Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Ex-Bear McMahon battles dementia

- ANDREW SELIGMAN

CHICAGO — Jim McMahon would leave home and forget how to get back.

Sometimes, he would stay in his room and lie in the dark because the pain in his head was so excruciati­ng. And at his darkest moments a few years ago, when it was just about too much to handle, the former Chicago Bears quarterbac­k thought about killing himself.

“I am glad I don’t have any weapons in my house or else I am pretty sure I wouldn’t be here,” McMahon said.

McMahon opened up about his struggles with early onset dementia and depression — issues he believes were caused by the beating he absorbed playing football — in a gathering with a small group of reporters on Tuesday. He is scheduled to be honoured Wednesday in Chicago by the Sports Legacy Institute, a Boston University-based group that has been studying the effects of brain trauma in athletes and others.

While his suicidal thoughts are a thing of the past thanks to treatment for a fluid blockage in his neck, the fight with dementia continues.

The “Punky QB” who once helped the Chicago Bears shuffle their way to a Super Bowl championsh­ip is also digging in for another battle, this one with the NFL.

McMahon is one of several players identified in a federal lawsuit filed in California last month, accusing teams of illegally dispensing powerful narcotics and other drugs to keep players on the field without regard for their long-term health.

He is also a party to a concussion­s-related classactio­n lawsuit in which the NFL agreed to a $765-million settlement without acknowledg­ing it hid the risks of concussion­s from former players. A federal judge has yet to approve the settlement.

 ?? STACY THACKER/The Associated Press ?? Ex-NFL quarterbac­k Jim McMahon says he thought of suicide in his fight with depression and early onset dementia.
STACY THACKER/The Associated Press Ex-NFL quarterbac­k Jim McMahon says he thought of suicide in his fight with depression and early onset dementia.

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