San Francisco Chronicle

Dangers of youth football likened to smoking in PSA

- By Jimmy Golen Jimmy Golen is an Associated Press writer.

Everybody seems to be having fun when the kids in a new public service announceme­nt are just playing football, until one boy is thrown to the ground and the background music turns ominous.

Then, the coach starts handing out cigarettes.

“Tackle football is like smoking,” a youthful voiceover says as a smiling, motherly type lights a cigarette for one of the preteen players. “The younger I start, the longer I’m exposed to danger.”

“Tackle Can Wait” is part of a campaign by the Concussion Legacy Foundation to steer children under 14 years old into flag football and away from the contact version of the sport. The organizati­on says children who start playing tackle football at the age of 5 have 10 times the risk of developing the degenerati­ve brain disease chronic traumatic encephalop­athy compared to those who wait until they are 14.

“Tackle football is really a man’s game, and it’s incredibly dangerous to the developing brain,” CLF cofounder Chris Nowinski says in a video accompanyi­ng the ad.

“We now have the data that show that playing youth tackle football and developing CTE is correlated in a very similar way to smoking, and developing lung cancer,” Nowinski said. “We’re trying to help parents visualize that those two things are equally bad: Letting your kid smoke and letting your kid play tackle football are both bad ideas.”

Some states, including California, New York and Illinois, have discussed banning tackle football for children under 12. Until then, the PSA hopes to let parents know about the risks.

The spot’s creator is Angela Campigotto­Harrison, whose father, Joe Campigotto, played college football and developed stage 4 CTE, the degenerati­ve brain disease that has been connected to repetitive blows to the head in contact sports like football and boxing, even though he was never diagnosed with a concussion.

Look closely, and you may notice that the referee in the PSA is former 49ers linebacker Chris Borland, who retired from the NFL at the age of 24 after one season — and two diagnosed concussion­s.

“Waiting to play until later is better for the health of young athletes and obviously better for their brains,” Borland said in a separate video. “We don’t need to use young kids as guinea pigs. We can retool the game where they can still glean the benefits, enjoy themselves, get exercise and delay tackle football until junior high or high school.”

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