Scottish Daily Mail

More dire warnings of dementia timebomb in rugby

SURGEON VOICES FEARS FOR CURRENT PLAYERS

- By SEAN VINCENT

There is every likelihood that current profession­al rugby players will suffer long-term brain injury as the incidence of concussion increases, a surgeon who worked for the Welsh rugby Union has said.

The WrU, along with World rugby and the rugby Football Union, have been served with a legal letter of claim by a group of nine former players, including former england internatio­nal Steve Thompson and Wales flanker Alix Popham.

The duo are part of the first generation whose entire careers took place in rugby’s profession­al era, during which it is accepted that the game has become more physical and that the force of collisions has increased.

Professor John Fairclough is part of the Progressiv­e rugby group which is lobbying the game’s governing bodies to introduce measures to make the game safer, including a return to a minimum break of three weeks if a player suffers a concussion. Popham is also part of the group.

Fairclough fears that the problems being suffered by the likes of Thompson and Popham now will likely be replicated in those still playing who will retire over the next five years.

Citing a study in the Welsh profession­al game carried out by Cardiff Metropolit­an University between 2012 and 2016, Fairclough said: ‘Over a four-year surveillan­ce period the number of concussion­s was increasing.

‘The likelihood is we are going to see more (players with long-term brain injury). In the 30-odd years I’ve been sitting pitch-side there has been an increasing number of people with head injuries, so if we’re exposing more, yes we’re going to see an impact.’

Fairclough is set to give evidence to a parliament­ary inquiry examining the link between playing sports and longterm brain injury next week.

he feels the reduction of unnecessar­y risk is key to minimising the likelihood of players suffering neurodegen­erative disorders later in life.

‘The pressure of the boards is to get the best players on the pitch for as long as they can,’ he said.

‘There are slightly different viewpoints. They don’t want to harm their players but they want to err on the side of their business. What we’re saying is that at some point there needs to be a recognitio­n of being on the side of safety.

‘We don’t want to kill the sports with litigation. If there is a litigation case that is correct, of course that must go ahead.

‘But let’s try and remove those factors which we can remove. What we have to do in rugby and football is to reduce the risk so that the game can carry on in a safe way.’

The MPs on the DCMS committee will hear today from Professor Willie Stewart, who has been instrument­al in Sportsmail’s campaign on the risks of dementia.

The FIeLD study he led at the University of Glasgow published data in 2019 that profession­al footballer­s were three-and-ahalf times more likely to die of neurodegen­erative disorders than age-matched members of the population.

Since then, the national football associatio­ns of england, Northern Ireland and Scotland have advised coaches to avoid heading in training for children aged 11 and under.

A working group is looking at the possible introducti­on of limits on heading in training at the senior profession­al level.

repetitive heading of the ball was the cause of the brain injury which led to the death of former england and West Brom striker Jeff Astle aged 59 in 2002, according to the coroner in his case.

his daughter Dawn, who has campaigned for greater research into the link between heading and brain injury, is expected to give evidence to the committee at a later date.

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