The Timaru Herald

The heavy price of league’s big hits

Repeated concussion­s from rugby league hits and tackles cost Peter Rikiriki his mental health. It’s cost others their life. But there’s no coherent plan for protecting players from the danger. Carmen Parahi investigat­es.

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Peter Rikiriki has paid a high price for the love of rugby league. He counts nine bona fide concussion­s in 14 years but says there were probably more knocks to the brain he hasn’t accounted for.

‘‘We would get a knock or tackled, feel dizzy but just carry on and shake it off,’’ he says.

Of his nine concussion­s, Rikiriki was knocked out only three or four times. The rest were impact hits, ‘‘bell clangers’’ or ‘‘seeing stars’’, as he calls them.

On one occasion he took a hit, kept playing, finished the game, walked off the field, showered then came to in a locker room filled with players from the Mongrel Mob Porirua team. They’d played on a different field altogether. He had no memory of how he got there. When he eventually found his own team they filled in the blanks. Yes, they saw him take a blow to the head during the game but he got up and carried on. They all laughed about it, including Rikiriki.

The longest blackout he suffered, he came to standing at a bar with a beer in his hand. ‘‘I just thought getting knocked out was part of the game,’’ he says.

It was the ninth hit in 1999, and the only one he sought medical advice for, that ended his playing ambitions.

‘‘The final concussion I had problems with blurred vision, dizziness. I had to sit down, confusion. The headaches were really bad.’’

Scans found nothing wrong but the pain continued. He didn’t know what was wrong with him. Then the anxiety started.

‘‘I was having attacks going into the supermarke­t. I’d be pushing the trolley around, I’d get a tingling sensation, the hair would stand up on my arms. I just wanted to get out of there as soon as possible.’’

At the time, neither Rikiriki nor his GP connected the concussion­s to his declining mental health. He was diagnosed with depression and prescribed antidepres­sants.

He had to give it up his plastering job. His marriage with four children fell apart.

‘‘I was sitting at home feeling worthless. I didn’t see my friends as much, stayed home, slept a lot.’’

‘‘For me being on the field was everything. It shouldn’t have been,’’ says Rikiriki.

‘‘It’s just a game; put it into perspectiv­e.’’

He eventually went back to school and gained a diploma in exercise science.

During his studies he became aware of the impacts of concussion. He went back to his GP, asked if all of his concussion­s could have caused the depression and the doctor agreed.

‘‘It was a vicious cycle resulting from my concussion­s,’’ says Rikiriki.

AMATEUR CONCUSSION GAME

Doug King believes concussion is the biggest issue facing amateur rugby league clubs.

He says Rikiriki’s case is typical of athletes who’ve suffered multiple concussion­s.

King has studied and written numerous academic papers on the subject. A clinical nurse specialist, he’s played the game and run the sidelines for decades as a voluntary medic for rugby league and union.

‘‘About 98 per cent of concussion­s do not involve the loss of consciousn­ess,’’ says King.

‘‘Impacts to the body can result in concussion because it’s all transferre­d up. Anything can cause it. It’s the shaking of the brain. It’s like a big bruise and it needs time to heal.’’

In 2017, ACC received 21,149 concussion claims, 7615 sportsrela­ted. Of those, 443 were rugby league claims with $1,626,691 paid out.

In one study, King stuck electronic mouthguard­s into rugby union and league players mouths measuring the impacts per player per game for a whole season.

‘‘When I finished at the end of the rugby season we were looking at 70 impacts per player per game, 15 for under 9-year-olds.

‘‘One season of 20 rugby games, I had 20,000 impacts.

‘‘In rugby league I was looking at 50-odd impacts per player per game at premier level for males, 36 for females, 11 for under 11-year-olds.’’

Despite the growing evidence about brain injuries, too many clubs continue to dismiss concussion protocols, King says.

As a medic he makes no apology for

Policy confusion

hauling players off the field and standing them down. But it’s made him unpopular.

King has been spat at, sworn at, threatened and himself knocked out trying to manage players with concussion. He’s been banned from four clubs in the Wellington region, three union and one league. He won’t name them.

‘‘I’ve had one player die in my arms, another player nearly die in my arms and it’s taught me a big lesson. I’d rather be wrong and say sorry to the guy I take off than be wrong and say sorry to his parents.’’

In both cases, King later found out the players suffered prior concussion­s.

‘‘Unfortunat­ely players keep dying, not only in league but in union. So we want to stop that and manage it properly.’’

WIN AT ALL COSTS

Rikiriki has coached league for the past 18 years, from kids to adults in club and provincial teams, and the under 16s national side. He says players and their parents would argue with him on the sideline for taking them off for a suspected head knock.

King says he has seen a player knocked out but their trainer helped him to pass the on-field test to stay in the game. ‘‘People will rort the rules as much as they can to make it an advantage,’’ he says. ‘‘It’s not sportsmans­hip but it happens.’’

At other times, opposition teams will say a player has concussion or note it down on the team sheet to get him out of the game.

‘‘If player X is going to make or break the team then you’ll do whatever you can to get rid of him,’’ King says.

Players, families and coaches are taking greater risks because there are high stakes in the game now. ‘‘Some parents put a lot of effort into their kids to become sports stars, to earn big money so they can live off them. It’s an issue.’’ King estimates less than 2 per cent turn pro.

Dr Simon Mayhew is the medical specialist and concussion spokesman for the New Zealand Rugby League (NZRL). He also takes care of the Junior Warriors and admits even the top players ‘‘tell pork pies’’.

‘‘A lot of people won’t own up to being concussed,’’ says Mayhew. ‘‘They can’t play for three weeks but they desperatel­y want to.’’

He says the NZRL takes concussion seriously and has laid out procedures for everyone involved in the game. But he concedes the stand-down time and concussion diagnosis is problemati­c.

CONCUSSION CONFUSION

The NZRL recommends concussed players stand down for three weeks.

‘‘It’s basically been a number they’ve plucked,’’ says King.

Mayhew agrees it’s arbitrary but he’s following current worldwide guidelines. ‘‘Unless you get sophistica­ted testing you’re going to be sidelined for at least three weeks.’’

Of the players King has tested, 60 per cent weren’t symptom free after 14 days. He says it takes another 11 days before it’s clear, so 25-28 days.

Concussion informatio­n held by NZRL provinces:

❚ Northland: Factsheet, no date or mention of 21-day stand-down, concussion report card

❚ Auckland: Own concussion policy

❚ Counties Manukau: 2016 factsheet

❚ Waikato: Couldn’t find concussion informatio­n on website

❚ Coastline: No website, no concussion policy

❚ Bay Of Plenty: March 2008 policy, review date March 2010

❚ Hauraki: No website, no concussion policy

❚ Gisborne: No website, no concussion policy

❚ Taranaki: Link to NZRL policies

❚ Aoraki: No website, no concussion policy

❚ Hawke’s Bay: NZRL Laws of the game 2012, no concussion policy

❚ Manawatu¯ : Feb 2015 policy

❚ Wellington: Apr 2010 policy

❚ Canterbury: 2014 factsheet, no mention of 21-day stand-down, Feb 2015 policy

❚ Otago: NZRL Laws of the game 2012, no concussion policy

❚ Southland: Link to NZRL policies

❚ West Coast: Rugby league pledge 2012, no concussion policy

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