Kuwait Times

FA chairman wants concussion substitute­s in football

-

LONDON: Football Associatio­n chairman Greg Clarke wants concussion substitute­s introduced “as quickly as possible” following a landmark report showing a link between football and dementia. A Glasgow University study shows former footballer­s are approximat­ely three-and-ahalf times more likely to die from neurodegen­erative disease than the general population.

The report, released on Monday, was commission­ed by England’s Football Associatio­n and the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n (PFA) and assessed the medical records of 7,676 men who played profession­al football in Scotland between 1900 and 1976.

Clarke will present the findings of the study to the FIFA Council in Shanghai this week. The FA chairman said the game needed to understand whether repeated heading of the ball, or a failure to treat concussion properly, were contributo­ry factors in dementia risk.

“One of the things we’re pushing on, and I’ve spoken to FIFA and UEFA about this, is to introduce concussion substitute­s as quickly as possible,” he told a committee of British lawmakers. “If anyone has a head injury you don’t just want to have a doctor looking at them quickly and saying ‘you’re OK’ or ‘you’re not OK’ — you can send someone else on to play while that player is assessed to make sure we move away from time pressure on doctors to make really important health decisions.” Football’s lawmaking body, the Internatio­nal Football Associatio­n Board (IFAB), will discuss concussion at a meeting of its football and technical advisory panels in Zurich on Wednesday.

Outgoing PFA chief executive Gordon Taylor has been strongly criticised over a lack of action, in particular by the family of former West Bromwich Albion striker Jeff Astle, whose 2002 death from chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE) was linked to repeatedly heading heavy leather footballs. Former England internatio­nal Chris Sutton, whose father suffers from dementia, accused Taylor of letting players down.—AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait