Teams disband during decline
Risk of head injuries is one factor; South is exception to trend.
On a ELLICOTT CITY, MD. — cool and rainy afternoon during the first week of classes at Centennial High School in thiswell-to-doBaltimore suburb, about50members of the boys cross-countryteamsaunteredacross the parking lot for their afterschool run.
Meanwhile, about 30 kids in helmets and pads went through drills on the pristine artificial turf at the school’s hillside football stadium.
“It used to be the other way around,” said Al Dodds, Centennial’s cross-country coach, who has 64 boys on his team this year. “Now, there’s a small turnout in football and cross-country is huge.”
Across the athletic complex, a practice football field sat empty, even though it was recently mowed and painted with yardage lines and hash marks. In years past, the junior varsity players would have been relegated to that grass field. But on this day they had the stadium to themselves, as they will for every practice this fall. Centennial isn’t fielding a varsity football team because not enough kids signed up to play.
The situation at Centennial — where a long history of losing has dampened students’ enthusiasm for football — is unique to this part of central Maryland, but there are plenty of similar examples around the United States. Participation in high school football is down 3.5 percent over the past five years, according to the annual survey by the National Association of State High School Federations, or NFHS.
The decline would be much more if not for a handful of states in the South and the West. Throughout the Northeast, the Midwest and theWestCoast, in communities urban and rural, wealthy andworking class, fewer kids are playing football.
“I’veneverbeeninterested in football,” said 16-year-old Zach Deming, a cross-country runner atCentennial with the solid build of a defensive back. “I’m afraid of getting hurt badly, like getting a serious concussion.”
The risks of football have never been more apparent. This summer, researchers at BostonUniversity said they’d found evidence of a brain disease linked to repeated head blows in nearly all of the 202 former football players they studied. Theathletes whose brainswere donated to the study had played in theNationalFootballLeague, collegeandevenhigh school.
Thereportdoesn’tconfirm chronic traumatic encephalopathy, known as CTE, is common in all football players, becausemany donors or their families participated in the study because of the players’ troublingsymptoms.
After years of denials, the NFL acknowledged a link between head blows and brain disease and agreed in 2015 to a $1 billion settlement to compensate former playerswho had accused the league of hiding the risks.
“There’snoquestionabout it. The amount of publicity, beginning with the NFL and what you see on national news, has caused concern among parents,” said Bob Gardner, the NFHS executive director. “Probablysome whowould have been more inclined to let their young men play, maybe are making different decisions now.”
A study published last month in the medical journal Translational Psychiatry showedthat kidswhoplayed football before age 12 were more than twice as likely to have mood and behavior problems.
The news hasn’t escaped the parents at Centennial, one of the top-rated public high schools in Maryland, where 97 percent of students go on to college. Just 10 percent of students qualify for free or reduced-price meals, an indicator of poverty.
“Families around here are more into academics,” Deming said.
Maryland isoneof 14states where participation in football was down 10 percent or more over the past five years, according to NFHS data. In all, 41 states saw a decline between the 201112 and 2016-17 school years, and just nine states and the District of Columbia saw increases.
In West Windsor Township, N.J., which borders PrincetonUniversity and has a median household income of $137,000, one of the two public high schools dropped varsity football this year, and the other might have to do the same next year.
Trinity High School in Manchester, N.H., also disbanded its varsity team, with hopes that it could return in a lower division next year.
At the first practice, the team “had three seniors, one junior, 12 sophomores and one freshman,” Athletic Director Chip Polak told the New Hampshire Union Leader in August. “Two of theseniorshaveneverplayed any kind of organized football and the other senior is dealing with concussion symptoms.”
In Ventura County, northeast of Los Angeles, Thousand Oaks High School disbandeditsjuniorvarsityteam this season because itneeded sophomores and juniors to fill out the varsity roster. In Marin County, north of San Francisco, Novato High School announced that it wouldn’t field a varsity team this year, but the programgot a last-minute reprievewhen more athletes than expected showed up for practice.
Among the states where participation is down more than 10 percent are Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois.