Mercury (Hobart)

Finance for trial of head injuries

- MICHAEL WARNER

A CONCUSSION damages action against the AFL is set to be bankrolled by third-party litigation funders.

Lead lawyer Greg Griffin yesterday confirmed private backers were considerin­g funding a proposed multimilli­ondollar Federal Court stoush involving up to 100 ex-players.

Litigation funders carry the burden of an adverse finding but are entitled to about 30 per cent of total damages awarded to plaintiffs.

“It’s looking positive but it’s an ongoing process,” Griffin said. “Once that’s in place then we can get on with it. We’re working towards filing documents within six months.”

The concussion claim — based on a successful damages action mounted by NFL players in the US — will involve five lead plaintiffs and multiple past AFL players battling neurologic­al impairment­s linked to head knocks.

Hawthorn Brownlow winner and concussion casualty John Platten, former Essendon and Geelong ruckman John Barnes and retired Melbourne and North Melbourne highflyer Shaun Smith have already committed as plaintiffs.

Asked how many other players would join the case, Griffin said: “It’s between 80 and 100, but quite frankly that’s conservati­ve. When wives and partners start seeing this, they’re going to look at their husband or partner and say: ‘Why do you think you’re not a part of this?’

“There are a lot of challengin­g aspects of this case, but one of them is speaking to the partners of the players. You can actually see that everyone is affected by this.

“The AFL have an army of damaged ex-footballer­s that they have to account to.”

Smith’s post-career life has been cruelled by brain lesions, depression and memory loss.

Barnes suffers from epilepsy, memory loss and mood swings, while Platten fears he is experienci­ng the early effects of Alzheimer’s disease.

Top US concussion expert Chris Nowinski, co-founder and executive director of the Concussion Legacy Foundation in Boston, last year accused AFL affiliated doctors questionin­g the link between head knocks and mental health of using “the same lines we heard from big tobacco and the people defending the asbestos industry”.

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