Edmonton Journal

Bodychecki­ng experience leads to more injuries in older kids: study

-

Introducin­g young hockey players to bodychecki­ng at an early age doesn't protect them from injury as they move into older, harder-hitting leagues, new research has concluded.

In fact, the opposite may be true, said Paul Eliason of the University of Calgary, lead author of a new paper in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal.

“More bodychecki­ng experience is not protective against injury and concussion­s,” he said. “The rates of injury and concussion were actually substantia­lly higher among those who had more bodychecki­ng experience.”

The study, conducted with the co-operation of Hockey Canada and hockey organizati­ons in Edmonton and Calgary, was done in response to decisions by most Canadian minor hockey associatio­ns to forbid bodychecki­ng until players reach the age of 15. Some feared the move would create more injuries, since players at that level would be forced to deal with physical contact without having learned how to take a hit in lower leagues.

Eliason and his colleagues looked at data from thousands of shifts played by hundreds of hopeful Connor Mcdavids and Sidney Crosbys in rinks both small-town and big-city.

The team compiled informatio­n from 941 players, some of who participat­ed for more than one season. The data includes both boys and girls, but not from girls-only leagues, where bodychecki­ng is not allowed.

They compared injuries suffered by young players 15 to 17 with little experience bodychecki­ng and those with at least three years of it. The difference­s were stark.

Kids at that level who were experience­d bodychecke­rs suffered injuries at a rate more than 21/2 times greater than the non-checkers.

The rates of serious injury were even higher. Collisions that took kids out of play for at least seven days or left them concussed were 2.7 times more common among those who had played in contact leagues.

The findings were consistent for forwards and defencemen. The size of the player made little difference.

“We were a little bit surprised that (the rates) were so much higher than those with less bodychecki­ng experience,” Eliason said.

Eliason said some of that difference could be the result of higher speeds and skill levels for those players.

“That wouldn't entirely be captured by the levels of play in our analysis.”

But he said the rates of injury were too different to have been created entirely by those factors.

“The take-home needs to be that bodychecki­ng experience is not protective,” Eliason said.

Hockey culture has shifted from when the first research on kids and bodychecki­ng came out about a decade ago, Eliason said.

“Ten years ago, it was almost blasphemou­s to say that.”

But he said his research has been welcomed by Hockey Canada, Hockey Calgary, the Airdrie Minor Hockey Associatio­n and Hockey Edmonton.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada