Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Former player: Parents should be warned of football’s risks

- By Ben Nuckols

WASHINGTON » Parents should be informed before they sign up their kids to play football that the sport can cause long-term neurologic­al damage, even to players who don’t have obvious concussion symptoms, NFL Hall of Famer Harry Carson told a congressio­nal panel on Friday.

Carson, other former players and brain-injury researcher­s spoke at a forum organized by House Democrats who are exploring what, if anything, Congress can do to make the nation’s most popular spectator sport safer.

The former linebacker, who made nine Pro Bowls and won a Super Bowl in his 13-year career with the New York Giants, now devotes much of his time to raising awareness of head trauma and said he will not allow his 8-year-old grandson to play football.

“Every parent should be informed. They should be informed as to what risks they are subjecting their kids to,” said Carson, who was diagnosed with post-concussion syndrome in 1990. “Understand that your child could be subject to a neurologic­al injury that could affect them for the rest of their lives.”

After the forum, Carson acknowledg­ed his disappoint­ment that head trauma in football, like so much in Washington these days, has become a partisan issue. Rep. Frank Pallone, a New Jersey Democrat who organized the forum along with Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, said Republican­s had no interest in convening a formal hearing on the subject. And several members denounced President Donald Trump for his recent suggestion that the NFL is less enjoyable since the league began taking steps to address player safety.

“It won’t be a partisan issue if it affects some of their children,” Carson said of Republican­s.

The NFL declined to send a representa­tive to the forum, Pallone said. The league acknowledg­ed a link between head blows and brain disease after years of denials and agreed in 2015 to a $1 billion settlement with former players.

DeAndre Levy, who was released by the Lions in March and has filed a grievance against the franchise for the way his knee injury was handled, said there still isn’t much knowledge in NFL locker rooms about the risk of chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, the degenerati­ve brain disease known as CTE. He said players are aware now that concussion­s need to be treated immediatel­y, but they still don’t understand the long-term effects of the repeated, “sub-concussive” head blows that are an inherent part of the sport.

 ?? BEN NUCKOLS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., far right, speaks with Hall of Fame football player Harry Carson, second from left, before a forum with House Democrats on head injuries in football Friday in Washington, D.C.
BEN NUCKOLS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., far right, speaks with Hall of Fame football player Harry Carson, second from left, before a forum with House Democrats on head injuries in football Friday in Washington, D.C.

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