Waterloo Region Record

Football coach forfeits after many concussion­s

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FREDERICTO­N — A New Brunswick high school football coach’s decision to forfeit a game at halftime because of head injuries among his players is casting a fresh spotlight on how sports teams handle concussion­s.

Coach Marcel Metti of the L’Odyssee Olympiens halted a game last Friday against the Tantramar Titans with his team trailing 35-0.

Four Olympiens players had received body injuries, four declared concussion­s and four others displayed concussion symptoms but have since been cleared by a medical profession­al.

“I’m really proud of the coaching team,” Monique Boudreau, superinten­dent of the Francophon­e South School District, said in an interview Tuesday. “I know it was a really big decision to make, but I think it was the best decision based on the circumstan­ces.”

The district recently adopted a new concussion protocol that says any player who receives a blow to the head must be cleared by a doctor before they can play again.

Boudreau said that to replace the injured players, the coach would have had to ask Grade 9 students to compete against older and more robust players.

“This would have put the young athletes at risk,” said Boudreau.

Andy Clark, president of the New Brunswick Interschol­astic Athletic Associatio­n, said officials have reviewed the game tape and have determined it was played within the rules of the game and there were no safety concerns.

In a statement, he said all football coaches are required to take a concussion course “and as such they are to ensure players that exhibit symptoms do not play.”

According to the Mayo Clinic, a concussion is a traumatic brain injury that affects brain function. Effects can include headaches and problems with concentrat­ion, memory, balance and coordinati­on.

The Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n reports that in Ontario and Alberta — the two provinces where the data was collected — 94 per cent of emergency department visits for sport-related brain injuries in 2014-2015 were concussion related. The data showed a 45 per cent increase in emergency room visits among 10- to 17-year-olds over a five-year period.

Hockey, cycling, football and rugby were the sports that sent the largest number of patients to the emergency department for brain injuries.

Cathy Simon, a physiother­apist in Saint John, said she now regularly sees cases of athletic concussion­s, which she chalks up to better awareness.

“Years ago it was kind of suck-it-upand-keep-playing. There wasn’t a lot of education around concussion or what we should do to treat concussion­s and the long term effects of it. Now I think people are becoming more aware and so they are reporting it more frequently,” she said.

She said while concussion protocols are necessary, the best situation would be to have a therapist on the sidelines of each game to watch for concussion symptoms.

That is the situation at football games in the Seven Oaks School Division in Winnipeg. Brian O’Leary, the superinten­dent of the division, said coaches are busy just coaching the games.

“They might not notice someone coming off wobbly. It’s an extra precaution and it’s a way of reducing the risk but there is still a risk in contact sports,” he said.

O’Leary said Seven Oaks requires coaches to take a concussion course, and they’re looking at requiring players and their parents to take it, too.

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