Daily Mirror

Football is swimming in money..yet players are left without help

World Cup hero’s son calls for better dementia support

- BY WARREN MANGER mirrornews@mirror.co.uk @DailyMirro­r

THE cost of caring for footballer­s with dementia caused by heading the ball could reach £1billion, campaigner­s have warned.

Now relatives, including the son of England World Cup winner Nobby Stiles, are calling for more support for ex-players living with dementia.

A 2021 study found that former profession­als were three-and-a-half times more likely than the general population to develop dementia.

For defenders, who are likely to have had more head impacts, the difference was almost five times.

Last year, the Premier League and Profession­al Footballer’s Associatio­n pledged £1million for former players living with dementia.

Campaigner­s welcomed the move but warned the game must go further. John Stiles, who lost dad Nobby to dementia in 2020, said: “Football is swimming in money yet you have players who’ve given their lives to the game being left without any form of help. It’s a scandal.”

John, who played for Leeds United, now fears he too could develop dementia and is campaignin­g to educate current players about the dangers of heading footballs.

The 59-year-old said: “This deadly epidemic has to stop. I’ve spoken with loads of former players and many of them are scared stiff.

“I’m terrified too. I set myself little exercises each day, like trying to finish the crossword.”

John is one of 30 former players who have begun legal action against football’s governing bodies.

Last month, sports minister Stuart Andrew said he was putting pressure on the Premier League and the PFA to go beyond the £1m Brain Health Fund they have launched.

He wants them to create a charity with sustainabl­e funding to support former players living with dementia.

MPs also called for dementia in sport to be classed as an industrial disease, so retired players could access benefits to pay care costs.

In all, five members of England’s victorious 1966 side developed dementia before their deaths. Ray Wilson died in 2018, Martin Peters in 2019, Nobby and Jack Charlton in 2020, and Bobby Charlton last year.

Judith Gates launched the charity Head Safe Football after her exfootball­er husband Bill was diagnosed with dementia in 2017.

A central defender for Middlesbro­ugh, he died last year, aged 79.

Her calculatio­ns showed caring for footballer­s with the disease could cost £1bn over the next 30 years. And some experts fear that current players could be even more susceptibl­e than those in the past, as they are heading balls travelling much faster.

Bill’s story, and the scale of the crisis facing football, are told in a new book, No Brainer, which will be launched this month. Judith said: “Bill was one of the first players to live the millionair­e lifestyle, because we ran a chain of sports shops.

“We had a home in the Cayman Islands and a house overlookin­g a golf course in Florida. But I would have swapped all of it for a healthy husband. “The Brain Health Fund is an important step but if you were paying the full care costs for 12 players for one year, that would use up the full £1m.

“Bill told me that he didn’t want any more players and their families to suffer like we have. He said he wanted to plant a tree, so others would benefit from the shade.”

ESTIMATES that caring for footballer­s with dementia could cost £1billion over the next 30 years is a ticking time bomb for the sport and a terrible tragedy.

Legal action launched by former players and improved research mean the game could change and cash from huge TV deals will be diverted from rich clubs into caring for those who were injured at work.

The £1million pledged last year by the Premier League and Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n is only a start.

 ?? ?? LION’S HEART Nobby Stiles with his son John in 2012
LION’S HEART Nobby Stiles with his son John in 2012
 ?? ?? UNITED Nobby with George Best and Bobby Charlton in 1968
UNITED Nobby with George Best and Bobby Charlton in 1968
 ?? ?? DEFENDER Bill Gates in 1969
DEFENDER Bill Gates in 1969
 ?? ?? BATTLE Judith and Bill Gates in care home
BATTLE Judith and Bill Gates in care home

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