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Attempts to wring extreme violence out of football are as old as the sport itself.
In 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt joined the crusade, waging a campaign to eradicate brutality from the game. Eighteen players were killed that season.
"I believe in outdoor games, and I do not mind in the least that they are rough games, or that those who take part in them are occasionally injured," Roosevelt said in a speech to Harvard that year.
But "brutality playing a game should awaken the heartiest and most plainly shown contempt for the player guilty of it."
That fall, Roosevelt summoned officials from Harvard, Yale and Princeton to the White House, urging them to clean up the sport. The president had a vested interest; his son was a freshman member of the Harvard football team who had recently come out of a game with a slit eyebrow and "cauliflower ear," in the words of one newspaper account.
Roosevelt's involvement helped lead to the formation of the International Athletic Association of the United States, later renamed the NCAA, which still governs college sports today.
The forward pass, which had been banned until then, was legalized, helping to open up the sport, while a dangerous play called the "flying wedge" was banned.
As football has faced a new crisis with head injuries in recent years, the federal government again prodded the sport to change, but this time the pressure came from Congress. House Judiciary Committee members in 2009 vainly tried to get Commissioner Goodell to acknowledge a connection between football head injuries and later brain diseases.
Browne said that those hearings were "part of the overall education of everyone involved in sports, not just in football, of the need to treat these injuries more seriously ... We're being much more aggressive in addressing the safety issue than perhaps any time in the 90-year history of our league."
One of Goodell's chief critics at that hearing, Rep. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif., called the NFL's concussion campaign laudable.
"While it heartens me to see that the NFL's finally embraced the growing body of scientific evidence that points to major problems for people who suffer multiple concussions," she said, "it's been a long time coming."
[Associated Press;
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