The Niagara Falls Review

Concussion conundrum

Fights over children’s involvemen­t in football winding up in family court

- KEN BELSON

PITTSBURGH — In this city with a deep and proud relationsh­ip with football, a custody dispute has pushed the debate about the sport’s safety into a new arena: family court. A father, John Orsini, has gone to court to prevent the youngest of his three sons from playing high school football because, he said, scientific studies have revealed the perils of repeated blows to the head — especially for an athlete, like his son, who has a history of concussion­s. The boy’s mother, Orsini’s exwife, believes he should be allowed to continue playing because he understand­s the risks. “You always heard it sometimes, when one parent would say I don’t want him doing that because he might get hurt,” said Allan E. Mayefsky, a leading divorce lawyer. “Usually, we thought the parent was just overprotec­tive. Now, it’s more of a real medical issue.” In the decade since scientists began to link football to long-term brain damage, the debate over the future of the sport has moved from research laboratori­es to the halls of Congress, to locker rooms and owners’ suites. Families, too, have grappled with the question of how dangerous the game is — and now parents’ concerns are surfacing in legal battles between divorced couples, leading to an increase in fights over whether to amend custody orders to prevent their children from playing the game. It is impossible to say precisely how many disputes over football are occurring in family courts. Most records are sealed and disputes often settle before they go to trial. But Joe Cordell, founder of Cordell & Cordell, which specialize­s in divorce law, said that about a third of the 270 lawyers at his firm, which is spread across 40 states, said that they have seen an increase in custody battles over whether a child should be allowed to play football. In some parts of the country, football has replaced hockey as the sport at the centre of custody battles, other lawyers said. Like many fathers of his generation, Orsini, 66, was for years an enthusiast­ic supporter of football. He played the game in grade school and rooted for the hometown Steelers. He enrolled his sons in youth tackle football leagues when they were as young as 5 years old, including his youngest son. Orsini said he attended their practices and games, including in the years after he and his ex-wife, Janice, divorced in 2004. Their oldest son, Giuseppe, who is now 21, plays football at Case Western University in Cleveland. John Orsini’s view of the game changed when his youngest son, 17, suffered three sports-related concussion­s. The first was in 2013, when he was hit in the head with a metal baseball bat while not wearing a helmet. He took a battery of tests at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and, after several weeks, was allowed to resume playing sports. The second and third concussion­s were in 2015 and 2016 during football games. Orsini said that afterward, his son was sensitive to light and noise, experience­d headaches and was lethargic. His son, he recalled, sat

Usually, we thought the parent was just overprotec­tive. Now, it’s more of a real medical issue. ALLAN E. MAYEFSKY Divorce lawyer

slumped at the table during meals. Again, within a few weeks, doctors cleared him to return to play. Orsini said that when he asked the doctor whether his son should stop playing football, he was told there was no medical evidence that he should not. “The moment for me started when he repeatedly got diagnosed with concussion­s and the doctors kept telling me there was no reason for him to not keep going,” Orsini said. Having worked as a plaintiff’s attorney, he was alarmed. “His mother didn’t question the doctors, but in my profession it is an impossibil­ity.” Orsini said he was surprised that his son’s doctors appeared to be sanguine about the dangers of the sport. So he began doing his own research and found, among other things, studies by researcher­s at Boston University that said that boys who began playing tackle football before the age of 12 had more behavioura­l and cognitive problems later in life than those who began playing the sport in their teenage years. Orsini said he tried unsuccessf­ully to discuss these findings with his ex-wife. She told him their son, then 16 and finishing his sophomore year of high school, was mature enough to understand the risks of the game and to make up his own mind. “The truth is, this young man loves to play football and understand­s the dangers, and based on the science now, his mom thinks the benefits are worth the risks,” said John Demas, a lawyer representi­ng Janice Orsini, who declined to be interviewe­d. In late July, just before his son was to start practising for his junior season, John Orsini told his school that he did not want his son playing. He had joint legal custody, so the school complied. The case then moved to family court. In early August, Janice Orsini filed an emergency request to let her son play, as he had for more than a decade. John Orsini argued that while he had supported his son’s right to play for years, he was now aware of new, worrying research about the safety of the game. “Playing football cannot be considered status quo when the Child has now suffered three concussion­s,” John Orsini’s lawyer wrote in a court filing. Common sense dictates that “the best interest and general health welfare of the Child is protected by not permitting Child to participat­e in football.” The judge allowed the ban to stand. But two weeks later, Janice Orsini filed a petition to gain “sole legal custody” related to “the child’s participat­ion in extracurri­cular activities.” The judge agreed to let the boy resume playing football while she decided on whether to approve the change to the custody order. The Orsinis have entered a court-mandated mediation program, but the two sides are no closer. Their next mediation, which will be in front of the judge, is later this month. If neither side budges, John Orsini said he is prepared to go to trial, a process that will likely require that the boy be deposed. His fear, though, is that the case will drag on until November, when his son will turn 18, and John Orsini will be powerless to stop him from finishing his senior season, or from playing in college. “If I can’t stop him now, he’s on track to have a lot more damage done,” he said.

 ?? ROSS MANTLE NEW YORK TIMES ?? John Orsini at the Upper St. Clair High School football field in Pittsburgh. Orsini has gone to court to prevent the youngest of his three sons from playing high school football.
ROSS MANTLE NEW YORK TIMES John Orsini at the Upper St. Clair High School football field in Pittsburgh. Orsini has gone to court to prevent the youngest of his three sons from playing high school football.

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