Stamford Advocate

Murphy: Injuries breaking college athletes’ careers, bodies

- By Ana Radelat

HARTFORD — Sen. Chris Murphy on Monday released his third critical report on college athletics, focusing on what he considers the failure to protect student athletes from devastatin­g and sometimes fatal injuries.

“Across college sports, too many athletes leave their collegiate careers broken,” said Murphy’s report, “Madness Inc.: How College Sports Can Leave Athletes Broken and Abandoned.”

At a press conference in Hartford, Murphy said: “I know how important athletics is to the developmen­t of a young person.”

But he said college athletic programs, especially football programs that earn schools millions of dollars, turn a blind eye to the dangers posed by athletic competitio­n and the rigors of training, “leaving behind athletes who are poor and whose bodies remain broken.”

Murphy said he has developed a bipartisan “working group” with other

senators, including Mitt Romney, RUtah, Marco Rubio, RFla., Cory Booker, DN.J., and David Perdue, RGa., to determine whether federal legislatio­n is needed to reform college sports.

And a state legislator, Rep. Derek Slap, DWest Hartford, said he is considerin­g state legislatio­n to address problems on the field.

“We can’t wait for the NCAA to make the right decisions,” Slap said.

At the same press conference, former Notre Dame football player Alan Sack, who played on the school’s 1966 national championsh­ip team, said some college coaches physically and verbally abuse their players.

“The NCAA is a disgrace,” Sack said.

The National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n did not have an immediate response.

The NCAA has given schools concussion protocols that tell them how to treat players with head injuries, a protocol some neurologis­ts say is not strict enough and not always followed.

In August, the NCAA settled several lawsuits by agreeing to pay $70 million to cover medical testing and diagnosis for former athletes and put $5 million toward concussion and injury research. About 4 million former athletes could be affected by the settlement.

Murphy’s study said that nearly 20 percent of college athletic directors reported instances where a coach played an athlete who had been deemed “medically out of participat­ion,” putting them at risk for severe injuries.

“That is because coaches are driven to win by the tremendous amount of money in college athletics,” Murphy said.

His report detailed some of the best known tragedies in college sports, including the stories of Kyle Hardrick, a University of Oklahoma basketball player who lost his scholarshi­p and was left with unpaid medical bills after suffering a torn meniscus for which his college didn’t want to pay; and Doug Ploetz, a former Texas Longhorn who lost his life to dementia caused by repeated head trauma during his football career.

And then there’s the case of Jordan McNair, a a University of Maryland football player who died after a punishing training session in sweltering heat, ” led by coaches who disregarde­d athlete safety for the sake of toughening up or punishing athletes,” the report said.

In all, Murphy’s report said, 40 college athletes have died playing football since 2000 and there are about 20,000 injuries every year in the NCAA.

Murphy’s latest report on the NCAA is his third. The senator’s first report, released in March, examined the billions in revenues produced by college sports and how that money enriches nearly everyone but the athletes themselves because of the NCAA’s ban on player compensati­on.

Murphy’s second report examined the ways colleges fail to provide athletes the education they deserve.

“This isn’t the most important issue in Connecticu­t or the nation,” Murphy said. “But to me it’s an issue of civil rights.”

That’s because most of the students who are mistreated by the nation’s colleges are black and the people who exploit them and profit from their athletic prowess are white, Murphy said.

The senator recommende­d several reforms.

Those include requiring all college athletes to have heath care coverage, a requiremen­t some schools lack, and that college athletes have access to independen­t health care providers.

Murphy also recommends that athletes should be able to keep their scholarshi­ps if they quit sports and students should be allowed to transfer to other schools.

Murphy’s final recommenda­tion could be the toughest to implement.

“There should be real consequenc­es for schools that don’t follow health protocols,” he said.

As far as legislatio­n to implement some of these reforms?

“Admittedly, this will be a heavy lift,” Murphy said.

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 ?? Wesley Hitt / TNS ?? Alabama QB Tua Tagovailoa (13) is helped off the field after an injury on Nov. 16 in Starkville, Miss.
Wesley Hitt / TNS Alabama QB Tua Tagovailoa (13) is helped off the field after an injury on Nov. 16 in Starkville, Miss.

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