The Guardian (USA)

FA Cup set to introduce concussion substitute trial this season

- Paul MacInnes

The FA is to fast track trials of concussion substitute­s in this season’s FA Cup, following their approval by an expert Internatio­nal FA Board panel.

An Ifab committee has given its assent to the use of additional permanent substitute­s in the event of a player being concussed during a match. The recommenda­tion will go before Ifab chiefs at their annual business meeting next month.

It is expected that trials will be approved without reservatio­n and the English FA, which holds a seat on the Ifab board, quickly revealed its support for the plans. A spokespers­on said: “The FA will support the proposal at the meeting on 16 December with a view to implementi­ng the trials at the earliest possible stages of the FA Cup and Women’s FA Cup.”

Trials of concussion substitute­s had been expected to be implemente­d last season but the Covid-19 pandemic caused a suspension of the plans.

There remain some doubts as to whether the Premier League, alongside other major European domestic leagues, will agree to trials this season. Competitio­ns are understood to be waiting for further details before taking action, with concerns remaining over the legal ramificati­ons should the trials go wrong.

The FA has taken a more proactive approach and it follows an interventi­onthis year to ban players under the age of 12 from heading the ball in training. Further changes for youngsters seem likely and the FA has also committed greater funding to research into the links between heading the ball and neurodegen­erative conditions.

Concussion substitute­s would not relate specifical­ly to heading but to head injuries more broadly. The specific scheme recommende­d by Ifab would see an extra permanent substitute granted to a team who had assessed a player to be at risk of concussion.

An alternativ­e to the permanent

substituti­on would be a temporary one, as practised in rugby union. It is understood Ifab rejected this option, believing that because a number of concussion symptoms do not emerge until at least half an hour after an incident doctors may decide a player is fit to return to play and run the risk of a potentiall­y highly damaging repeat injury to the head.

 ??  ?? Burnley’s goalkeeper Nick Pope goes through the concussion protocol with medical staff after a blow to the head in Monday’s game with Crystal Palace. Photograph: Jack Phillips/JMP/Shuttersto­ck
Burnley’s goalkeeper Nick Pope goes through the concussion protocol with medical staff after a blow to the head in Monday’s game with Crystal Palace. Photograph: Jack Phillips/JMP/Shuttersto­ck

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