Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

I had to take a break from game, I had a bleed in my brain

RYAN REVEALS EXTENT OF HEAD INJURY CONCERN

- BY PAT NOLAN in Philadelph­ia

RYAN MCHUGH has revealed how he suffered a bleed on the brain as repeated concussion­s mounted up for him this year.

The Donegal star had to take the rest of the year off following medical advice after suffering the latest blow in a challenge game for his club Kilcar against St Vincent’s in September.

It ruled him out of the club’s run in and they were eliminated in the county quarter-finals by Naomh Conaill, though he’s back in the gym and will resume training with Donegal after he returns from the PWC All-star tour in Philadelph­ia.

“I had one at the start of the League this year and I took about eight weeks off, I had a slight bleed in my brain,” explained Mchugh.

“Three knocks in games. Dublin, Kildare and Tyrone were the three games. Our doctor, Kevin Moran is one of the top doctors in Ireland and he was looking after me.

“So I took about six to eight weeks off and I was grand then.

“Unfortunat­ely I went back to the club and we had a challenge match against St Vincent’s of Dublin. I picked up another knock and I don’t really remember a lot about that. I got the CT scan and was advised again by the doctor to take a longer rest.

“We were county champions last year and we had a chance to defend our title. So it was a break you didn’t want to take but you have to think of later on in life.”

Having a discussion with medical profession­als about a bleed on his brain was, naturally, a more worrying one than those relating to the more typical injuries that tend to befall footballer­s.

“Now, it was a slight bleed, they weren’t 100 per cent sure,” he said. “But I suppose it happened, you just have to get on with it.

“Rest, there’s nothing you can really do with it. It’s not like when you break a leg, you come back and try to build it up in the gym and different sort of stuff.

“It’s just rest really is all you can do, stay away from computers and that sort of stuff.”

Awareness around concussion has improved considerab­ly in recent years but, Mchugh admits, there’s still quite a lot of ground that needs to be covered.

“I know the first time I had it, I actually didn’t get the symptoms and stuff until about two weeks later. So it was strange, it actually happened at training one night, I just felt ill and dizzy and stuff.

“I went to Kevin and Kevin pulled me out straight away. If Kevin wasn’t there, I could’ve trained on.”

Mchugh says he may now have to tailor his game. He added: “Yeah, myself and Dad were actually on about that. I was reading up on Johnny Sexton.

“He had to change the style of the way he tackles. He must have been going in with his head or something. So it is something I can look at in the future.”

I was reading up on Johnny Sexton. He had to change the way he tackles. It is something I can look at in the future

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