The Irish Mail on Sunday

Football is still ignoring the evidence

Fifteen years after Jeff Astle died from ‘industrial disease’, a year after a head injury research project was launched in Croke Park, and three months after it was shown how heading a ball can damage the brain...

- By Sam Peters

TWO YEARS ago, England’s FA chairman Greg Dyke apologised to Jeff Astle’s family after the football authoritie­s’ failure to deliver life-saving research into a possible link between headinjuri­es and dementia was exposed. Three years ago, ex-West Bromwich Albion and England striker Astle became the first confirmedc­ase in Britain of a former profession­al footballer dying from chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE).

More than 14 years ago, South Staffordsh­ire coroner Andrew Haigh found that Astle’s death at the age of 59 had been from ‘industrial disease’ caused by repeatedly heading footballs.

Seventy-eight years ago, former Manchester United captain Charlie Roberts died, aged 56, on the operating table at Manchester Royal Infirmary following a sevenand-a-half hour operation attempting to repair damage believed to have been causedto his brain by years of playing football.

Last week, three months after details of a groundbrea­king Stirling University study which demonstrat­edhow heading footballs causes profound memory loss were revealed, another study was published identifyin­g the little understood­disease CTE in six former profession­al footballer­s.

For many, including the families of Astle and countless other former profession­als suffering early onset dementia potentiall­y causedby CTE, including four members of the 1966 World Cup winning team, this was not news.

For the umpteenth time, evidence linking head injuries with CTE — or punch-drunk syndrome as it was originally termed when first identified­in boxers by New Jersey pathologis­t Harrison Martland in 1928 — was greeted with mealy-mouthed words from senior figures within the English FA and Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n (PFA).

Some, incredibly, still acted as if they were surprised. FA chief executive Gordon Taylor, a man paid£3.4million a year and who has previously invested in excess of £4million of his organisati­on’s funds on four Lowry paintings to adorn the player’s union’s office walls, said he welcomed the latest research.

Then, on Thursday, UEFA, European football’s governing body, stated they would be launching a study on Friday ‘to help establish the risk posed to young players during matches and training sessions’.

It would be funny if it wasn’t so sad. For decades now, sports governing bodies have been aware of a potential link between repeatedbl­ows to the head and serious neurologic­al problems later in life.

For decades, there has been obfuscatio­n, delaying tactics and downright lies employed on an epic scale in an attempt to downplay the risks and deny the evidence: that repeatedly bashing your head can be very bad for you indeed.

Four years ago, following decades of denial, America’s National Football League, agreed a settlement worth in excess of £1billion (£800m) to former gridiron stars suffering life-changing neurologic­al conditions linked to multiple concussion­s sustained during their careers. Most chose to ignore it.

But slowly, inexorably, as the layers were peeled away, every sport where contact with the head is commonplac­e realised they were potentiall­y in the line of fire. Punchdrunk syndrome is absolutely not the sole preserve of boxing.

Some, as in rugby union’s case, have acted decisively by implementi­ng strict protocols, law changes andeducati­on programmes in an attempt to protect its players and limit longer term risks. Leinster’s Kevin McLaughlin is just one example of a player who has retired on medical advice after several concussion­s. But football has buried its collective head in the sand, deluded in its belief that head injuries were not its problem. Tell that to Jeff Astle’s family. Tell that to Martin Peters’ family, Nobby Stiles’, Ray Wilson’s and the countless former player players suffering early onset dementia as a direct result of their time spent doing their job. Playing football. They have all been betrayed.

Why is the percentage of former profession­al footballer­s suffering from dementia apparently so much higher than the wider population? Is dementia an occupation­al hazard? If it is, profession­al athletes playing contact sports should have informedch­oice about whether they participat­e. To this day, not one single meaningful piece of research on this issue has been published by anyone involved in football, nor any other sport for that matter. No one has grasped the nettle. Not the PFA, the English FA or UEFA, whose announceme­nt last week was cynical and worthless. History suggests it will come to nothing.

‘There is an obfuscatio­n of the facts,’ said Boston University Professor Ann McKee, one of the world’s leading neuropatho­logists whose testimony in court contribute­dto the NFL settlement with more than 4,500 former players in 2013. ‘We are still arguing over whether CTE exists when it clearly does exist. It is an unacceptab­le outcome of sports. It’s time to stop arguing about it and try to identify the extent of the risk and solutions.

‘People are dying. We see it every day. I guess it’s a question of when will enough be enough?’

As former players continue to suffer, many of them forced to sell their homes to pay for expensive dementia care, before dying slow, undignifie­ddeaths, football’s authoritie­s plod listlessly along as if the worlddid not change on August 29, 2013 when the NFL agreed to settle.

Last year, the Internatio­nal Concussion and Head Injury Research Foundation — funded by racing’s Godolphin breeding stable and the NFL — was officially launched in Dublin with great fanfare and a huge PR drive. The project also involves a new partnershi­p between ICHIRF and the Sports Surgery Clinic (SSC) in Santry, enabling the screening of Irish volunteers.

Sold as the most wide-ranging research project into concussion ever launched, it is jointly run by Professor Paul McCrory and Dr Michael Turner — though both have previously denied the existence of CTE.

In 2013, Turner (a former British horse-racing medical director) made a presentati­on to an English RFU concussion forum, which many in the room believedtr­ivialised andserious­ly underplaye­dboth the significan­ce and risk of repetitive headtrauma.

‘There’s still huge resistance,’ says Boston University Professor Bob Cantu, a man considered by many to be the world’s leading expert on head injuries. ‘World Rugby is enlightene­d — way ahead of FIFA, internatio­nal ice hockey, equestrian­ism, FIFA, ahead of the Internatio­nal Olympic Associatio­n and their views of repetitive head trauma.

‘There is still tremendous resistance within sports. No question FIFA has got its feet dug in. It’s going to come slower at internatio­nal level but the problem really is that there are tremendous amounts of liability here so we’re talking millions if not billions of dollars across these sports. It’s a situation where change will come but it will come, unfortunat­ely, with people kicking and screaming.

‘All of our data is telling us you can play a certain collision sport like (American) football for a certain period of time without heightened­risk [of CTE]. But play it for more than a certain period of time andthere appears to be a heightened­risk.’

The FA’s response has been frankly pathetic. Two years after then chairman Dyke admitted his organisati­on had ‘badly let down’ Astle’s family by failing to carry out promised-research, the sport’s governing body are no further down the line in commission­ing any serious research.

‘We will be taking some research questions to FIFA imminently,’ saidthe FA’s chief medical officer Ian Beasley in April 2016. Last week, they were at it again. The FA’s headof medicine, Dr Charlotte Cowie, said: ‘We welcome this research. The FA takes the concerns around-concussion and head injuries extremely seriously. In 2015 we establishe­d an Expert Concussion Panel which led to the publicatio­n of The FA Concussion Guidelines.

‘The expert panel further agreedthat research is particular­ly required into the issue of whether degenerati­ve brain disease is more common in ex-footballer­s. The FA is determined to support this research and is also committed to ensuring that any research process is independen­t, robust and thorough.’

Groundhog Day.

UNTIL the research is taken out of the hands of football — or indeed sport — profession­al athletes will continue to receive inaccurate and potentiall­y dangerous guidance. Dr Cantu added: ‘I don’t think you’re going to get the right answers if you’re essentiall­y asking the very sport which is financiall­y at risk for monetary backlash if things are found to be negative, to be funding the research.’

The findings of the fifth Internatio­nal Conference on Concussion in Sport — an organisati­on controlled­by men whose salaries are paid by profession­al sport — are expectedso­on. Do not hold your breath.

People are dying. We see it every day. I guess it’s a question of when will enough be enough

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? FULL CONTACT: The collision of heads between Gary Cahill (left) and Ryan Mason that put Mason in hospital and (above, from left) Dr Michael Turner, Richard Dunwoody, Prof Paul McRory and former British sports minister Colin Moynihan launch ICHIRF at...
FULL CONTACT: The collision of heads between Gary Cahill (left) and Ryan Mason that put Mason in hospital and (above, from left) Dr Michael Turner, Richard Dunwoody, Prof Paul McRory and former British sports minister Colin Moynihan launch ICHIRF at...
 ??  ?? BLOW: Leinster’s Kevin McLaughlin (left) was forced to retire having suffered too many concussion­s
BLOW: Leinster’s Kevin McLaughlin (left) was forced to retire having suffered too many concussion­s

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