The Columbus Dispatch

Top Ohio court takes up concussion case

- By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

The Ohio Supreme Court will decide whether the widow of a former Notre Dame football player can sue the school and the NCAA over allegation­s her husband was disabled by concussion­s from his college career in the 1970s.

Steve Schmitz was suffering from dementia and early onset Alzheimer’s disease when he and his wife, Yvette, filed a lawsuit in Cuyahoga County in October 2014. The lawsuit alleged both institutio­ns showed “reckless disregard” for the safety of college football players and for their failure to educate and protect players from concussion­s.

The lawsuit said the link between repeated blows to the head and brain-related injuries and illnesses had been known for decades, but it was not until 2010 that the NCAA required colleges to formulate concussion protocols to remove an athlete from a game or practice and be evaluated by doctors.

Steve Schmitz died in February 2015. The lawsuit said the Cleveland Clinic diagnosed him in 2012 with chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE, a brain disease attributed to receiving numerous concussion­s.

A judge ruled that too much time had passed for Schmitz to sue, a decision overturned by a state appeals court.

Attorneys for Schmitz argue he never knew he had been exposed to the risk of brain disease posed by “concussive blows to the head” during football. Receiving “dings” while playing and becoming temporaril­y disoriente­d is not the same as knowing at the time of an injury, David Langfitt, an attorney representi­ng Schmitz’ widow, told the court Wednesday.

A ruling in favor of Schmitz’s widow would allow her to return to court and argue the specific allegation­s regarding the impact of concussion­s on her husband, a running back and receiver.

Notre Dame and the NCAA argue the statute of limitation­s for Schmitz to have sued date back to his playing days when he first realized he suffered head injuries.

As such, the two-year window for filing a personal injury claim had long passed, the institutio­ns say.

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