Calgary Herald

TEAMMATES MUST SPEAK UP FOR CONCUSSED ATHLETES

New education program aims to compel Canadians to end ‘toughness’ culture

- JOHN KRYK JoKryk@postmedia.com Twitter: @JohnKryk

It would take just one minute.

One minute for sport team leaders in Canada at all levels to help end the lingering, Neandertha­l culture that promotes the misguided, potentiall­y life-threatenin­g idea that a head-struck athlete somehow shows off his or her “toughness” by playing through a possible concussion.

That’s what the Concussion Legacy Foundation Canada told a news conference Tuesday at Queen’s Park in Toronto in launching a new education campaign called Team Up Speak Up. It aims to purge the mistaken mindset by imploring teammates to speak up when they think a fellow athlete might have suffered a brain injury.

“You’re changing the social norm from, ‘Hey, we’re supposed to be hiding concussion­s’ … to ‘You’re actually supposed to look out for your teammates,’ ” said Chris Nowinski, co-founder of Concussion Legacy Foundation, the U.S.-based non-profit group dedicated to preventing concussion­s in sport through medical research, educationa­l programs, advocacy and other ventures.

“We’re framing the idea of identifyin­g concussion­s as being a good teammate. That’s why it’s called Team Up Speak Up.”

Team Up Speak Up began in the U.S. a year ago this month. Nowinski said three million athletes in 150 sport organizati­ons, across 47 states, already have heard a one-minute message delivered by their coach, captain or team medical personnel. American organizati­ons participat­ing in the campaign include USA Hockey, USA Rugby, NASCAR, the American Hockey Coaches Associatio­n, Major League Lacrosse and the National Federation­s of State High School Associatio­ns.

Concussion Legacy Foundation Canada hopes to eclipse American participat­ion numbers, said executive director Tim Fleiszer, a CFL defensive lineman with five teams from 1998 to 2007.

Rugby Canada is the first prominent sports body north of the border to sign on.

The program’s ambitious goal is that from now until Sept. 12, every athlete in Canada will have heard the one-minute speech’s three simple points.

“One, we’re a team, and that means we look out for each other,” Nowinski said. “(Two), if your teammate has a concussion, they need your help. And (three), I, as your coach, or captain, I expect you to speak up if you think your teammate has a concussion.”

Hockey hall of famer Eric Lindros is serving as the Canadian program’s first former pro athlete ambassador. Nowinski said the campaign’s impetus came from recent research showing athletes young and old continue to be “concerned what their coaches and their teammates are going to think of them if they come out of the game.”

That is, they’ll think they’re weak, Nowinski said.

“The problem has been for the past 10 years we have been trying to educate athletes to raise their hands to take themselves out,” said Nowinski, a former Harvard football player and WWE pro wrestler.

“The research has shown that we can teach (athletes) signs and symptoms — so now everybody knows when you get hit in the head and see stars, that might be a concussion. But we haven’t been able to convince them to come out of the game.

“It’s a lot to ask an 11-yearold to recognize when they’re suffering a brain injury and to recognize the long-term consequenc­es of their health and pull themselves out.”

Attending the kickoff news conference were Gord and Kathleen Stringer of Ottawa, whose 17-year-old daughter Rowan died four years ago after suffering two rugby concussion­s in a week. A new provincial law named in her honour will soon make Ontario the first Canadian province or territory to set up protocols governing the management of youth concussion­s suffered in all levels of organized sport (club, academy, school or otherwise).

Gord Stringer said Tuesday he believes the Team Up Speak Up program can be “a difference­maker” in Canada.

“Rowan’s situation was one where, it could be argued, that had this been in place, her outcome may have been different,” he said. “She talked on social media with her friends about the possibilit­y of having a concussion. She never mentioned it to a coach, parents, anyone else.”

More detailed advice as to crafting the one-minute speech, along with submitted videos of American coaches delivering it to their athletes, can be found at TeamUpSpea­kUp.org. That’s where Canadian teams can sign up and submit videos, too.

We’re framing the idea of identifyin­g concussion­s as being a good teammate.

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