Anonymous wrote:Would love to read it but I don't have a NYT subscription.
Anonymous wrote:Tell me on what sane planet a sport like this is good for kids:
You can argue about team sport involvement and physical activity all you want, but the above is what you don’t see that occurs constantly during practices all the time even to this day. The clip at 1:15 n the video is horrifying.
Plenty of other sports like swimming, track, golf, baseball, basketball, tennis, etc. exist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would love to read it but I don't have a NYT subscription.
It covers multiple families who had sons that played football but ended up committing suicide in their early 20s or younger. The one video clip of the boy is haunting. He makes a video for his parents and describes demons in his head before he shoots himself in the chest. In the video, he tells his parents to send his brain for science because he thinks he has cte. Yes, they study his brain and find CTE, and he was only a teenager who hadn’t played more advanced football beyond high school level. The other results from those that died showed up advanced CTE up to stage 2 (out of 4). If you remember Aaron Hernandez (ex-pats player who committed murder and died by suicide) the doc who studied his brain said it was the worst she’d ever seen at such a young age (27) and he was graded with stage 3 cte. These are kids in high school with CTE one notch below Hernandez.
But football isn't the only sport where that's a factor.
A little over a year ago, there was a Virginia HS LAX player that tried to take his own life, and his parents have questioned if the concussions were a factor.
https://www.fauquier.com/news/article_d6e18b20-71a4-11ed-870a-b706aa3f03b5.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would love to read it but I don't have a NYT subscription.
It covers multiple families who had sons that played football but ended up committing suicide in their early 20s or younger. The one video clip of the boy is haunting. He makes a video for his parents and describes demons in his head before he shoots himself in the chest. In the video, he tells his parents to send his brain for science because he thinks he has cte. Yes, they study his brain and find CTE, and he was only a teenager who hadn’t played more advanced football beyond high school level. The other results from those that died showed up advanced CTE up to stage 2 (out of 4). If you remember Aaron Hernandez (ex-pats player who committed murder and died by suicide) the doc who studied his brain said it was the worst she’d ever seen at such a young age (27) and he was graded with stage 3 cte. These are kids in high school with CTE one notch below Hernandez.
Anonymous wrote:My son is an 8th grader in FCPS. Next year he will be going to a large FCPS high school. He loves sports but isn't a super star. The only no-cut sport at the high school he will go to is football.
He keeps begging to play football because he wants to be on a school team and play a sport for his high school. I wish FCPS would get rid of the freshman football team that they have to beg for players for and add boys volleyball, or freshman soccer, or something else.
I keep saying no because I care about his brain.
Anonymous wrote:Would love to read it but I don't have a NYT subscription.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe that people can still watch professional football knowing what we know now, let alone letting their children play.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do parents still let their kids play tackle football these days? They're finding kids in their teens now with CTE:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/11/16/us/cte-youth-football.html
Im just trying to understand what calculus parents would ever be able to use to come to conclusion that yeah, it's ok for my kid to play a sport where they can risk permanent brain damage for the rest of their lives, even if they're only playing for a few years.
No, no parents anywhere in the entire world still allow their kids to play tackle football.
CTE has really only begun getting attention in the last half dozen years or so after the tragic deaths of some major players. It will be interesting to see if numbers of players drop over the next decade, and whether that is impacted at all by education level, socioeconomic status or region of the country or other factors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do parents still let their kids play tackle football these days? They're finding kids in their teens now with CTE:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/11/16/us/cte-youth-football.html
Im just trying to understand what calculus parents would ever be able to use to come to conclusion that yeah, it's ok for my kid to play a sport where they can risk permanent brain damage for the rest of their lives, even if they're only playing for a few years.
No, no parents anywhere in the entire world still allow their kids to play tackle football.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe that people can still watch professional football knowing what we know now, let alone letting their children play.
I agree. Other sports have concussion risks too: rugby, soccer, etc.
Millions of people grow up watching these things. It's like a cult: people are attracted to matches because they offer opportunities to socialize and party with their friends and relatives. The feeling you get when your team wins and you celebrate with your friends can't be replaced with anything else. It's like an addiction. The commercial sports industry exploits those emotions and pays such large salaries to players that every generation, thousands of little athletes dream of making it into the big leagues, and the money, women and fan adulation that comes with it. The small matter of later-life dementia and misery does not weigh in the balance.
- European who grew up around die-hard soccer fans. The crazy is real.