The Sport Needs to Change
By BOB HERBERT
  Dave Duerson was once a world-class athlete, a perfect physical  specimen  whose pro football career included Super Bowl championships  with the  Chicago Bears and New York Giants. Friends and former  teammates would  tell you that he was also a bright guy — a graduate of  Notre Dame with a  degree in economics and, at least for awhile, a  successful businessman. 
  When he shot himself to death in his South Florida home last month, the   despondent Duerson, who was 50, fired the bullet into his chest rather   than into his head. He did not want to further damage his brain. As he   explained in text messages and a handwritten note, the former all-pro   safety wanted his brain tissue studied, presumably to determine whether   he had been suffering from a devastating degenerative disease that is   taking a terrible toll on what appears to be an increasing number of  pro  football players and other athletes. 
 As The Times has reported, Duerson wrote, “Please, see that my brain is given to the N.F.L.’s brain bank.” 
  Professional football has a big, big problem on its hands, and I’m not   talking about the lockout that is jeopardizing the 2011 season. The  game  is chewing up players like a meat grinder. The evidence is  emerging of  an extraordinary number of players struggling with lifelong  physical  debilitation, depression, dementia and many other serious  problems  linked to their playing days. 
  Duerson’s concern was believed to have been centered on chronic   traumatic encephalopathy, an incurable disease associated with   depression and dementia in athletes who played violent sports like   football and boxing. A number of retired football players, including   some who took their own lives, were found to have had the disease, which   can only be diagnosed post-mortem. 
  Pro football, the nation’s most popular sport, had been ratcheting up   its violence quotient for years. Fans loved it. But a backlash has   developed as more and more stories come to light about the awful price   retired players are paying for a sport that increasingly resembles   Colosseum-like combat. Few players escape unscathed after years of   brain-rattling, joint-crippling, bone-breaking, consciousness-altering   collisions. Many live out their lives in chronic pain, varying degrees   of paralysis, and all manner of cognitive and emotional distress. 
  The N.F.L. has taken some remedial steps, especially in the area of  head  injuries. But pro football, always violent, is now violent in the   extreme, and there is some question as to whether that violent style of   play — and the consequences that flow from it — can really be changed.   Paul Tagliabue, a former N.F.L. commissioner, told The New Yorker  about  the comments of a group of former players who had looked closely  at the  way defensive play has changed. “They raised the idea,” said  Tagliabue,  “that it was no longer tackle football. It was becoming  collision  football. The players looked like bionic men.” 
  I am an enormous fan of football, but I get a queasy feeling when I see   one of those tremendous hits that leaves the opposing player lying as  if  lifeless on the turf. Or when I read about players like Andre  Waters,  formerly of the Philadelphia Eagles and Arizona Cardinals, who  shot  himself to death in 2006 at the age of 44. A forensic pathologist  said  Waters’s brain tissue looked like that of an 85-year-old man. It  turned  out that he had been suffering from chronic traumatic  encephalopathy,  the disease that Duerson may have feared. 
  This is an enormous tragedy. So many players are suffering in the   shadows. They need much more help from the N.F.L., the players’ union   and the myriad others cashing in on a sport that has become a   multibillion-dollar phenomenon. And big changes are needed in the rules,   equipment and culture of the sport to cut down on the carnage  inflicted  on current and future players.        
  I once was a big fan of boxing. I marveled at the breathless,   elaborately detailed stories my parents’ generation told about Joe Louis   and the unparalleled Sugar Ray Robinson. I followed Muhammad Ali’s   career from beginning to end. I read biographies of the great boxers of   the 20th century. 
  But I also saw the televised fight in March 1962 in which Emile  Griffith  beat Benny (Kid) Paret so savagely that Paret died 10 days  later.  Robinson also killed a man in the ring, Jimmy Doyle, in a fight  in 1947.  And it’s no secret that even the greatest fighters tended to  end up in  bad shape, demented or enfeebled from the punishment of their  trade —  Louis, Robinson, Ali, so many others. I haven’t been able to  watch the  sport in years. 
  It’s a very bad sign that chronic traumatic encephalopathy, long   associated with boxing, is now linked to football. With the carnage   increasingly emerging from the shadows, there is no guarantee that   football’s magical hold on the public will last. Players are not just   suffering, some are dying. The sport needs to change.
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment