Toronto Star

We’ve let coaches kill their players

Jordan McNair was pushed to his death by the excesses of college football dictators

- SALLY JENKINS

Heatstroke didn’t kill Jordan McNair, the berserk excesses of coach D.J. Durkin and his staff did.

No amount of “honouring” McNair can pretty up that fact.

The investigat­ion into what Maryland did wrong after McNair collapsed is misplaced. It’s what came first — the deranged college coaching mentality that drove McNair to the staggering point — that requires full inquiry, and no one should be allowed to forget it.

An NFL player hasn’t died from heat exertion in 17 years. That’s the full measure of the crude, knuckle-dragging stupidity at work here. You know how many kids NCAA football coaches have killed with conditioni­ng drills in that same period? Twenty-seven. I say “kill,” because that’s what it is, when tyrants force captive young men to run themselves to death, out of their own outdated fears of weakness. Why is the NCAA tolerating this kill rate, which is unmatched at any other level of football?

Profession­al coaches have understood since the lamentable loss of Minnesota Vikings lineman Korey Stringer in 2001 that you don’t build a player by driving him to the brink of organ failure in practice. Only the most backward or mean coach still thinks August sprints are the only way to breed toughness. Everyone else has learned better, everyone but lunatic over-striving NCAA wannabes who are in such a big a hurry to prove themselves big dogs. The Pete Carrolls and Bill Belichicks aren’t putting their players in the ground; they’re putting them in virtual reality chambers. Only the NCAA tolerates, and refuses to regulate, unhinged dictators who think football has to be conditione­d with sadistic extremes.

“They get to dictate these things, and we get to keep burying athletes until we make definitive changes to the culture,” said Dr. Douglas Casa, a kinesiolog­ist who serves as CEO of the Korey Stringer Institute at the University of Connecticu­t.

Since 2000, there have been 40 athlete fatalities in conditioni­ng sessions in multiple sports across the NCAA, yet not a single death on the field, according to Casa. This despite the fact that schools have all the education and tools to prevent it: Heatstroke exertion is 100per-cent survivable with a thermomete­r and some ice.

The NFL has eliminated it altogether and, to its credit, continues to consult with the Stringer Institute on research and best practices to prevent sudden deaths. The NCAA, on the other hand, has remained lethally antiquated. Unlike NFL players, collegians have “no voice, and no rights,” Casa pointed out.

McNair was forced to run 10 sprints of 110 yards, until his body temperatur­e was 106. It was a nonsensica­l workout that had zero football relevance and demonstrat­ed nothing about his character except that he was willing to work himself into a coma for fear of punishment from an all-powerful authority figure.

“It’s a totally unregulate­d environmen­t,” Casa said.

University of Oklahoma trainer Scott Anderson has a term for this idiotic and outmoded brand of collegiate workout: “irrational intensity.”

Anderson wrote a 2017 academic paper entitled, “NCAA Football Off-Season Training: Unanswered Prayers,” that documents the stunning kill rate in the college game.

“Collegiate football’s dirty little secret is that we are killing our players — not in competitio­n, almost never in practice, and rarely because of trauma — but primarily because of nontraumat­ic causes in the off-season alleged to performanc­e enhance,” he wrote.

Anderson cites the example of a player who died from exertion-induced asthma, after being forced to run 2,160 yards of serial sprints in just 12 minutes, with a1:1work-to-rest ratio. You know what the work-to-rest ratio in an actual football game is? Somewhere between 1:8 and 1:10.

Coaches conduct these workouts for only one reason: because they have backward no- tions of man-making and are completely unread in the latest sports science. Obviously, the medical fate of other people’s sons should not be in their hands. And yet there is no NCAA rule restrictin­g conditioni­ng workouts or mandating independen­t medical care and monitoring for student-athletes. Maryland’s president Wallace Loh declined to implement such a proposal. So, McNair was left to lurch and pant into the hands of athletic department employees who answer not to a medical centre but to an impatient-for-success head coach. If McNair had independen­t care, someone would have taken his temperatur­e, and iced him down, and he would be alive. Instead what he got was a trainer screaming, “Drag his ass across the field!”

The heat didn’t kill McNair any more than the grass did. What killed him was an overheated attitude that came from the top. D.J. Durkin is not an outlier as a coach, and he’s not specific to Maryland. Far from it. He’s an acolyte of Ohio State’s Urban Meyer. He has coached at Notre Dame, Stanford, Florida and Michigan. He has worked under Will Muschamp and Jim Harbaugh. He is the all-too-common NCAA coach. You’ve seen and heard coaches like Durkin a million times.

He’s the guy who brags he’s only seen one movie in the last eight or 10 years, Lone Survivor. He’s the guy who once headbutted one of his helmeted players and made his own head bleed. He’s the guy who boasted in an interview to Sports Illustrate­d that Richard Sherman wasn’t that tough until he got ahold of him. Who bragged in the same interview that he has sat in meetings in which coaches decided whether a kid was a player, or “a phoney, a fraud, total piece of garbage.” He’s the guy who divides players into two groups: wolfpack or prey. And who has said, “When we’re with our players, we’re at a workout with our guys, that is all in. We’re fighting for our lives.”

This guy, and all the guys like him, need to be prevented from ever jeopardizi­ng young lives again.

“We get to keep burying athletes until we make ... changes to the culture.” DR. DOUGLAS CASA KINESIOLOG­IST

 ?? BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR THE BALTIMORE SUN VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jordan McNair, seen here in 2016 as a high school player, collapsed during practice with the University of Maryland in May. He died on June 13, of what his family said was heatstroke.
BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR THE BALTIMORE SUN VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jordan McNair, seen here in 2016 as a high school player, collapsed during practice with the University of Maryland in May. He died on June 13, of what his family said was heatstroke.

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