). Steelers’ Hall of Famer Webster dies. The Associated Press.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Schwarz, A. (2007, June 15). Lineman, dead at 36, sheds light on brain injuries. New York Times.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Schwarz, A. (2010, May 24). House panel criticizes new N.F.L. doctors. New York Times.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Schwarz, A. (2010, September 13).&lt;FONT style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/FONT&gt;Suicide reveals signs of a disease seen in the N.F.L. New York Times.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Schwarz, A. (2010, September 22). Despite law, town finds concussion dangers lurk. New York Times.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Schwarz, A. (2011, February 3). Two teams show divide in debate over safety. New York Times.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Schwarz, A. (2011, May 7). The next step for researchers is not finding brain trauma. New York Times.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Screening Limits. (2010, December 3). Football player’s death points to screening limits. The Associated Press.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Shedden, M. (2010, December 28). Concussion concerns are changing football, but it’s still hit and miss. Tampa Tribune.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Sherrington, K. (2011, May 19). Head trauma pushed ex-NFLer’s Shane Dronett over the edge. Dallas Morning News.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Shyr, L. (2011, February). New research suggests that even small hits to the head may lead to brain deterioration over time. So what can be done? National Geographic.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Siegel, A. (2010, December 8). Varied symptoms can result from concussions. Washington Post.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Smith, S. (2011, April 1). Ex-Falcons lineman had brain disease linked to concussions. &lt;A href="http://www.cnn.com.&lt;/p&gt;"&gt;www.cnn.com.&lt;/A&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
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&lt;P class=MsoNormal&gt;Zimmerman, P. (1986, November 10). The agony must end. Sports Illustrated, p. 17.&lt;/P&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>Football Brain Trauma Can Twist Personality, Spur Violence</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/06/16/football-brain-trauma-can-change-personality-spur-violence.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2011-06-16:b5d865b8-4da3-40f5-a22e-f37ca24a3c0d</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="News Analysis" />
		<updated>2011-06-16T20:21:00Z</updated>
		<published>2011-06-16T20:21:00Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;b&gt;By Matt Chaney&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Posted Thursday, June 16, 2011&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;This is Part 3 of an analysis series titled &lt;/i&gt;Brain
Trauma Dictates Epic Football Reform, &lt;i&gt;which will culminate with independent
recommendations for steps imperative to the blood sport’s survival at public
schools, colleges, and likely the professional level.&lt;o:p&gt;&lt;/o:p&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Doctors and medical researchers have long agreed boxing can
cause brain damage in athletes and lead to personality disorders and outbursts,
through repetitive impacts both concussive and sub-concussive.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;A 1973 study on postmortem evidence of 15 ex-pro boxers who
suffered “punch-drunk syndrome” documented their “violent behavior and rage
reaction” through interviews of relatives. Several of the boxers died in
psychiatric wards.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Decades earlier, boxers who became demented and deranged
were known as “slug nutty,” according to a 1928 report by Dr. Harrison
Martland.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Meanwhile, yet today, the NFL and loyalist experts loathe
admitting that tackle football even causes long-term impairment, much less off-field violence by players and chaos for families.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Neuropsychologist Mark R. Lovell, career NFL consultant with
a PhD—and marketer of the critically rebuked ImPACT “concussion testing” pushed
by the league’s media machine—helped author a 2011 review that concludes
“adverse long-term neurocognitive effects of concussive injury have been
demonstrated empirically in &lt;i&gt;professional boxers only&lt;/i&gt;” [italics for
emphasis].&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The NFL’s stalling about brain damage in players is easy to
lampoon, along with its PR measures such as arbitrary fines for helmet hits and
lousy concussion assessments.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;But there is legal logic for NFL absurdity in the issue, say
astute observers, and especially the league’s acting innocent when an active
player or retiree goes berserk.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“This shows that the NFL is frightened about getting sued,”
Dr. Gabe Mirkin, sports medicine pioneer and erstwhile Redskins consultant,
told &lt;i&gt;Washington City Paper&lt;/i&gt;. “Mark my words: The NFL is going to be at
the end of a lawsuit where a guy says they should be paying for this or that
criminal behavior, because some guy got hit in the head too much playing
football, and a jury will be convinced of that.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“And that is a reasonable argument. The brain controls
everything. And there’s accumulating evidence to show that getting hit in the
head can cause anything to change—thought processes, mood, anything. The NFL
has to act like it’s taking action.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;By 2009 the research team of breakthrough pathologist Dr.
Bennet Omalu had found brain damage, &lt;i&gt;chronic traumatic encephalopathy&lt;/i&gt;
[CTE], in four of five deceased NFL players and one professional wrestler.
Elsewhere, Boston University, pathologist Dr. Ann McKee and colleagues
corroborated Omalu et al, finding CTE in deceased NFL players and more athletes
of sports with repetitive head impacts.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Depression and erratic behavior had marked CTE subjects in
latter life, and most studied died in their 30s and 40s. Several committed
suicide, including an NCAA football player at 21, Owen Thomas, and NFL retirees
Terry Long and Andre Waters. Another retiree, 36-year-old Justin Strzelczyk,
drove straight into an oncoming tractor-trailer while fleeing police, dying in
the fiery crash. Chris Benoit, 40, the WWE star whose brain matter was analyzed
by Omalu, infamously killed his wife, son and then himself.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;A 2010 report by the Omalu group, of the Brain Injury
Research Institute at University of West Virginia, is titled “Chronic Traumatic
Encephalopathy, Suicides and Parasuicides in Professional American Athletes:
The Role of the Forensic Pathologist” and published by &lt;i&gt;American Journal of
Forensic Medicine and Pathology&lt;/i&gt;. In reviewing the cases of Long, Waters,
Strzelczyk, Benoit and Mike Webster, an NFL lineman who had attempted taking
his own life, the researchers concluded: “The key risk factors for suicides are
depression and other mental disorders… CTE in our 5 cases may represent a
common risk factor in our 5 cases.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The NFL has bristled at Omalu findings for years, but now
the league claims to advocate real research, and last year commissioner Roger
Goodell committed funding to the McKee team, awarding $1 million to the BU
non-profit Sports Legacy Institute founded by Chris Nowinski, celebrated
speaker, brain-chaser and former Omalu associate who authored a book on
concussion crisis in American football.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Recently the McKee team released findings of CTE in former
NFL star Dave Duerson, who committed suicide on Feb. 17 at age 50, shooting
himself in the chest to preserve the brain for analysis he requested in a final
note.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Dave Duerson had the classic pathology of [CTE] and severe
involvement of all the [brain regions] that affect judgment, inhibition,
impulse, mood control and memory,” McKee said.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;America is grudgingly accepting that playing football may
spur anti-social acts because of brain damage, not stale theory like “ ’roid
rage” resulting of anabolic steroids, which the game always blames on
individuals only, or of the silly assumption that former players cannot handle a simpler existence after glitter life as football star.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Anymore, very few people publicly question a link between
tackle football, CTE and mental issues, and former NFL players are convinced
that terror can ignite.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Andre Waters and Duerson—these deaths aren’t just a coincidence,”
said Eric Dickerson, 50, Hall of Fame running back. “That’s not something young
black men do, stick a gun to our head and kill ourselves.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
&lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
&lt;/font&gt;*&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;American football traditionally managed to distance itself
from players exhibiting behavioral or mental disorder, and a classic NFL case
is Jim Tyrer, early cornerstone lineman for the Chiefs, one of the greatest
offensive tackles in history. Today Tyrer remains shut out of the Pro Football
Hall of Fame, more than 30 years since his tragic end, when the league and
media suddenly wanted to forget him.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In autumn 1980 Tyrer was six years retired from the NFL,
spiraling downward in business and health at age 41, when at dawn on a Monday
morning he rousted his wife with a gunshot into her pillow. He killed Martha
Tyrer on second aim then shot himself with the .38 pistol, completing the
murder-suicide with three of their four children in the home near Kansas City.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The carnage was senseless, outrageous for family and friends.
None could firmly grasp a motive for Tyrer, once a perennial All-Pro and most
respected player in the league. “Something had to snap,” said Len Dawson,
former Chiefs quarterback. “He was such a strong, stable guy. He was a great
family man. Doing something like this is completely contrary to his character.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Book author Michael Oriard, former teammate of Tyrer on the
Chiefs, recounted the shock and mystery in a chapter of his &lt;i&gt;The End of
Autumn&lt;/i&gt;, an unheralded but riveting 1982 account of life in pro football.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The dignified Tyrer had worn suit and tie to work every day,
an unfailing gentlemen toward everyone including unknown rookies and free
agents, the clubhouse lower class from which Oriard emerged. Jim and Martha
Tyrer, sweethearts since high school in Ohio, led player families as religious
souls dedicated to their children and always willing to help others.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Jim Tyrer was the unlikeliest suicide-murderer to those who
knew him,” Oriard wrote. “Among all the Chiefs I played with, he seemed the
most responsible, the most controlled, the most conscientious and stable. He
struck his other associates in football the same way.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Oriard continued: “In the days before the murder-suicide,
Tyrer clearly seemed depressed to those who saw him. [Former teammate] Fred
Arbanas had lined up an opportunity to sell national accounts for the Yellow
Pages, but Tyrer never showed up to take the test. He was a college graduate,
but had been out of school for twenty years. He told Arbanas that he always did
poorly on those tests; he was competing with kids right out of school, barely
older than his daughter. His minister and friend at the Presbyterian church he
attended detected paranoia and arranged psychiatric counseling. [Former
teammate] George Daney saw him on the Wednesday before the fateful Sunday. Jim
was obviously down. He kept asking George how he looked; he was concerned about
the forty pounds he had lost. They talked about football. Jim had continued his
contact with the Chiefs’ organization, buying season tickets, attending Chiefs’
functions. That Sunday he took his eleven-year-old son, Jason, to the game in
Arrowhead Stadium, won 17-16 by the Seattle Seahawks. Someone reported that Jim
stayed afterward, wandering around the empty stadium before he went home. For
the last time.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;‘No one knows what passed through Jim Tyrer’s mind between
the end of the Chiefs’ game and five the next morning…”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The physical massiveness and brutality of Tyrer as feared
lineman did not explain his final act for Oriard. “Jim Tyrer was not a violent
man. And football violence is very different from murder and suicide,” Oriard
wrote. “Jim Tyrer was human, not a character in a soap opera. How can we fully
understand what drove him to do what he did?”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Today, some believe brain damage affected Tyrer,
particularly for his 14 years as pro player that included 180 consecutive
starts at offensive line for the Chiefs.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Standing 6-foot-6, weighing 280 pounds, Tyrer was a &lt;i&gt;Sporting
News&lt;/i&gt; AFL All-League tackle eight consecutive seasons, from 1962 to 1969,
then a two-time AFC All-Pro following the NFL merger. He played in three Super
Bowls and was named a first-teamer on the AFL All-Time Team.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;But voters for the Pro Football Hall of Fame ignore great
offensive tackles, anyway, having inducted only about a dozen from NFL history,
and they’ve literally forgotten the decorated giant who killed his wife and
himself three decades ago at Kansas City.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Tyrer was a finalist for Canton enshrinement in 1981, the Hall’s first election following his deadly rampage, but he wasn’t selected and
hasn’t come close since.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The murder-suicide largely drives pro football’s snub of
Tyrer, according to a family member and several former players interviewed last
year by J.W. Nix, a Washington-based blogger.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Dad belongs there [Hall of Fame], but I am unsure if the
voters will ever put him in,” said Brad Tyrer, the eldest child.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“It is time to wipe the slate clean and induct [Tyrer],”
said Ben Davidson, a Raiders defensive end from 1964 to 1972. “Life goes on.
These types of events happen daily. We are turning him into a Pete Rose by
excluding him, though everyone knows he should be in.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Tyrer was the pioneer of big offensive tackles,” said Elvin
Bethea, Hall of Fame defensive end for the Houston Oilers from 1968 to 1983. “He
was &lt;i&gt;the&lt;/i&gt; preeminent left tackle in all of football. All other blockers in
the NFL were mediocre compared to him.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The possibility of brain damage was a prominent question in
Nix’s many interviews about Tyrer, and the consensus was that he experienced
depression.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Brad Tyrer said, “I felt my dad’s mental state at the end of
his life must have been impaired and that very well could have been as a result
of the trauma his brain experienced during his football career.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Former Broncos defensive end Pete Duranko empathized with
Tyrer, his old opponent, having battled depression himself while working with
other retirees suffering emotional duress. “It creeps up on you,” Duranko said.
“People, especially the [Hall] voters, do not understand mental illness. Jim
was a strong man who did his best to hide his disease. He didn’t want people to
know he was depressed and preferred to try to deal with it himself.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Voices still speak up for Martha Tyrer, too, the certain
victim of tragedy. Her brother, Al Lundstrom, grew up with Jim Tyrer and played
football alongside him at Ohio State.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“Though he [Jim] was depressed about his financial
situation, I am not convinced his depression was brought on by post-concussion
syndrome,” Lundstrom told Nix.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The couple’s youngest child, Stephanie, was 11 at time of
the murder-suicide. “I think about it ever day,” she recalled 24 years later,
during an interview with &lt;i&gt;Kansas City Star&lt;/i&gt;&amp;nbsp;sportswriter Wright
Thompson, who reported the four children grew up to lead productive and
fulfilling lives.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;As an adult, Stephanie Tyrer harbors complex emotions about
her father and deep loss for her mother, who was beautiful, talented,
endearing. “That hurts more than anything,” Stephanie said. “My dad is the
focal point, and my mom is left behind. I miss my mother more, because there
was an anger factor with my dad. My dad traveled a lot, was on the road a lot.
My mom was the one who took us to all our practices and games. The person who
made an important impact on my life was my mom.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The author Oriard remembers Martha and Jim Tyrer and still
wonders what happened. An English professor and former Chiefs lineman, Oriard
follows contemporary reports on brain trauma and suicides of football players,
and he considers whether ramming heads severely injured Tyrer, “but all I can
do is wonder,” Oriard stated recently in email. “Jim was obviously going
through personal and financial problems, but whether he was suffering from the
consequences of too many hits, and that affected his reaction to his problems, we’ll
never know…”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Dr. Omalu recently considered the story of Jim Tyrer and
said, “He may have suffered from CTE.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Permanent brain dysfunction of football cannot be
investigated in the case of Tyrer, unfortunately, but modern research does
connect CTE to the sport, so termed by Omalu during his landmark postmortem
study of NFL retiree Webster in 2002 at Pittsburgh.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Omalu, then a medical examiner for the coroner’s office of
Allegheny County, confirmed in autopsy the Steelers legend died of cardiac
disease at age 50, and the brain of Webster appeared normal, free of damage.
Then Omalu conducted microscopic pathology, examining brain cells of the Hall
of Fame lineman who played 17 seasons in pro football and a quarter-century in the
sport, accumulating tens of thousand hits to head.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“The heart attack cannot explain his life after football,”
Omalu would remark to ABC Television. Most people around Pittsburgh knew of
Webster’s personal downfall in NFL retirement, during his 40s, for media
stories published local and national about his odd behavior, drug dependency,
financial ruin, homelessness and estrangement from family. A teen-age son,
Garrett Webster, told local media his father had suffered diagnosed “brain
injuries from football.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;And so the Nigerian-born Omalu, specializing in
neuropathology and working from medical literature on boxers with “dementia
pugilistica,” found CTE in Webster, the brain damage he anticipated of an
American football player.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Under microscope, brain slides of Webster displayed diseased
“tauopathy,” brown splotching and tinting of cell tissue known as cerebral grey
matter. The formerly clean blue hue of healthy brain cells was discolored as
result of repeated impacts Webster sustained, replaced by a tone of dried blood
with diffuse shapes—“neuritic” threads and “neurofibrillary tangles,” toxic
buildups of tau protein. In Webster’s case, hardened “amyloid plaques” blocked
axon fibers or white matter from transferring neuron impulses. The signs were
much like Alzheimer’s Disease, although CTE produced distinct variances in
tauopathy outlay.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The CTE resulted of untold metabolic cascades during brain
traumas for Webster, volatile chemical reactions for the jellied organ’s
attempts at healing, apparently foiled by relentless pounding of football,
especially at line of scrimmage. Webster was never diagnosed for a concussion
in his NFL career.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Three years later, Omalu’s research group published a report
on the Webster case in &lt;i&gt;Neurosurgery&lt;/i&gt;, titled “Chronic Traumatic
Encephalopathy in a National Football League Player.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The report, citing literature of traumatic head injury in
boxing and elsewhere, stated, “Possible symptoms of CTE may include recurrent
headaches, irritability, dizziness, lack of concentration, impaired memory, and
mental slowing; mood disorders, explosive behavior, morbid jealously, and
pathological intoxication and paranoia; tremor, dysarthria, and parkinsonian
movement disorders.” The report continued: “Postmortem telephone interviews of
close family members of [Webster]… indicated a long-standing mood disorder…”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The NFL objected strongly, allegedly having researched brain
trauma itself since 1994 while managing no full autopsy of a deceased player,
while never connecting its sport to dementia pugilistica in boxing and
“post-concussion syndrome” in the military, and despite knowing of early onset
impairments among league retirees for at least two decades.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The NFL, which Howard Cosell once described as more powerful
than government, had even managed to alter medical lexicon over years, seeing
that the term post-concussion syndrome was supplanted by the league’s new
label, &lt;i&gt;mild traumatic brain injury&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The NFL minions for shaping opinion got busy on the unknown
Dr. Omalu during 2005 and years following, those “experts” and other league loyalists
of research, medicine, media, PR and football. They campaigned ugly to
discredit Omalu and his findings on Webster and other retirees, until CTE was found in enough deceased NFL players to finally shut them up.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“It is something shameful…,” Omalu recalled of the period
during a telephone interview, “that the NFL, despite all the money they have,
did not identify this disease. It was an ignominious outsider like &lt;i&gt;me&lt;/i&gt;
who makes the link. And even when I made it, they attacked me, they
de-legitimatized me. They insinuated that I was a voodoo doctor from Africa and
that I should not be trusted. They made some statements that had visceral
undertones.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Simultaneously, league and union officials fought family
members of Webster in acrimonious lawsuit proceedings. A court judgment in
favor of the Webster family withstood appeal in 2006, awarding the estate about
$2 million in retroactive disability benefits, costs and interest.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
&lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;*&lt;font style="mso-spacerun: yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
&lt;/font&gt;*&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Two years ago, Dr. McKee directed neuropathology of former
defensive lineman Shane Dronett, who came close to rampaging like
Jim Tyrer and the wrestler Benoit.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Dronett stood 6-foot-6, weighed 300 pounds for a 10-year
career in the NFL, but he died young, violently, bereft of inner peace and terrorizing
people who loved him, among eerily familiar signs.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Until beset with his declining mental state around age 35, the Dronett story seemed stuff of grid legend, Texas pride. He was the
small-town boy who became All-American for the UT Longhorns, a top draft pick,
and an established NFL player making big plays and appearing in a Super Bowl.
At retirement from the Falcons in 2002, Dronett was by accounts a good man, an
engaging personality and doting father motivated to succeed in business.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;But Dronett’s family life began disintegrating a few years
later, when deranged episodes overtook him. Paranoia and rage would manifest
and the hulking man became capable of anything, beating loved ones and
strangers, brandishing weapons, issuing death threats. His wife Chris and
two daughters learned to flee their home in suburban Atlanta for extended stays
in secret places.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Ultimately, in January 2009, a confrontation between husband
and wife turned deadly at the home, thankfully with the children away. Chris
recounted for media how an enraged Shane went outside to his truck, grabbed a
12-gauge shotgun and returned inside. Chris saw the gun and ran out as Shane
shot himself to death in the kitchen. He was 38.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The McKee group found CTE in Dronett, a result recently
disclosed, and everyone wonders of the effect for his alternate persona,
disturbances and death. Dronett did have brain surgery in 2007 to remove a
benign tumor, but case experts doubt it as prime factor, in their conclusions
at the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy at BU.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;“There’s no way we would ever know what was specifically
caused by the tumor or the surgery for the tumor or CTE,” Robert Stern,
co-director of the center and BU professor of neurology, told CNN. “But more
than likely at least some of his behavior and symptoms were associated with the
worsening of the CTE.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Matt Chaney is a writer, editor, teacher and restaurant
worker living in Missouri, USA. Email him at &lt;/i&gt;&lt;a href="mailto:mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com"&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/a&gt;.
&lt;i&gt;For more information, including about Chaney’s 2009 book, &lt;/i&gt;Spiral of
Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football, &lt;i&gt;visit the homepage at&lt;/i&gt; &lt;a href="http://www.fourwallspublishing.com/"&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 14px; "&gt;&lt;b&gt;References&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Blum, D. (2010, February 5). Will science take the field?
New York Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Boxing Brain. (1973, November 24). Boxing and the brain.
British Medical Journal.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Bouchette, E. (2005, September 15). Surgeon disagrees with
Wecht that football killed Long. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Carpenter, L. (2007, April 25). ‘Brain chaser’ tackles
effects of NFL hits. Washington Post.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Casson, I.R., Pellman, E.J., &amp;amp; Viano, D.C. (2006, May).
LTE: Chronic traumatic encephalopathy in a National Football League Player.
Neurosurgery, 58(5).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Chaney, M. (2009). Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in
American Football. Warrensburg, MO: Four Walls Publishing.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Clark, R.S. (2009, January 21). Former Bridge City football
star Shane Dronett found dead in Atlanta-area home. Beaumont Enterprise.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Cosell, H. (1983). I Never Played The Game. New York, NY:
Avon Books.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Cronin, T. (2011, May 16). Doctor: Football must change
rules to protect players. Chicago Sun-Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Deardorff, J. (2011, May 2). Study: Duerson had brain damage
at time of suicide. Los Angeles Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;DeKosky, S.T., Ikonomovic, M.D., &amp;amp; Gandy, S. (2010,
September 30). Traumatic brain injury—Football, warfare, and long-term effects. New England Journal of Medicine, 363(14).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Dvorchak, R. (2005, September 16). Steelers doctor says
concluding football led to Long’s demise is bad science. Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Fitz, G. (2011, April 3). ImPACT tests coming to a high
school near you. Nashua Telegraph.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Garber, G. (2005, January 24). A tormented soul. ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Garber, G. (2005, January 25). Blood and guts. ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Garber, G. (2005, January 26). Man on the moon. ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Garber, G. (2005, January 27). Wandering through the fog.
ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Garber, G. (2005, January 28). Sifting through the ashes.
ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Garcia-Roberts, G. (2011, March 23). Autopsy: Dave Duerson
folded an American flag on his bed before shooting self.
blogs.miaminewtimes.com. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Gavett, B.E., Stern, R.A., &amp;amp; McKee, A.C. (2011,
January). Chronic traumatic Encephalopathy: A potential late effect of
sport-related concussive and subconcussive head trauma. Clinics in Sports Medicine,
30(1).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Gleason, B. (2011, May 23). Racking their brains. Buffalo
News.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Hack, D. (2006, December 14). Former Steeler’s family wins
disability ruling. New York Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Jacobson, M. (2011, May 11). In wake of Duerson case, 5
questions about football and brain injury. &lt;a href="http://www.pbs.org.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.pbs.org.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Jolly, T. (2010, February 8). Goodell stresses a culture of
safety. &lt;a href="http://www.nytimes.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.nytimes.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Johnson, L.S.M. (2011, January 13). Email correspondence
with author.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Jordon, B. (2000). Chronic traumatic brain injury associated
with boxing. Seminars In Neurology, 20(2).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Keating, P. (2006, October 24). Doctor Yes. ESPN The
Magazine.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Keating, P. (2007, August 9). NFL’s concussion expert also
sells equipment to the league. ESPN The Magazine.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Keating, P. (2010, December 2). Is concussion testing good
enough? ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Keating, P. (2011, January 10). Coming to a head. ESPN The
Magazine.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Martin, M. (2009, October 1). NFL players at risk for
dementia. &lt;a href="http://www.npr.org.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.npr.org.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;McCrory, P. (2011, January). Sports concussion and the risk
of chronic neurological impairment. Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, 21(1).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;McKee, A.C., Gavett, B.E., Stern, R.A., Nowinski, C.J.,
Cantu, R.C., Kowall, N.W., Perl, D.P., Hedley-Whyte, E.T., Price, B., Sullivan,
C., Morin, P., Lee, H., Kubulis, C.A., Daneshvar, D.H., Wulff, M., &amp;amp;
Budson, A.E. (2010, September). TDP-43 proteinopathy and motor neuron disease
in chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental
Neurology, 69(9).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;McKenna, D. (2010, October 29). The NFL’s concussion
politics. &lt;a href="http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.washingtoncitypaper.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Nix, J.W. (2010, May 7). Crazy Canton cuts: Jim Tyrer.
bleacherreport.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Omalu, B.I. (2011, January 15). Telephone interview with
author.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Omalu, B.I., DeKosky, S.T., Minster, R.L., Kamboh, M.I.,
Hamilton, R.L., &amp;amp; Wecht, C.H. (2005, July). Chronic traumatic
encephalopathy in a National Football League Player. Neurosurgery, 57(1).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Omalu, B.I., Bailes, J., Hammers, J.L., &amp;amp; Fitzsimmons,
R.P. (2010, March). Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, Suicides and parasuicides
in professional American athletes. American Journal of Forensic Medicine and
Pathology, 31(1).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Omalu, B.I, Bailes, J., Hamilton, R.L., Kamboh, M.I.,
Hammers, J., Case, M., &amp;amp; Fitzsimmons, R. (2011, February 23). Emerging
histomorphologic phenotypes of chronic traumatic encephalopathy in American
Athletes. Neurosurgery [electronic pre-print publication].&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Oriard, M. (1982). The End of Autumn. Garden City, NY:
Doubleday &amp;amp; Company, Inc.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Owen Thomas. (2010, September 14). Penn’s Owen Thomas had
CTE. ESPN.com.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Park, M. (2010, September 14). College football player who
committed suicide had brain injury. &lt;a href="http://www.Scnn.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.cnn.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Pierce, E. (2011, January 24). NFL: There are no other
players with dementia. &lt;a href="http://www.davepear.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.davepear.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Proszenko, A. (2011, April 2). Doctor claims concussion adds
to off-field incidents. &lt;a href="http://www.canberratimes.com.au.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.canberratimes.com.au.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Ratcliff, H. (2005, February 9). Autopsy sheds little light
on rampage. St. Louis Post-Dispatch.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Red, C. (2011, March 1). Eric Dickerson slams NFL for
ignoring former players, hopes Dave Duerson’s suicide sparks change. New York
Daily News. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Red, C., &amp;amp; O’Keeffe, M. (2011, February 26). Living life
of pain: Ex-NFLers battle with brain trauma may help explain why Dave Duerson
committed suicide. New York Daily News.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Robinson, A. (2002, September 24). Steelers’ Hall of Famer
Webster dies. The Associated Press.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Schwarz, A. (2007, June 15). Lineman, dead at 36, sheds
light on brain injuries. New York Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Schwarz, A. (2010, September 13).&lt;font style="mso-spacerun:
yes"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;Suicide reveals signs of a disease seen in the N.F.L. New York
Times.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Sherrington, K. (2011, May 19). Head trauma pushed
ex-NFLer’s Shane Dronett over the edge. Dallas Morning News.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Smith, S. (2011, April 1). Ex-Falcons lineman had brain
disease linked to concussions. &lt;a href="http://www.cnn.com.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;"&gt;www.cnn.com.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Solomon, G.S., Ott, S.D., &amp;amp; Lovell, M.R. (2011).
Long-term neurocognitive dysfunction in sports: What is the evidence? Clinics
In Sports Medicine, 30.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Stern, R., Gavett, B.E., Baugh, C., Nowinski, C.J., Cantu,
R.C., &amp;amp; McKee, A.C. (2011: In Press). Recurrent sports-related traumatic
brain injury and tauopathy. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Styf, J. (2011, April 11). Can football be fatal? Beaumont
Enterprise.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Talan, J. (2008, October 2). New report links sports
concussions to chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Neurology Today, 8(19).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Talan, J. (2010, September 16). Does concussion cause motor
neuron disease? The question stirs debate. Neurology Today, 10(18).&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Thompson, W. (2002, September 25). Steelers great Webster
dies. Kansas City Star, p. D1.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Thompson, W. (2004, January 25). Triumph and tragedy. Kansas
City Star.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Violent Behavior. (2011, June 1). People who have head
injuries report more violent behavior. University of Michigan News Service.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Webster, G. (2011, January 12). Telephone interview with
author.&lt;/p&gt;</content>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<title>Football-Media Complex Deflects Injury Blame from Game</title>
		<link rel="alternate" href="http://blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/06/08/football-media-complex-deflects-injury-blame-from-game.aspx?ref=rss" />
		<id>tag:blog.4wallspublishing.com,2011-06-08:fb4f7a26-56a4-4abd-9748-3271d03bb4a0</id>
		<author>
			<name>Matt Chaney</name>
		</author>
		<category term="Football Health Crisis" />
		<category term="News Analysis" />
		<updated>2011-06-08T12:33:00Z</updated>
		<published>2011-06-08T12:33:00Z</published>
		<content type="html">&lt;div&gt;&lt;b&gt;By Matt Chaney&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;&lt;b&gt;Posted Wednesday, June 8, 2011&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;&lt;font class="apple-style-span"&gt;&lt;i&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 9pt; " face="Arial" color="black"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;&lt;font class="apple-style-span"&gt;&lt;i&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 9pt; " face="Arial" color="black"&gt;This is Part 2 of an analysis series titled&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&lt;i&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 9pt; " face="Arial" color="black"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font class="apple-style-span"&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 9pt; " face="Arial" color="black"&gt;Brain Trauma Dictates
Epic Football Reform,&lt;i&gt;&amp;nbsp;which will culminate with independent
recommendations for steps imperative to the blood sport’s survival at
public schools, colleges, and likely the professional level.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 24px; "&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;&lt;font class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 24px; "&gt;Despite the contemporary campaign
of “concussion awareness” and “culture change” for tackle football, as game
officials and media promote, America essentially remains insensitive to brain
disorder in victims and especially athletes.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;“Generally speaking, mankind does
not empathize with brain diseases as well as with physical ailments; there is
this negative response, culturally, for diseases of the brain,” said Dr. Bennet
Omalu, the forensic pathologist who first discovered cerebral damage in an
American football player, deceased NFL lineman Mike Webster.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;“If you talk about having mental
disorder, psychological disease, people wouldn’t empathize with you,” Omalu
said. “Rather, they would stigmatize you and ostracize you. And I can see the
same cultural trend in football.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;In pro football, if a player
complains too loudly about head injury, or stays too long on the disabled list,
he risks public stigma, ridicule and unemployment. Adding insult, irony,
players are blamed most in this issue, widely presumed to disregard their own
head injuries and foil detection.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;But the true forces against impact
reform—which would begin with mandated rest of one to three months for every
concussed player—remain dogmatic football personnel, football media and
football fans. The football horde stands impatient and dismissive of cognitive
injury affecting athletes.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Only for NFL entertainment, amid
today’s risk-averse society, could a person with brain trauma come back rapidly
like Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers did in December, when he banged
through an NFL game only 14 days after his second concussion in two months.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Forget that Rodgers went on to lead
the fabled Packers to Super Bowl victory and cursory glory, including a widely
disseminated &lt;i&gt;New York Times&lt;/i&gt; tale that Green Bay somehow played safer
football than Pittsburgh, two pro teams fighting for a championship.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;This preposterous storyline of
football redemption, channeled through supposedly clean-playing champions,
proved feel-good for faithful of the bloody national pastime—especially
football’s close business partners, traditional media, the news outlets and
networks of the “free press,” historical leeches of the show and thus the
players.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Which is the point of the
football-media complex: Package the sport for tasty consumption by exaggerating
the positives while stifling, denying negatives.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Football is American fantasy
flight, for games at celebrity level down to local, with only the replaceable
gladiators suffering injurious outcomes. Through 130 years of tackle football,
a cult psyche has suspended common sense about maiming on the fields, including
contact deaths of a thousand kids, as America proclaims the game's benefits
outweigh its costs.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Modern organizers and media shroud
the carnage through glorifying myth, basic themes first crafted by gridiron
officials and the Golden Press during growth of football commerce at elite
universities of the Victorian Era. Cultural analyst and former NFL player
Michael Oriard investigated the phenomenon for his seminal 1993 analysis in
book form, &lt;i&gt;Reading Football: How The Popular Press Created an American
Spectacle&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;The sport defied gravity by end of
the 19&lt;sup&gt;th&lt;/sup&gt; century, operating above shackles of civil law, medical
ethic and educational mission, primarily through a meta-narrative of goodness
spun by media, stories for sanitizing football brutality and courting audience,
which responded in droves.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;The gridiron mythologists, Golden
Press writers and illustrators, reasoned that rampant injury of young bodies
didn’t constitute barbarism. Rather, football was “necessary roughness,”
lessons in manliness for all. Oriard has found this particular theme
predominates American narrative on football to date, during his analyzing
thousands of texts from early newspapers and magazines to modern multi-media
saturation of print, audio, video and film.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Early grid tales cast coaches not
as sadistic tyrants but as geniuses, moral leaders who motivated young men to
perform and achieve, and players weren’t thugs but football heroes, exuding
qualities every male should emulate.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Fans, moreover, needed to feel
worthy and patriotic in their role, not masochistic, so the Golden Press
portrayed a football contest as must-see social event, a wholesome American
happening, not a public bloodletting.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;But many people resisted the hype,
branding the spectacle instead as a demoralizing health menace, and they aimed
to abolish football at turn of the new century.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Shailer Mathews, professor at the
University of Chicago Divinity School, said “there arises a general protest
against this boy-killing, man-mutilating, money-making, education-prostituting,
gladiatorial sport.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Casualty rates were outrageous, but
more football malaise befell campuses and towns, including conniving coaches
and mercenary players available to highest bidders. Players engaged in public
drunkenness, gambling, beatings of students and citizens, and committed sexual
assaults of women.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Football supporters countered that
football was a sound maturation process, even if few of them ever lined up to
bash at scrimmage.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;“To bear pain without flinching,
and to laugh at the wounds and the scars of a hotly contested game, is very
good discipline and tends to develop manliness of character,” opined a popular
magazine, &lt;i&gt;Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;By 1905 football boasted clout in
the Oval Office, game advocate President Theodore Roosevelt, who brought
spotlight onto a campaign for “safer” football through rule changes, the same
spin voiced by advocates a century later, in present-day controversy.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Although T.R. stated his intent to
reduce injuries—“I wish we could learn… to make the game of football a rather
less homicidal pastime”—this president loved watching the sport, which he
lauded for boys in need of a “strenuous life” he perceived to be vanishing.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Roosevelt was angered by much of
the criticism bombarding football, and he blasted injured players who
complained: “I have a hearty contempt for [a male] if he counts a broken arm or
collarbone as a serious consequence when balanced against the chance of showing
that he possesses hardihood, physical prowess, and courage,” the little big man
declared.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Roosevelt fashioned his fame as
rugged individual and obviously savored talking tough about football manliness.
But he had avoided the gridiron as a Harvard man, back in the late 1870s. “He
never played himself—he was too small and wore glasses—but he became an
enthusiastic fan,” explained author John J. Miller, author of the new book &lt;i&gt;The
Big Scrum: How Teddy Roosevelt Saved Football&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Roosevelt surely capitalized
politically, with his stance endearing and fortifying football fans in every
major institution of society, people lapping up the game mythology.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;There was American wise man Oliver
Wendall Holmes, U.S. Supreme Court justice, drinking the football Fool-Aid to
believe he saw bloodshed with merit. “Out of heroism grows faith in the
worthiness of heroism,” Holmes said. “Therefore I rejoice at every dangerous
sport which I see pursued.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Many educators backed the game,
such as MIT president Francis A. Walker, who said it developed “something akin
to patriotism and public spirit” in a young man. Illinois professor Edwin G.
Dexter theorized that a football player might hear the “Call of the Wild…
echoing down from a thousand generations.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Fortunately for football, public
opinion largely favored it and the game survived a tempestuous incubation
period. On urging of President Roosevelt, university leaders established the
Intercollegiate Athletic Association, forerunner of the NCAA, with a stated mission
to make football “safer.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;“Football was saved not by
eliminating all violence but by compromising on an acceptable degree of
physical danger,” Oriard observed.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;“Basically, the coaches and
[football supporters] had pulled a slick one on the public and universities,”
Rick Telander wrote for his 1989 book, &lt;i&gt;The Hundred Yard Lie&lt;/i&gt;. “By making
rule changes that made the game safer (though certainly not safe), they had
also effectively killed protests about the game’s ethics and its place on
campus. Indeed, by the 1920s the complaints about college football became
little more than a nuisance, part of the background din…”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;The ruse succeeded smashingly. By
end of the 20&lt;sup&gt;th&lt;/sup&gt; century, public schools banned religious expression
but most were football churches, with adults shepherding children to playing
fields out back, the collision sport of myth. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;No real heed for football brain
injury has arisen in this culture, just more blustery cultural leaders like old
T.R., only swiping at the irritant problem as though trying to shoo flies. Head
trauma in beloved football is yet obscured, off public radar, especially once a
loop-legged or unconscious player is removed from view.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Even the term is a misnomer,
“concussion awareness,” for true scope of epidemic, since experts increasingly
believe the constant sub-concussive blows of football—wholly undetectable under
current clinical practice around the sport—pose greatest threat to
participants.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;The football public embraces
suspect countermeasures, like it did Roosevelt’s NCAA concept a century ago, and
otherwise intelligent people babble about “concussion testing” and minimalist
state laws to “protect” children.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;And game officials and pal media
continue capitalizing on the gory game, standing dually responsible.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Today football and supporters seek
to defy restraint on the sport like never before, to avoid necessary, dramatic
remake of where the game is played, by whom, and under what conditions.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;Significantly, cutting-edge science
and independent opinion are eschewed for antiquated shoddiness in reform, even
silliness, rank obfuscation, just to keep the game intact as-is, largely
publicly funded and available in every nook and cranny of society.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;“Let me make a statement here,”
Omalu intoned, as a premier independent brain expert considering football
context during a January interview. “Policies are made in science based on the
prevailing and emerging evidence, and the evolving ways of thinking. Our
understanding of brain injury has advanced in a very fast pace in the past 10
years.”&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;“Current policies in football are
based on what we knew 20 years ago. Policy-making and policy-enactments in
football are not on par with the advances in science. Why? Because the advances
of science are further confirming that football is a very dangerous game.”&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;font class="apple-style-span"&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 9pt; " face="Arial" color="black"&gt;&lt;i&gt;Matt Chaney is a journalist, editor, teacher and
restaurant worker in Missouri, USA. Email him at &lt;/i&gt;mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com.&amp;nbsp;&lt;i&gt;For more information, including about his
2009 book,&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font class="apple-converted-space"&gt;&lt;i&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 9pt; " face="Arial" color="black"&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font class="apple-style-span"&gt;&lt;font style="font-size: 9pt; " face="Arial" color="black"&gt;Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football&lt;i&gt;, visit the
homepage at&amp;nbsp;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.fourwallspublishing.com/"&gt;www.fourwallspublishing.com&lt;/a&gt;&lt;i&gt;.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content>
	</entry>
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