The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Authoritie­s ‘waking up’ to football brain trauma link

Ex-United star’s widow praises new studies into dementia in players

- GRAEME STRACHAN gstrachan@thecourier.co.uk

Dundee United legend Frank Kopel’s widow believes the authoritie­s are finally waking up to the issue of traumatic brain injuries in football.

Amanda Kopel, from Kirriemuir, suspects her husband’s dementia was caused by years spent heading a hard leather football.

He died just days after his 65th birthday, having lived with the disease from the age of 59.

A major study conducted by University of Texas experts has now investigat­ed the incidence of brain condition CTE (chronic traumatic encephalop­athy) in thousands of people who took part in contact sports.

Kevin Bieniek of UT Health San Antonio led the research which found nearly 6% of athletes and non-athletes have the neurodegen­erative disorder CTE, in what has been described as the largest and broadest study of its kind.

Dr Bieniek now directs the brain bank at the Glenn Biggs Institute for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegen­erative Diseases, which is part of UT Health San Antonio.

The team scanned obituaries and high school yearbooks of 2,566 individual­s whose brain autopsies are a part of the Mayo Clinic Tissue Registry.

The study focused on a variety of contact sports: baseball, basketball, boxing, football, hockey, lacrosse, soccer and wrestling.

Kopel made his name as a full-back for Dundee United, so would have felt the impact of a ball on his skull several times almost every day of his career.

Amanda said: “I always said that the damage was not done to these ex-players’ brains in the 90 minutes of a game, but in the five or six training days before a match, when these hard leather balls were continuall­y thrown at their heads.

“I’m glad that the authoritie­s in the UK are now beginning to wake up and recognise CTE, which a lot of them didn’t when Frankie was diagnosed with dementia.”

She added: “I remember our friend who is a neurologis­t in the States first mentioning CTE to me the day we were told Frankie had dementia.

“He said he and his colleagues were dealing with sportsmen who had dementia, and were being diagnosed with dementia, and finding CTE on their scans.

“That was in 2007-08 and I mentioned repeatedly over the next few years to a few if that could be another cause of the disease, but was never taken seriously.”

Hundreds of ex-footballer­s are also being recruited for a study into possible brain injuries caused by heading.

Around 300 former players aged 50 to 89 will have mental tests and answer questions on how often they used their head during their profession­al career.

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 ?? Picture: Kris Miller. ?? Amanda Kopel says she always suspected the damage to her husband Frank’s brain was caused by years spent heading a hard leather football.
Picture: Kris Miller. Amanda Kopel says she always suspected the damage to her husband Frank’s brain was caused by years spent heading a hard leather football.

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