Showing posts with label football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label football. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Sioux Falls to continue football amid health concerns


Slip "N Slide Football Battle | Dude Perfect

High school football isn"t going away in Sioux Falls, despite recent concerns from two Minnesota doctors about the game"s effect on children and teens.

Links between football and life-threatening head trauma has forced rule changes at the highest level of the sport. The topic has drawn national and regional attention, with a million-dollar ruling for an Iowa high school student last year and last month"s release of "Concussion," starring Will Smith.

Now, Minnesota-based physicians have penned an editorial calling for the end of tackle football programs at public schools. But Sioux Falls high schools won"t be slashing football just yet, as rules continue to evolve for the sake of player safety, Superintendent Brian Maher said.

"My answer would be, today, we"re certainly not ready to pull the plug on that," Maher told the Argus Leader (http://argusne.ws/1ITp9GD ).

The editorial authored by Dr. Steven Miles and Dr. Shailendra Prasad was set to run this month in the American Journal of Bioethics, and is already available online at www.bioethics.net.

Miles and Prasad criticized a recent article from the American Academy of Pediatrics, which acknowledges the increased likelihood of concussion among youth football players, but suggests schools address the problem by enforcing safety rules, decreasing tackling and following best practices.

The doctors" response: "Public schools should end their football programs because of the high prevalence of concussions."

Between 5 percent and 20 percent of student athletes in football will suffer a concussion in a single season, according to Miles and Prasad. Middle school-age students will sustain about 240 head impacts each season. The number soars to 650 per season for high school players.

Brain injuries caused by playing football can lead to poor performance in class for weeks following the incident, as well as headaches, absenteeism and memory problems, according to research highlighted by the doctors.

"Evidence about the effect of youth football is evolving but is sufficient to show that school football is likely to adversely (affect) school performance in the short term," they wrote.

Research is limited when it comes to the long-term effects, said Dr. Verle Valentine, a sports medicine physician for Sanford Health.

He questioned the Minnesota doctors" proposal of banning the sport from public schools.

"Certainly there"s lots of injuries in football, but there"s also lots of injuries in other sports, too," Valentine said. "The vast majority of patients who have concussions recover nicely in a few weeks."

Problems that caught the National Football League and inspired a Hollywood film came from studies done of former NFL players, who played the game into their 30s, Valentine said.

Chronic traumatic encephalopathy or CTE is the focus of "Concussion," about the Pittsburgh doctor who discovered the condition while analyzing the brain of a dead player.

Repeated concussions caused by head injuries can lead to damaged nerve cells in the brain, which can cause changes in emotion and behavior later in life.

In addition to being the Sioux Falls public schools chief, Maher sits on the state"s high school activities association. His son plays professional football.

Rule changes implemented by the NFL in the wake of CTE have trickled down to public school teams, Maher said.

Maher believes the sport is important to students because of the kind of learning that can happen in athletics, including teamwork, sacrifice and time management.

"One of the quotes I gave to my kids growing up was if you don"t take life lessons away from the activities you"re involved in, you"re simply engaged in recess," Maher said.

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Information from: Argus Leader, http://www.argusleader.com

An AP Member Exchange shared by the Argus leader

Source: http://www.kentucky.com/living/health-and-medicine/article53570560.html

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College Football Playoff championship: How Clemson built an undefeated mindset


Slip "N Slide Football Battle | Dude Perfect

CLEMSON, S.C. Clemson quarterback Deshaun Watson had nearly wrapped up a summertime appearance when someone asked if the Tigers could win a national championship.

"No doubt about it," Watson said with a grin. "15-0."

Fifteen? Are there even that many games?

In the College Football Playoff era, the Tigers are trying to break new ground. Watson and the top-ranked Tigers are trying to make history as the first undefeated team with 15 wins against No. 2 Alabama on Monday night, hoping to finish off a goal set down as the ultimate target long ago.

Sure, there have been other undefeated teams. Clemson"s last national championship team in 1981 finished with a 12-0 record. Florida State was 14-0 in its national championship year two years ago. With the playoff in the mix, the Tigers could be the first team to reach 15-0.

The undefeated mindset was set as the team"s theme for the season before the Tigers ever stepped on the field. Swinney put 15 up on the board at an early gathering. He passed out T-shirts with "15 for 15" on the back.

"It"s 2015," Swinney told them. "Right now, we"ve sold every ticket, but there"s only 12. We want to make them print 15 tickets."

That part"s done. Now, it"s up to Clemson to finish off its first perfect season since the 1981 national champions.

"It was not easy to get everyone to buy into this," co-offensive coordinator Jeff Scott said. "It took planning and preparation."

RELATED: Let"s take a look at Clemson"s path to the national championship

Swinney regularly worked with a sports psychologist, Milt Lowder, who has consulted with Clemson athletes and coaches since 2005. Lowder said he met with Swinney at least once a week during the season, the coach sharing ideas about techniques on keeping the Tigers focused.

Lowder said none of this season"s success would"ve happened without Clemson"s steady success the past several seasons. The Tigers have won 10 or more games each of the past five years, defeating college powers LSU, Ohio State and Oklahoma twice in bowl games.

Older players understood and accepted the work it took to win games. Without that, Lowder said, Swinney"s words would ring hollow.

So when the season began, the team forgot about the big goal. They looked at the milestone in increments. They didn"t think about 15 anymore. 2-0 became 3-0. Then 4-0, and 5-0. 6-0, then 7-0. The win column kept changing, the loss column never did.

Swinney puts it simply: "You can"t be 15-0 unless you"re 3-0."

"You"ve got to have a process on getting there, something that you"re confident works with your team," said Brent Walker, president of the Association for Applied Sport Psychology. "It"s easier to do that once your players understand your commitment to them."

MORE: Best of media day from College Football Playoff Championship

The players, led by Watson, easily followed along. The sophomore had an injury-plagued first year, and was eager to show the high school promise that made him one of the country"s top prospects. He helped the younger Tigers get on board.

Watson says it was an easy sell. To those holdouts, Watson insisted he came to Clemson to win championships and needed everyone to have that focus.

"It"s about believing in each other," he said. "That"s what we do around here."

That belief has succeeded for Clemson before. The 1981 national champion was No. 1 and 11-0 into a David-vs.-Goliath showing in the Orange Bowl against powerful and pedigreed Nebraksa. The result? Tigers 22-15.

"No one except up thought we could win," said Jeff Davis, a linebacker for that championship group. "That sounds like now."

On Monday, on the game"s biggest stage, this year"s group will get the chance to prove it.

This article was written by Pete Iacobelli from The Associated Press and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network.

Source: http://www.ncaa.com/news/football/article/2016-01-09/college-football-playoff-championship-how-clemson-built-undefeated

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