Art Monk vs. NFL

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htownskinfan
05-11-2012, 09:27 AM
No doubt some of these players sustained actual life altering injuries,but a lot of these players are jumpoing on the bandwagon for the money.I heard on the radio yesterday that a former kicker{didnt catch his name}who played around 10 years and never sustained a concussion joined the lawsuit.Are you kidding me,a kicker?

FRPLG
05-11-2012, 11:21 AM
No doubt some of these players sustained actual life altering injuries,but a lot of these players are jumpoing on the bandwagon for the money.I heard on the radio yesterday that a former kicker{didnt catch his name}who played around 10 years and never sustained a concussion joined the lawsuit.Are you kidding me,a kicker?

Yeah his name is Chip Lohmiller. You might have heard of him.

Defensewins
05-11-2012, 12:22 PM
Ah dude, players know it is a dangerous, rough sport, when they decide to play the game, just like hockey players, or even race car drivers know they could get into a serious car accident. If the players are just trying to increase awareness or get the NFL to maybe spend more on protective equipment I am all for it, but to be honest, with these guys getting bigger and faster every decade, it is going to be very hard to really increase the protection they can get. The whole thing is tremendous blunt force. Maybe create a helmet with some sort of shock absorber mechanism, but even that might only alleviate the force some.

For me it is about raising awareness. Especially for parents that let their small little kids play full contact pee-wee football or hockey. They might think differently once educated on the real risks of exposing a young child to a certain sport at such an early age.
I had never heard of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy until just a few months ago. I did not know that it has been found in kids as young as 18 years old.
As the research and funding continue to grow we will learn more about this preventable condition. I hear they are close to developing a test that will identify it in the living.

What shocked me is when Kurt Warner was recently quoted on "The Dan Patrick Show", saying he would prefer if his children did not play football. Backlash and criticism followed, “I think it’s irresponsible and unacceptable,” Merril Hoge said on "NFL Live" on ESPN. "He has thrown the game that has been so good to him under the bus. He sounds extremely uneducated.”
Really?
Merril Hoge a former running back suffered a concussion during the 1994 season with the Bears, but was cleared to play without further examination by the team doctor. A few weeks later, he suffered another concussion, this one causing him to stop breathing. Hoge was eventually resuscitated and spent two days in intensive care, which marked the end of his football career.

In the weeks, months, and years following this incident Merril Hoge experienced severe memory loss and even had to learn to read again.

It is nearly mind-boggling to hear Hoge, who nearly lost everything on the field, not only question Kurt Warner’s safety-related comments, but to essentially call blasphemy on the Super Bowl MVP. Hoge more than anyone should understand the extreme risks that come with playing an extremely violent sport.

htownskinfan
05-11-2012, 03:04 PM
Yeah his name is Chip Lohmiller. You might have heard of him.

seriously? If i would have heard his name i would have remembered that.Dude should be ashamed of himself

FRPLG
05-11-2012, 03:56 PM
Former Redskins Kicker Chip Lohmiller Is Suing The NFL For Concussions?! | Fatpickled (http://www.fatpickled.com/?p=4467)

FRPLG
05-11-2012, 03:57 PM
Here's a question. These guys played football for years. How can prove any injuries sustained happened in the NFL versus college or high school?

Evilgrin
05-11-2012, 04:39 PM
I think one of the areas the NFL is most concerned with, is any instance where a player might claim that a coach forced/persuaded him to go back in hurt. IE, 20 years ago coach Gibbs made me play concussed, and now my arm is going numb. I think this does create some liability for the NFL?

Not that the coach had knowledge of the longterm effects of the injury at the time. We know how the league culture has evolved over the years, and is still evolving. So they could also point the finger back at themselves, if a player didn't go back in he might have been ostracized by his teammates.

Evilgrin
05-11-2012, 04:48 PM
Here's a question. These guys played football for years. How can prove any injuries sustained happened in the NFL versus college or high school?

Sue them also? Taxpayer ends up being responsible in the end...

Giantone
05-11-2012, 06:35 PM
Sue them also? Taxpayer ends up being responsible in the end...


....how?

los panda
05-11-2012, 08:39 PM
i believe public schools receive funding from taxpayers

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