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Judge Again Rejects Deal in NFL Concussion Cases

nfl_logo2011-medPHILADELPHIA (AP) — A federal judge in Philadelphia has again declined to approve deals for some of the retired players suing the NFL over concussions.

U.S. District Judge Anita Brody’s preliminary ruling Wednesday affects a batch of lawsuits involving lead plaintiff Kevin Turner, a former Philadelphia Eagle now battling Lou Gehrig’s disease.

Brody had issued a similar ruling in January in the lead case in the matter, which could ultimately cover up to 20,000 retired players.

The judge has asked lawyers for more details to support claims the proposed $765 million fund would last for 65 years. Young players with severe brain injuries would get up to $5 million under the deal, though most players would get far less.

Brody is expected to conduct hearings in the case later this year.

NFL Faces New Concussion Case in Los Angeles

nfl_logo2011-medLOS ANGELES (AP) — The estate of NFL Hall of Famer Mike Webster and dozens of former players suing the league over concussion injuries have agreed to wait to see if their lawsuit will join other similar cases being reviewed by a judge for possible settlement.

Webster’s estate and 65 former players and their families are suing the NFL in Los Angeles. On Friday, attorneys for the players and the NFL agreed to stay the case to see if it should join other concussion lawsuits currently assigned to a judge in Pennsylvania.

That judge is considering whether a $765 million settlement is enough to resolve all claims against the NFL for players who are dealing with dementia and other serious cognitive conditions caused by concussions sustained during their pro careers.

Webster, who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Kansas City Chiefs, died in 2002. The NFL declined to comment on the Los Angeles case, which was filed in February.

NFL Concussion Lawyer Expects Case to Heat Up Soon

nfl_logo2011-medVILLANOVA, Pa. (AP) — The court fight over NFL concussions should heat up soon when a judge in Philadelphia weighs the fairness of the proposed $765 million settlement.

Lead players’ lawyer Sol Weiss expects the judge’s financial expert to advise her “shortly” on his view of the plan.

Senior U.S. District Judge Anita Brody will then hold a fairness hearing, when financial details will emerge.

Brody is concerned the fund won’t cover 20,000 retirees for 65 years. And critics say the NFL, with $9 billion in revenues, is getting off lightly.

The program would pay retirees as much as $5 million for the most serious neurological injuries.

Speaking Friday at Villanova University outside Philadelphia, Weiss says he’s confident the fund is sufficient. He believes most players will sign on rather than fight the NFL in court.

Study: Concussions Less Prevalent in Young Players

ConcussionINDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A new study shows that the youngest football players are less likely to suffer concussions.

The results, obtained by The Associated Press and expected to be released later Wednesday, show that 4.3 percent of players from ages 5 to 14 were diagnosed with concussions. Thirty-four percent of the players who did report injuries complained of bruises. Ligament sprains were the second-most common injury, coming in at 16 percent.

Indianapolis-based USA Football asked another Indy-based organization, the Datalys Center, to conduct the research which evaluated more than 4,000 youth players in six states between 2012 and 2013.

Researchers found that the behavior of coaches has a direct correlation on the number of injuries, and that the youngest athletes were the least likely to be injured.

Boxing, MMA Meet to Support Head Injury Research

MMA Boxing Head InjuryWASHINGTON (AP) — Bringing together the rival bodies of boxing and mixed martial arts is no small feat. But there is one common cause on which they can agree – the need for brain trauma research.

On Tuesday, two former boxers, Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Harry Reid (D-Nev.), welcomed representatives of the world’s two premiere boxing and four mixed martial arts organizations to announce support for a study to understand the effects of repeated blows to the head.

The combat sports have joined forces to commit $600,000 to the Cleveland Clinic’s Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in Las Vegas.

“It’s a rare occasion when Golden Boy Promotions and Top Rank Boxing are in the same room together,” McCain said. “These athletes are here in support of their fellow athletes because they’ve seen the results. If we don’t do this, I’m afraid that support for these incredible, entertaining sports will wane on the part of the American people.”

A former chairman of the Nevada Gaming Commission, Reid has deep roots in boxing. He said he judged “hundreds” of matches, including one eye-opening bout late in the career of former great Sugar Ray Robinson, who accumulated 200 professional fights in 25 years.

“He fought too long,” Reid said.

Seated behind Reid as he spoke was former middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins, still active at age 49, and most high-profile fighter involved in the study. He is one of nearly 400 active and retired fighters who have enrolled.

“You want to know the risks,” Hopkins said. “God forbid if I was diagnosed with something 10-15 years ago, then I got a choice to make. Do I want to enjoy the rest of my life with my kids or do I want to continue to fight for myself and to walk around the rest of my life as a vegetable?”

This much has been determined: Professional fighters have a higher risk of developing long-term conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), depression, and other neurological and neuropsychiatric problems.

But there currently is no way to determine if a fighter has sustained cumulative brain damage from head trauma. The Cleveland Clinic is working to identify risk factors.

“What we want to know is, what is the very first change that occurs,” said Jeffrey Cummings, director of the Lou Ruvo Center. “Can you detect that in an athlete so you can tell that athlete that they are in the beginning of the process. Second, are there procedures, are there risk factors, are there vulnerabilities, so that we would know which athletes to monitor.”

Former Bellator MMA lightweight champion Michael Chandler spoke eloquently, admitting that as a young fighter he didn’t think about consequences, but he appreciated that others were looking out for his long-term well-being so that he could “play football in the front yard with my children.”

NFL: 13 Percent Fewer Concussions in ’13 than ’12

ConcussionNEW YORK (AP) — The NFL says the number of concussions in practices and games in the preseason and regular season dropped 13 percent from 2012 to 2013.

Using information collected from team doctors, the league also says there was a 23 percent decrease over the past two seasons in the number of concussions caused by helmet-to-helmet contact.

Speaking at a pre-Super Bowl news conference Thursday, Jeff Miller, the league’s senior VP of health and safety policy, calls the data “positive trends.”

Some players have expressed concern that the NFL’s emphasis on decreasing hits to the head could lead to more low hits and more knee injuries. But Miller says there has not been an overall increase in damaged knee ligaments.

NFL: 2 Players Violated Concussion Protocol

nfl_logo2011-medBOSTON (AP) — Two players violated league concussion protocol during last weekend’s wild-card games, according to a letter sent by the NFL’s head, neck and spine committee chairmen to all team doctors and trainers.

In a document obtained by The Associated Press, Drs. Hunt Batjer and Richard Ellenbogen said one player re-entered the game and another refused to leave the sideline.

The doctors did not identify the players, but one was Green Bay tackle David Bakhtiari, who went into the game for an extra-point try despite being examined for a concussion and not cleared. The other player was Saints cornerback Keenan Lewis, who remained on the sideline but did not get back on the field.

“On two occasions last weekend, and contrary to the advice of the team medical staffs, players who had been diagnosed with a concussion and therefore declared ineligible for play nonetheless refused to leave the sidelines as required by league concussion protocols,” the letter said. “In one case, the player went back onto the field for one play before being removed from the game.”

ConcussionThe doctors found “no fault” in how the team medical staffs conducted themselves.

“If a player refuses to follow your advice and leave the sidelines after being diagnosed with a concussion, we recommend that the head athletic trainer seek assistance from the player’s position coach (or another member of the coaching staff) or from another team official to remove the player from the sidelines as soon as possible,” the letter said.

The NFL’s Madden Rule requires a player diagnosed with a concussion to be taken to the locker room or another quiet location.

The Saints and Packers declined comment. The NFL Players Association did not immediately respond to a message from the AP seeking comment.

No fines will be imposed for the violations.

Bakhtiari’s season is over because Green Bay lost to San Francisco. But Lewis’ Saints are playing Saturday at Seattle and he has been practicing.

Batjer and Ellenbogen noted in the letter how players may resist being kept out of the game, particularly during the postseason.

“But (the rule) is an important element of the league’s protocol and intended to safeguard the player’s well-being and enhance his ability to recover from his injury,” they wrote.

Former Football Players Sue NCAA Over Concussions

NCAA-Logo-College-SportsMINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Three former college football players have filed a federal lawsuit in Minnesota alleging that NCAA did not inform former players about the risks of concussions inherent in the sport.

The lawsuit filed Tuesday also says the NCAA failed in its duty to establish protocols to prevent, monitor and treat brain injuries. Former University of Minnesota linebacker Joey Balthazor and former Vanderbilt players Paul Morgan and Cliff Deese are named as plaintiffs.

The suit seeks medical monitoring and testing for former players who are suffering from head injuries related to their playing days. The suit seeks class-action status, but is limited to players who did not play in the NFL.

Similar suits have been filed elsewhere around the country.

Concussion Expert Says Players Still in Fear

ConcussionMELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — A leading concussion expert from the United States says players in high-level contact sports still are often fearful of sitting out games after head injuries because they might lose their positions on their teams.

Chris Nowinski, a Harvard graduate and former wrestler, is a co-director of the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy at Boston University, otherwise known as the “Brain Bank.”

It is one of the leading research groups in the world on the effects concussions are having on athletes, highlighted by recent cases involving NFL players.

Nowinski, in Melbourne meeting with officials from the Australian Football League players association, says “there still has to be a culture change with the players … they still have that impression that their job or role might be at risk.”

Groups Join to Combat Brain Injuries

nfl_logo2011-medUNDATED (AP) — The NFL, Under Armour and GE have together issued a challenge for new engineering to help protect athletes from brain injury.

The group said Wednesday that it would award up to $10 million for new innovation and materials that could protect the brain from traumatic injury, as well as new tools for tracking head impacts in real time. It is the second of such challenges from the trio.

The move comes as the issue of concussions in football has taken center stage.

Meanwhile, three former college football players are suing the NCAA, saying it failed to educate them about the risks of concussions and did not do enough to prevent, diagnose and treat brain injuries. Chris Walker and Ben Martin, who played for Tennessee from 2007-2011, and Dan Ahern, who played for North Carolina State from 1972-76, filed a class-action lawsuit in federal court in Chattanooga, Tenn.

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