Los Angeles Times

Fighting concussion­s head-on

Multiple studies demonstrat­e the risk of concussion­s in the beautiful game. A former MLS star helps sound the alarm.

- KEVIN BAXTER reporting from glendale, ariz.

Former pro soccer player Taylor Twellman is determined to raise awareness of the risks of brain damage young players face routinely in sports.

“I look completely normal, right?” a completely normal-looking Taylor Twellman says.

It’s something he asks often, and the response is always the same: nodding heads, words of affirmatio­n, smiles. In reality, though, Twellman is far from normal. Three and a half years ago, the then-new England Revolution forward and former Major League Soccer most valuable player was accidental­ly punched in the jaw by Galaxy goalkeeper Steve Cronin while scoring on a header. Although Twellman didn’t know it then — and wouldn’t for months — he sustained a concussion on the play. And despite appearance­s, he hasn’t been normal since. Twellman played the rest of the 2008 season, but he was forced to retire two games into the 2009 season because of health problems related to the concussion. He currently works as a soccer analyst for ESPN.

“Now I’m behind the eight ball the

pulled defending champion Game On Dude out of the mix to run in the March 31Dubai World Cup with its $10-million purse. But Ultimate Eagle got burned up in the early torrid pace set by Gladding and struggled home 10th in a 13-horse field.

It wasn’t hard to interpret how Ultimate Eagle’s trainer, Mike Pender, felt about the way the race unfolded. Gladding, trained by John Sadler and ridden by Joel Rosario, did the opening quarter in 22.26 seconds and pulled Ultimate Eagle to a 44.55 lead at the half mile.

“They were hellbent on getting the lead — Rosario and Sadler’s horse,” Pender said. “And when you go 44 and change going a mile and a quarter [total race distance] … like we said, anybody who tries to chase us is going to pay the price, and Gladding was hitting the reverse button at the three-eighth’s pole. We kept on going — credit to our horse. You can’t go a mile and a quarter in 44 and change. It’s literally impossible — unless you are Secretaria­t.” Gladding finished 11th. Setsuko, who was second last year after being involved in a scary bumping incident with Game On Dude and Twirling Candy, finished second again. Uh Oh Bango grabbed third and paid $6.60, behind Ron The Greek’s $9.20, $4.40 and $3.40 and Setsuko’s $3.60 and $2.80.

In fourth was trainer Julio Canani’s Holladay Road, coming from 10th place with a quartermil­e to go. Entering the race, there was one ticket still alive in the Pick Six and that was one that had Holladay Road winning. The second-place finish of Mr. Commons, a likely singled pick-six horse for most bettors in the race preceding the Big ’Cap, the $300,000 Grade I Frank E. Kilroe mile, had reduced the field to one big ticket. Sunday’s Pick Six carry-over is $430,582.

The first of the three cardclosin­g Grade I races, the $250,000 Las Virgenes, was one by Baffert’s Eden’s Moon. That gave the redhot trainer four victories for the day, with Stirred Up taking the second, Mile High Magic the fourth and Hoorayforh­ollywood the seventh. Baffert also had an entry in the Big ’Cap, but Prayer For Relief finished second to last.

A rare occurrence took place in the third race, which ended up being called a no-contest for bettors. Muny jumped early and broke through the gate, at almost the exact second the button was pushed to open the gates. Several horses left, while several others stayed with gate assistants holding tight to the reins. Three horses left the gate, ran the race and received the normal owners’ pot distributi­on. All bets just on that race were refunded and exotic bets — Pick 3, Pick 4 and Pick 5 — made all starters eligible as winners to keep tickets alive.

That was just part of what made this Big ’Cap day feel a bit unusual. The dominating victory by Ron The Greek, a short-odds horse but one not on many people’s radar, contribute­d to that.

But one of the owners, Wachtel, saw several omens.

“Years ago, we had three horses running and I drove over to Aqueduct to be there when they ran,” he said. “I got there and the parking lot was empty. The races were at Belmont Park, so I drove like crazy, made it and all three finished first, although one was disqualifi­ed.

“Then, the other night, I was watching TV with my 8-year-old and on comes the movie ‘Seabiscuit,’ the part where Tobey Maguire is convincing somebody they have to run in the Big ’Cap. I told my 8-year-old that’s where I was going.

“Then I drove to the airport to fly here, got to Laguardia, tried to find my gate and realized my flight was from Kennedy, not Laguardia. I had 20 minutes to make it, and I did.”

The crowd, on a near-perfect sunny day, was 26,147, up from last year’s all-time low of 23,304. The on-track handle on the Big ’Cap alone was $2,826,786, up from last year’s $2,228,669.

The Big ’Cap village used to be much bigger than that in all regards, but at least the line on the chart is heading upward.

bill.dwyre@latimes.com

 ?? Luis M. Alvarez Associated Press ?? TAYLOR TWELLMAN, right, goes for a header in a 2008 game. A concussion that season led to the end of his distinguis­hed Major League Soccer career the next year. “I’d still be playing,” he says. “I was 28 when I got hit. I had some time left in me.”
Luis M. Alvarez Associated Press TAYLOR TWELLMAN, right, goes for a header in a 2008 game. A concussion that season led to the end of his distinguis­hed Major League Soccer career the next year. “I’d still be playing,” he says. “I was 28 when I got hit. I had some time left in me.”
 ?? Ronald Martinez Getty Images ?? ABBY WAMBACH dismisses the danger: “I feel OK. I love what I do. I don’t think it’s harmful to me or my body.”
Ronald Martinez Getty Images ABBY WAMBACH dismisses the danger: “I feel OK. I love what I do. I don’t think it’s harmful to me or my body.”
 ?? Benoit Photo ?? RON THE GREEK and Jose Lezcano, center, draw away from the field to win the Santa Anita Handicap.
Benoit Photo RON THE GREEK and Jose Lezcano, center, draw away from the field to win the Santa Anita Handicap.

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