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Even Dr. Robert Cantu, who is co-director of the Boston University Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy and argues against youngsters starting contact sports like tackle football and hockey before age 14, called several Pop Warner initiatives "good first steps."
"In this case, the punishments handed out seemed appropriate and I'm encouraged that the officials were held accountable for this debacle, too," Cantu said. "You get crazy, one-sided games in a lot of sports, but in most of those, the mercy rule is applied to protect kids' psyches. In football, it's even more important, because what you're protecting is their bodies and brains."
There's no mercy rule in the NFL, and not much more mercy, even at the top. During Commissioner Roger Goodell's tenure, the league has begun to address the wide-ranging problem of concussions with better information, stricter protocols covering player safety and changes in the rules. But none of it has discouraged Goodell from moving games to Thursday night to bulk up the NFL Network's profitability, pushing to increase the regular season to 18 games and launching a PR campaign that could be charitably described as disingenuous. A new commercial featuring Tom Brady and Ray Lewis reassures parents the league is concerned about player safety -- without ever mentioning concussions -- and earlier this month, the commissioner turned up at a youth football gathering in Virginia to promote the league's "Heads Up Football" program, designed to teach kids and coaches tackling skills to minimize potential head and neck injuries.
But the science on concussions increasingly suggests all those measures combined -- and applied at every level -- will reduce the numbers only so much. Cantu acknowledged what happened at that game in Massachusetts last month was an anomaly -- "I hope it was nothing more than an isolated event," he said. "But it points out the dangers of brain trauma in a stark way. I hope no other game results in five concussions. But from what we know, from what I see increasingly in my practice, there are plenty of other games where concussions are taking place as well."
Ultimately, Cantu believes the only answer to the problem, at the youth level, anyway, will come from parents. He co-authored a book that was released last month laying out the case to have kids play flag football instead of tackle.
"They haven't understood the dangers their kids are being subjected to. Once they do -- and it won't happen in weeks, or months, maybe even years -- they'll demand changes," he said. "So we'll see."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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