The Mercury News

5 steps football must take to protect players’ brains

- By Leigh Steinberg Leigh Steinberg is a sports agent, philanthro­pist and author.

As more and more parents in the U.S. see the connection between football and brain damage, the game we love will change. Many will tell their teenage boys, “You can play any sport you want … except tackle football.” What’s left will be a gladiator sport.

We now know that football is harming players through repeated trauma and long-term brain damage. The game, the training and the gear must adapt to reduce harm.

Having represente­d profession­al athletes since 1975, I’ve been worrying about football players’ health since long before the first diagnosis of chronic traumatic encephalop­athy in a former NFL player, in 2002.

In the late 1980s, I sat in the stands at Sun Devil Stadium watching a young quarterbac­k play against the Arizona Cardinals. I watched as a defensive player knocked him to the turf. Blood oozed out of his ear as he lay motionless on the ground. My heart pounded as I stared at this young athlete and wondered aloud if he was dead. He gradually regained consciousn­ess.

I had to make a choice 30 years ago of whether to walk away from the industry or work from within to improve it. The players and I made a lot of money, but I had a responsibi­lity to my clients to do more than enrich our bank accounts.

That made the decision clear, so I had a new mission: Understand­ing concussion­s thoroughly, the components of the injury, long- and short-term damage, recovery, education and prevention. I’ve been aligned with a number of neurologis­ts and concussion safety advocates and I hosted conference­s to present the latest medical informatio­n to the players and their families, the leagues, teams and the public.

Pre-adolescent brains are especially vulnerable. Repeated blows over years escalate the risk. A 2017 report on the brains of 111 former NFL players who died between the ages of 23 and 89 found almost all had CTE. Only one brain did not.

To its credit, the NFL has adopted and enforced concussion protocols that take clearly injured players off the field. But football has not changed enough. In some ways it’s getting worse.

The best way to keep football alive is to ensure standardiz­ed safety protocols not only in profession­al leagues but also in collegiate, high school and youth sports. The following steps would be a good start. They are based on what we know now that we did not know in 1975.

• Take hitting out of training camp and practices for kids and profession­als. Save it for the games. This could cut down concussion­s dramatical­ly. The NFL could make this change instantly.

• Leagues and coaches must demand better blocking and tackling techniques that don’t involve the head and neck. The dangerous current practices should be banned.

• Delay the age at which children are allowed to play tackle football. Younger brains are still developing.

• Develop and require new helmets and padding on top of the head.

• Continue to support research into new treatments for concussion­s and ensure that injured players receive the best care to minimize longterm harm. Some examples available now include a nasal spray administer­ed immediatel­y so that an acute injury might not cause long-term damage, or treatments intended to help injured brains heal, such as hyperbaric oxygen or repetitive transcrani­al magnetic stimulatio­n and neurofeedb­ack.

Until brain injuries are curable conditions, a few simple precaution­s would save countless players from untold suffering.

I believe that sports such as football, hockey and soccer teach great values and that mastering them imparts invaluable life skills. It builds camaraderi­e and lifetime friendship­s. For a fortunate and hardworkin­g few, playing can even be lucrative work for a few years. None of that is worth risking brain health.

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