I hate to risk spreading
misinformation at a time when there’s more than enough of it around, but as a
new football season approaches I can’t help thinking about a conversation I had
with a sports-chemistry scientist 30 or so years ago, when I was doing one of my
many columns about the use of performance-enhancing drugs on our playing
fields. In my innocence I asked the guy why an athlete would risk his health to
hit a few more home runs or shave a few hundredths of a second off his dash
times. He answered with a laugh and a snort.
“A few
years back someone asked a bunch of world-class athletes what they’d do if they
were offered a pill that would enable them to win every competition they
entered for the next five years but would kill them when that period ended,” he
said. “Most of them said they’d take it.”
He was,
I suspect, embellishing a story to make a point, but the tale contained germs of
truth that help illuminate the discussion about football and the brain injuries
that, now, are firmly linked to the sport. One is that athletes, like most
people, are shortsighted, eager to cash in on short-term opportunities whatever
the possible consequences. Another is that jocks figure that, being special
people, if worse came to worst they’d think of a way to avoid trouble. After all,
bad things are what happen to other people, not to them.
The
immediate trigger for my thought was the release last month of the results of a
Boston University study of the brains of 202 deceased former American football
players turned over to them to confirm that they had CTE, or chronic traumatic
encephalopathy, an Alzheimer-like illness caused by the repeated blows to the
head the sport entails. Of the 111 former National Football League players
involved, 110 of them showed signs of the condition, as did all but 10 of the
92 others who’d played the game at the college or semi-pro levels.
The BU
group was quick to point out that their study was anything but random. The brains
had been donated by relatives who’d been concerned about their loved ones’
mental states, so positive results were assumed. Further, CTE can’t now be diagnosed in living
individuals and no scale exists to judge at what level CTE-type damage becomes
serious enough to cause pain or alter behavior. Nonetheless, the overwhelming
nature of the findings raised (or should have raised) eyebrows, as did the
conclusion that people with only a few years’ exposure to football could be
susceptible to harm.
Already
punch drunk from CTE studies, the NFL reacted predictably, citing the steps it
has taken in recent seasons to prevent or ameliorate head injuries, not to
mention the multi-billion-dollar settlement it had reached to settle the
lawsuits of the hundreds of ex-players who claimed it previously understated
the seriousness of same. Still, it
couldn’t resist its tendency to downplay or change the subject.
This
came through strongest at a pre-training-camp press conference that included
several members of the New York Jets and Roger Goodell, the NFL commish. One of
the players, 21-year-old rookie defensive back Jamal Adams, used the occasion
to state that if he could envision a “perfect” death it would be to die on a
football field, a view that wags quickly agreed was likely for him because the
Jets get killed every week in season.
Goodell, who couldn’t plead youth as a defense, chimed in with a Donald
Trumpian reply, pointing at a reporter and saying “the average NFL player will
live five years longer than you probably will.”
I found
that claim interesting and tried to look it up. It traces back to a 2012 study
by the Centers for Disease Control, which compared mortality rates of a group
of men who had played at least five NFL seasons between 1959 and 1988 with
those of American men generally at the time. A couple of differences quickly
occurred comparing conditions in the league today with those of nearly 30 years
ago. One is that the bigger-faster-stronger syndrome of which the NFL is proud
has accelerated greatly since 1988, especially the “bigger” part. Players weighing 300 or more pounds were rare
then (remember the fuss when the Chicago Bears signed “Refrigerator” Perry in
1985?) but they’re commonplace now, with every league roster containing a dozen
or more of the behemoths.
Less
noticed but as important, I think, have been the improvements in playing-field
conditions over the last three decades. Back then, both grass and
artificial-turf surfaces could be slippery at times, blunting contact. Now the boys
almost always have firm footing, meaning that their collisions pack more power,
and danger.
Every
season for the last several a number of NFL players in their prime have weighed
the odds for and against playing and decided they weren’t favorable. The most
notable of these this season was John Urschel, a Baltimore Ravens’ offensive
lineman and a three-year vet at age 26. He’s a mathematician in the off-season,
an MIT grad student, and he opted to keep his brain intact by quitting the game.
More
typical, though, was Ben Roethlisberger, the 13-season veteran quarterback with
the Pittsburgh Steelers. When asked if recent CTE findings affected his career
decisions he said yeah, sure, but he’d keep playing as long as he felt OK, even
though the effects of brain damage might not manifest themselves until years or
decades after the injuries stop.
Football
players today are like cigarette smokers, weighing the pleasure (and profit) of
the activity against its undeniable long-term health dangers. While it’s clear
that the longer you play (smoke) the greater the chance of trouble down the
line, there’s some wiggle room, and not everyone is bitten.
That sort
of calculation takes time to sink in. In 1964, the year of the U.S. Surgeon
General’s initial report linking smoking to lung cancer, more than 40% of
American adults smoked. Now the figure is around 17%. Football will be in
trouble one of these days, but it’ll take a while.
1 comment:
Great article. Well researched. You should write for a living.
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