Los Angeles Times

Players initiating more injury exams

- staff and wire reports

The NFL’s chief medical officer says more than a third of concussion evaluation­s this season are a result of players indicating they have symptoms, a much higher percentage than last season.

Allen Sills said in a conference call with reporters Tuesday that “about 37%” of the 379 concussion evaluation­s during the preseason and regular season have been “initiated by a self-report.” Sills said it was about 20% to 22% a year ago.

He called that increase “a positive developmen­t.”

Sills also said the rules for checking for a concussion were followed properly for Indianapol­is Colts quarterbac­k Jacoby Brissett on Sunday, when he was allowed to return to a game after a hit to the head. After the game, it was determined he did have concussion symptoms.

Sills says it is impossible to “capture 100% of concussion­s.”

NFL spokesman Joe Lockhart said on the call that the league and the players’ union are still reviewing whether the Seattle Seahawks properly followed concussion protocols with quarterbac­k Russell Wilson on Thursday night.

Sills also said data from the last five years show that the injury rate per game “is actually lower” for Thursdays than games played on other days of the week.

Carolina Panthers offensive lineman Matt Kalil is facing criminal charges of selling alcohol to a minor at his Minnesota pizza restaurant, even though he wasn’t present when the transactio­n occurred.

A charging document says a 17year-old server at Kalil’s Pieology Pizza in a Twin Cities suburb sold a beer to a 19-year-old woman Oct. 26.

The charges say Kalil is responsibl­e for the illegal sale because he’s the owner.

No one else was charged in the case.

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