Sunday Mirror

We’re crying out for help. But Rugby League has washed its hands of us

- BY WARREN MANGER Scoops@sundaymirr­or.co.uk

SEVENTY-FIVE rugby league stars stricken by brain injuries will launch a legal case against the sport’s rulers TOMORROW.

Ex-Great Britain scrum half Bobbie Goulding says he and fellow pros have been left sobbing, scared and suicidal after years of blows to the head.

They are racked by illnesses like dementia, Parkinson’s and epilepsy.

And their landmark case – which could run into tens of millions of pounds – claims the Rugby Football League failed to protect them.

The players are the sport’s first stars to sue over brain injuries – joining 220 rugby union pros who launched a claim earlier this year. Forty ex-footballer­s are ready to bring a claim for dementia-related negligence too.

Former St Helens star Bobbie, 50, is among many who first suffered symptoms in their 30s, more than a decade before their diagnosis.

He says: “We are crying out for help. It’s the biggest pandemic that’s ever going to hit the sport and it’s happening now. But Rugby League has washed its hands of us.”

The father of four was diagnosed last year with dementia and probable chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE) – known as boxer’s brain as it is caused by repeated head blows.

Wife Paula, 53, was with him when he was given the grim news.

He adds: “When the specialist said, ‘You’ve got early-onset dementia,’ Paula and I both started crying. Our lives changed in an instant.

“The scariest bit is not knowing how fast it will progress. I don’t know what tomorrow will bring.

“I’ve never been scared of anything in my life, but I’m scared of this.

HEADACHES

“I sit looking out the window for six or seven hours. I don’t realise time is passing. There’s mad, bad headaches, where you feel so sick you can’t lift your head off the pillow and I have to take anti-dizziness tablets every day, otherwise the room starts spinning.

“I keep forgetting things. The other day I went to get something to eat and, without thinking, I took my teeth out and put them in the fridge. I couldn’t find them for 24 hours.”

Fellow claimants include England’s Francis Maloney, Welshmen Mickii Edwards and Lenny Woodard, and Scots Jason Roach and Ryan MacDonald. Their lawyer will list 53 key allegation­s in a formal “letter of claim” tomorrow – five days before the Rugby League Cup starts in Newcastle.

It accuses the RFL of neglect for failing to take reasonable steps to ensure head injuries were properly assessed and treated. It also stands accused of failing to protect youngsters, by allowing 16-year-olds to play profession­ally. New demands include:

Limiting physical contact in training and safety first protocols at all levels, from school level to the pro game.

Better postconcus­sive care and extending rest and recovery periods after head injuries to at least 21 days.

A concussion database and annual “MOTs” including brain scans to identify problems and help players to make an informed choice about the risks.

The prospect of a big payout has seen the RFL’s annual insurance bill quadruple to £1.5million.

Telling of his despair, Bobbie says: “Before I was diagnosed, I was all set to commit suicide. The only thing that stopped me was looking to my left and seeing a photo of my children.

“I collapsed on the floor and burst out crying and didn’t stop for hours. I’ve had 30, maybe 40 players contact me who want to end it all and I’ve sobbed with them.

“Frightened to death, they don’t know where to turn. I’ve tried to get them tested and get them help, but no one from the sport has contacted them. Rugby League doesn’t care.”

Bobbie was nicknamed Bobbie

Dazzler in a prolific career that saw him coach the French team. But like many players, he collected more head injuries than accolades.

Recalling one knockout injury, he says: “I don’t remember anything until I was in the car and lost control of all my bodily functions. It was like the Exorcist, but I played six days later. You’re looking at 15 bad concussion­s during my career.

“Ones that left you seeing stars happened nearly every game and all the time in training.”

Teacher Paula adds: “It seems crazy now, but we laughed it off. We didn’t know better.”

Bobbie takes anti-dizziness pills and a range of extracts he hopes can slow down his dementia. He follows a gruelling daily training regime and now reads more to stay alert. He continues: “I started off reading Concussion, the book about brain injury in the NFL. “And looking after my four-year-old grandson Ralphy three or four days a week is my antidote. I’m lucky to have a lovely family. I want to spend as much time with them because I don’t know if I’m going to be the same bloke in six months.

“Paula checks my medication and handles all the bills because I get confused, frustrated. That’s on top of being the breadwinne­r. That stings, because I’m an old-fashioned guy.

“If I deteriorat­e over the next 12 months, how is she supposed to care for me as well as work full time? She

gets no help from the authoritie­s. That’s not the future I want for her.”

Bobbie believes his symptoms began 15 years ago with headaches, mood swings, and depression. Struggling with booze, he smashed his car into a tree at 50mph – suffering a punctured lung, broken ribs and a broken shoulder.

“I admitted I was an alcoholic,” he says. “But I didn’t know what else was happening inside my head. They need to get to the bottom of why players are doing things out of the norm.”

Bobbie went to a Sporting Chance clinic for his alcoholism. But he says: “I haven’t heard from the Rugby Football League since I came out. It’s all very well ticking boxes on alcohol and depression, sending people to Sporting Chance.

“But this goes deeper than that. They don’t want to know.”

A study of elite rugby union players reveals they were 2.5 times more likely to have dementia and Parkinson’s and 15 times more likely to develop motor neurone disease. And England’s 2003

Rugby Union World Cup winner Steve Thompson, 44, has told how dementia robbed him of his sporting memories.

Bobbie has pledged his brain for medical examinatio­n, as CTE can only be diagnosed by postmortem analysis. He says: “I look back at players who have taken their own lives.

“We don’t know what injuries they had. It would be interestin­g to look inside their brains. That’s why I made my decision to leave my brain to science now.”

The 75 players are represente­d by Richard Boardman, of Rylands Sports Law.

He says: “We are of the view that this is an epidemic. Everything our experts have seen suggests that up to half of elite rugby players will end up with some kind of neurologic­al impairment.

“That means thousands have brain damage and are struggling with symptoms but aren’t aware what they have. We think

hundreds of premature deaths of rugby players may be linked to brain damage.

“Players are retiring with hundreds of thousands of sub-concussive blows on top of the concussion­s. Rugby urgently needs to change if the sport is going to survive.”

A spokesman for Rugby Football League said: “The RFL takes player safety and welfare extremely seriously, and it has been desperatel­y sad to hear of any players’ difficulti­es.

“Player welfare is always of paramount importance.

“As a result of scientific knowledge, the sport of Rugby League continues to improve and develop its approach to concussion, head injury assessment, education, management and prevention across the whole game. We will continue to use medical evidence and research to reinforce and enhance our approach.”

 ?? ?? STAR Bobbie was dubbed ‘Dazzler’
STAR Bobbie was dubbed ‘Dazzler’
 ?? Picture: JULIAN HAMILTON ?? SHAKEN Bobbie and wife Paula were left in tears
Picture: JULIAN HAMILTON SHAKEN Bobbie and wife Paula were left in tears

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