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Chris Nowinski (right) with musician Billy Corgan. M. Spencer Green/AP/Press Association Images

Chris Nowinski: We need to make contact sport safer, especially for kids

The head games author on the future of contact sports and what we can do to help.

CHRIS NOWINSKI SEEMED to have it all.

A graduate of Harvard, he signed a contract with World Wrestling Entertainment in 2002 before becoming their youngest ever hardcore champion.

However, he couldnโ€™t explain the constant feelings of nauseousness or dizzy spells.

Worst of all though, were the headaches.

โ€œEverytime I exercised, I felt ill,โ€ the 34-year-old told TheScore.ie on Friday.

โ€œIโ€™d go to the gym, Iโ€™d feel sick. Iโ€™d perform at a show, Iโ€™d feel sick.

โ€œI lied about my symptoms though, tried to shake it off, but eventually I sought help after my girlfriend found me sleep-walking in a hotel.โ€

Thatโ€™s when Nowinski, then just 23, met with world renowned neurosurgeon Robert Cantu.

โ€œHe explained that everything I was experiencing,  seeing stars, headaches, they were symptoms of concussion.

โ€œIt opened my eyes to the fact that this was a very serious injury and that the brain is a very special part of your anatomy.โ€


Nowinski during his WWE days.
Image: Chris Harvard

Luckily for Nowinski, after some initial confusion, the WWE were more progressive in their approach to dealing with concussions than some sporting organisations.

โ€œAt the start the WWE didnโ€™t fully appreciate the risk, they still gave me access to medical help, but didnโ€™t understand why I went from never having a problem to all this.

โ€œThe WWE is one of the leaders now, and are doing really well on implementing the proper procedures when it comes to head injuries.โ€

Itโ€™s troublesome how the NFL controls youth football

One organisation Nowinski has been critical of is the NFL.

While they talk a good game when it comes to concussions, and have done since the 1990s, Nowinski believes theyโ€™re far too eager to put players who have suffered head injuries back in the game.

โ€œFor a while they became the leaders in raising awareness, saying and doing the right things, but now that 4,000 former players are suing them because of brain injuries they say they sustained while playing, theyโ€™ve become more conservative than they really should be.โ€

However, while Nowinski is obviously sympathetic to the plight of former players, his real concern is the impacts that kids are taking every day in youth sport.

โ€œFor me itโ€™s troublesome that the NFL controls so much of how youth football is played. Even with [the Heads Up Football program] they run for kids, there are still more protections in place for professionals than there are for children.โ€

The problem for the NFL is that they promote contact at all age groups, and younger children havenโ€™t developed enough to play the game properly.

Nowinski cites ice hockey as a sport which doesnโ€™t allow some types of contact below a certain age and has previously noted that even youth baseball has a pitch count to protect young players from injuring their elbows.

In football, there is no such โ€˜hit countโ€™ for their brains.

YouTube: jflener14

An invisible killer

One of the reasons athletes, teams and fans donโ€™t treat concussions as seriously as other injuries is that they are invisible.

โ€œYou donโ€™t have pain nerves in your brain so you donโ€™t cry out in agony when you get a concussion the same way you would with a broken leg,โ€ says Nowinski.

โ€œFor that reason, in more than half the cases of concussion, no one will know you have one unless you speak up and, the fact is, in some cases athletes are willingly ignoring the information their body is providing them with so they canโ€™t be taken out of the game.โ€

This leads to athletes suffering numerous concussions. In many cases the end result is Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE), a progressive degenerative disease that causes sufferers to display symptoms of dementia.

If you want to see what CTE looks like, the images below from Boston University show, left to right, a healthy 65-year oldโ€™s brain, the brain of former NFL linebacker John Grimsley and the brain of a 73-year old former world champion boxer.


Image: Boston University

Grimsley died, aged just 45, in 2008.

Time for a change

In December, Boston University found a further 34 former professional football players with CTE and those numbers could keep rising because the disease doesnโ€™t really start to manifest until athletes are in their early to mid forties with their playing careers well behind them.

Is it a case of out of sight, out of mind?

โ€œWe certainly need some athletes to step forward. There was a big deal here in the States when (three-time Super Bowl winner) Ted Johnson stepped forward and documented the impact concussions have had on his life post-football.

โ€œUnfortunately, we only really find out about CTE and its side effects after a player has died and their wife or family donate the brain to us for study.โ€

The us Nowinski mentions is the Sports Legacy Institute, an organisation he co-founded to help promote awareness of the long term implications of head injuries in sport.

The ultimate goal of the SLI is to further develop CTE research and get more researchers around the world looking at sports-related head trauma.

โ€œWe also want to change sport, to make it so that everyone can still have the same enjoyment but without the neurological side effects.โ€

Of course Nowinski and the SLI arenโ€™t trying to put an end to contact sports, far from it.

โ€œIf youโ€™re over 18, you can do what you want, especially if youโ€™re getting paid for it.

โ€œHow you choose to earn your living is your own business.

โ€œFor younger kids though, I hope we can alter sports so that brain trauma will be rare and accidental rather that something deliberate.โ€

With a spokesperson as passionate and vocal as Nowinski at the forefront, itโ€™s difficult to imagine their campaign not being a success.

โ€˜He could have been dead 10 minutes laterโ€™ โ€“ Chris Nowinski on BOD blow against France

Lions win what the doctor ordered, but they pay the price

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11 Comments
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    Mute Big Pat
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    Jun 9th 2013, 1:16 PM

    Watch Royal Rumble 2003. Around the 8 minute mark Edge and Rey Mysterio give him a double dropkick but Edge goes right across his face and breaks his nose!

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    Mute Leslie Alan Rock
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    Jun 9th 2013, 1:39 PM

    The worst one pat. Remember m n m? When the guy got the ladder right in the face. Complete botch. His nose spread across his face

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    Mute Alan Burke
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    Jun 9th 2013, 4:53 PM

    Joey hasnโ€™t been the same since and is effectively retired (training in nxt now). One of the worst injuries Iโ€™ve witnessed.

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    Mute Big Pat
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    Jun 9th 2013, 10:18 PM

    Oh God. Yeh, that one is foul!

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    Mute Aidan Jennings
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    Jun 9th 2013, 12:58 PM

    I love watching NFL, but the number of former players committing suicide because of the CTE-related dementia is scary and really needs to be addressed.

    Itโ€™s not just just the older guys suffering symptoms either, linebacker Jovan Belcher who was only 26 and still playing for the KC Chiefs last year, murdered the mother of his child and committed suicide.

    How long before they wake up and change the rules?

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    Mute Denis O Donovan
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    Jun 9th 2013, 1:20 PM

    Where is it claimed that this had to do with cte? The reasoning behind that particular tragedy says he had a row with his gf over whether their daughter was his or not.

    I think itโ€™s really admirable what chris is doing but other tragedies shouldnโ€™t be cited to push an agendaโ€ฆ

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    Mute Aidan Jennings
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    Jun 9th 2013, 2:08 PM

    Belcher was a 3 time All America wrestler as well as a crunching linebacker whose job it is to crash head first repeatedly into 250lb+ blockers and running backsโ€ฆ head trauma much?

    It is also well documented by close colleagues and friends that he displayed all the early stage signs of cte, e.g. depression, memory loss, confusion, aggressive behaviour etcโ€ฆ

    โ€ฆbut hey if you think shooting his girlfriend 9 times and then himself was a perfectly sane, rational response to a row over the daughter then fair enough.

    Like I said I love watching nfl, but it doesnโ€™t take a genius to realise that repeatedly leading with their helmets, as they are taught to do from a young age, causes major problems later in life.

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    Mute Steve Herron
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    Jun 10th 2013, 12:39 AM

    Was the same story with the Chris Benoit murder suicide. Everyone put it down to roid rage or personal issues with his wife but Nowinski worked with Benoits father closely and when they did an autopsy on the brain of Chris Benoit they discovered that due to the number of concussions Chris Benoit suffered he had a brain the equivalent to an elderly person suffering dementia. It was then argued how many dementia sufferers kill their family but I would argue back how many are physically capable of doing so.

    After this was high lighted WWE took steps to prevent this. Unprotected chair shots to the head are banned, certain moved such as piledrivers and top rope head butts (incidentally one of Benoits finishers) are banned. On the other hand American Football associations have stuck their head in the sand.

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    Mute Andrew Moore
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    Jun 9th 2013, 12:19 PM

    Billy Korgan.

    Karl Pilkingtons twin. :)

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    Mute Paul Quigley
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    Jun 10th 2013, 1:07 AM

    I agree that the NFL has to do more to
    protect players โ€“ the constant impact to the brain in the sport is definitely related to depression later in a players life, as seen with linebacker Junior Seau. I also think that the NFL isnโ€™t strict enough in regards to PEDs โ€“ so many players nowadays are on HGH and other banned substances โ€“ the combination of both brain trauma and dangerous substances does even more damage to the body. No wonder ex players are suing.

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    Mute Neil Treacy
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    Jun 9th 2013, 8:53 PM

    Interesting piece, but the link on Twitter was called โ€œWeโ€™re putting our kids at too much risk by letting them play certain contact sports. Hereโ€™s how we can change that:โ€

    This doesnโ€™t really come close to addressing thatโ€ฆ

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