Daily Dispatch

Lambie Bok future of big concern

- By CRAIG RAY

SHARKS and Springbok flyhalf Pat Lambie’s career is in the balance with reports suggesting he will miss the rest of the season because he’s still struggling with concussion symptoms.

Lambie is only 26‚ but on Monday Sharks chief executive Gary Teichmann said it was unlikely he would play again in 2017.

And who knows? He might play again.

Considerin­g Lambie has only played a handful of games since a serious concussion sustained last June in the first Test against Ireland at Newlands‚ this is a worrying developmen­t.

Lambie was felled by Ireland flank CJ Stander and didn’t play for four months.

Earlier this year Lambie suffered another head injury when he collided with his own player in a Super Rugby match. He hasn’t been on a field since.

While it’s a desperatel­y unfortunat­e situation for Lambie‚ it’s again brought the serious issue of concussion under never the spotlight.

World Rugby’s Head Injury Assessment (HIA) protocols during matches‚ which were first implemente­d in 2012‚ are a massive step in the right direction and led to a higher number of concussion diagnoses. But concussion­s are also increasing. A recent study of the 2015-16 Premiershi­p season by the Rugby Football Union (RFU) showed that concussion­s accounted for 20% of all injuries to the ball carrier and a whopping 47% of all injuries to the tackler (defender).

And those are just the incidents that have been diagnosed. Despite stringent controls‚ sometimes concussion­s are not spotted.

“It’s the most difficult sports injury to consistent­ly recognise and diagnose‚” England Rugby’s chief medical officer Simon Kemp told CNN earlier this year.

“This is the number one player welfare issue in collision and contact sports at the moment ...

“The science around head injury and particular­ly around concussion in sport is relatively immature and evolving very rapidly.

“The average assessment of a player in the 2015 World Cup was 64 seconds and done on-pitch where the player couldn’t engage in the assessment.

“We now have a 10-minute‚ off-pitch assessment informed by video review with a structured assessment.

“If a player has any abnormal results‚ they don’t return. But even if they have all normal results‚ if in the opinion of the team doctor that they may be concussed‚ they still don’t return ... It’s not pass or fail. The HIA supports the doctor’s decision-making.”

Lambie is clearly going through a thorough process with the support of the Sharks.

In recent months‚ concussion has ended the careers of several players in their prime, such as one-Test All Black lock James Broadhurst, who called time on his career in April after failing to recover from concussion symptoms from an injury sustained in 2015.

Lambie’s only priority now‚ is make a full recovery. — TMG to

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