What are you talking about? You sound like you're arguing just to argue now. The neurologist was talking about youth sports and the impact they have, in terms of accumulative damage to the brain. In the case of this kid, the article clearly said...BlueHen86 wrote:Implications aren't facts. The neurologist was talking about youth sports, you respond with an article about a college player. Apples and oranges.GannonFan wrote:
But the Penn player had played youth sports for as long as someone could play them before getting to college. There was no implication that the damage to the guy's brain only happened once he played college football - quite the opposite, actually, the implication from the article was that it was a lifetime accumulation of trauma to his brain that led to his death.
I am not aware of a higher suicide rate among Pop Warner players.
Now, I'm assuming you read the article rather than just shooting from the hip and seeing the words "college" and dismissing it. Otherwise, how do you jibe your comment with that in the article?Because of this, several doctors said, his C.T.E. — whose only known cause is repetitive brain trauma — must have developed from concussions he dismissed or from the thousands of subconcussive collisions he withstood in his dozen years of football, most of them while his brain was developing.
As for facts, again, nice glib comment, especially since there aren't enough "facts" at any level to make a direct connection between concussions and suicides, often much later in life after their playing days are long done. However, that's clearly the intention of the neurologolist's initial statement that started this thread and the article I referenced on the Penn player. If we follow your line of reasoning, the NFL shouldn't be concerned about this at all since all the players currently who have committed suicide have been ex-players and into their retirement. Obviously, the NFL does not share your interpretation.


