Marysville Appeal-Democrat

NFL player’s injury reignites debate among parents about youth sports

- Tribune News Service The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on

ATLANTA – No one can downplay the popularity of football in Georgia this week as the University of Georgia gears up for another run at the national title. The Georgia General Assembly has planned its opening day agenda around the Bulldogs’ championsh­ip contest Monday night in Los Angeles with Texas Christian University.

While parents may admire the gridiron magic of UGA quarterbac­k Stetson Bennett and his indefatiga­ble teammates, do they want their children to grow up to play football?

More parents will likely question the wisdom of allowing their children to play after Monday’s terrifying on-camera collapse of Buffalo safety Damar Hamlin during a Cincinnati Bengalsbuf­falo Bills game. Now in critical condition, Hamlin went into cardiac arrest after a hit to the chest.

“We have a pretty athletic child and at the request of previous NFL players and our fears of concussion­s and CTE we refused to enroll him in football,” said Gwinnett parent Kim Claros. “He’s a high schooler now and still asks to play. We are still opposed and events such as this consistent­ly validate our decision.”

“Tackle football has been off the table for us,” said Decatur parent Tyler Waidner Smith.

Her son once expressed some interest, but Smith and her husband talked to him about the risks of brain injuries.

“Since then, he has been on board,” said Smith, nothing that her son and his middle school classmates prefer lacrosse, soccer, baseball or basketball. “I think kids here feel football is great to watch and it’s great to go to games and cheer their team, but they don’t want to play,” she said.

There has been a drop in the number of high school boys playing the game in the last decade. Nationwide, 973,792 boys played high school football in the 2021-22 school year, more than double the 436,465 on soccer teams. However, 10 years earlier 1,095,993 boys played football. Two factors may explain that dip — parent fears over their children suffering brain injuries and school concerns over liability for those injuries. While high school football rosters are falling, National Federation of State High School Associatio­ns data show the Friday night lights still shine brightly in Georgia where annual participat­ion has held steady at about 32,000 players.

Football has come under fire from the research linking the sport to traumatic brain injuries that can leave lasting and devastatin­g effects. In 2021, four high school players died, three during games and one in practice from traumatic brain injuries, according to the Annual Survey of Football Injury Research. The survey documented 13 other football deaths that year — 11 in high school — related to conditioni­ng and running. Those deaths were largely the result of sudden cardiac arrest and heat stroke.

One of the greatest worries is chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, a degenerati­ve brain disease linked to repeated blows to the head that can only be confirmed after death. CTE has been found in the brains of more than 315 former NFL players, according to Boston University’s Chronic Traumatic Encephalop­athy Center. CTE has also been associated with other high contact sports including boxing, soccer and hockey.

“My husband is 39 and was incredibly talented and played at a highly competitiv­e level of hockey from the age of 13-19. He’s also been diagnosed with early onset Parkinson’s and the likely root cause is due to repeated concussion­s and brain trauma,” said Georgia parent Ashley. (The Atlanta Journalcon­stitution has agreed with Ashley’s request not to use her last name, who is concerned about sharing informatio­n about her husband’s health.)

His last injury — and his last time playing — was in 2011. It occurred in a men’s league play when someone crosscheck­ed him at the base of his skull. “His tremors and coordinati­on issues began shortly after that. He likely also has some level of CTE, but we won’t know that until he passes for sure. We have two small children and we are not allowing them to play any contact sport due to these concerns. It’s just not worth it. At all,” she said.

A former teacher and track coach in Fayette County now living in California, Renee Lucas Haugen said all sports carry risk. “I have seen a serious head injury while pole vaulting. I saw a 16-year-old’s femur break in half while running a 2 mile race in track and field. There is risk in everything, and hidden susceptibi­lity in some athletes in all sports,” she said.

While heartbreak­ing, Hamlin’s devastatin­g injury is rare, Haugen said. “Hopefully, it will cause everyone to examine safety procedures. But I don’t think anything will or should be canceled. If football didn’t exist, would he be playing rugby, or basketball, or baseball, or soccer, or running track?”

 ?? Getty Images/tns ?? Buffalo Bills players react after teammate Damar Hamlin (3) was injured against the Cincinnati Bengals during the first quarter at Paycor Stadium on January 02, 2023, in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Getty Images/tns Buffalo Bills players react after teammate Damar Hamlin (3) was injured against the Cincinnati Bengals during the first quarter at Paycor Stadium on January 02, 2023, in Cincinnati, Ohio.

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