“If 10% of mothers begin to see this as a dangerous sport, this is the end of football in America."
October 10, 2013 | | 3 min read
This provocative quote comes from this week’s PBS Frontline expose League of Denial: The NFL’s Concussion Crisis. Would you let your children play football?
Connie and Ron Stile’s of Spring Hill, KS didn’t give it a second thought.
But on October 28th, 2010, their son Nathan, a six foot, 175 pound senior and the high school football captain had just scored two touchdowns and ran 165 yards.
But after a routine play just before halftime Nathan slowly left the field.
Connie knew something wasn’t quite right.
“I told Ron. Something’s wrong. He’s walking funny. And then we immediately get a call from another football player that said ‘Get over here, something is wrong with Nathan.”
Holding his helmet and screaming his head hurt, Nathan, 17 collapsed on the sideline.
He was never to recover.
In August the NFL paid more than $765 million to settle concussion related suits by about 4,500 former players.
“The NFL has given everybody 765-million reasons why you don’t want to play football.” Harry Carson, Hall of Fame NY Giants linebacker tells the PBS Frontline program.
This week, on KCPT we follow up on the Frontline series by examining how concussions are impacting middle and high school football players in Kansas City.
“We have to stop looking at youth sports and thinking these kids are just miniature professionals, because they are not. They’re just kids.”
Doug Abrams, is a professor of law at the University of Missouri and an expert on concussions in youth sports. He thinks its only a matter of time before concussion based lawsuits are filed at the high school level, “it’s a ticking-time bomb,” he says.
Abrams appears in an-depth report Friday at 7:30 pm on KCPT’s Kansas City Week in Review program that localizes the Frontline investigation. KCPT has formed a unique reporting partnership with KCTV5 to tackle the issue.
Stacey Cameron at the Kansas City CBS affiliate has done some of the the metro’s most extensive reporting on the concussion issue and was freed from his daily responsibilities to work with KCPT along with KCTV5 videographer Courtney Hulsey to conduct original reporting around the Frontline series.
We hear from bereaved parents who’ve lost their children to football injuries and examine whether regulations governing school sports in Kansas and Missouri do enough to protect young athletes.
Friday at 7:30 pm on KCPT’s primetime public affairs program Kansas City Week in Review.
Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.
Related Stories
Former Chiefs players file concussions lawsuit before changes to workman's compensation law
John G. McGrath — The Hale Center for Journalism The NFL season is over, and it was a mixed bag for the Chiefs. The team made the playoffs after an abysmal 2012 campaign, but it closed out the season with a monumental collapse against the Indianapolis Colts. Prospects for the team might look bright on…
Local high school athletes may be at greater risk than college players
High school athletes may have a higher risk of getting a concussion than college players. That’s the conclusion of a joint report released today by The Institute of Medicine and National Research Council. A panel of medical experts found that concussion rates were higher in high school-aged athletes who played football, baseball, men’s soccer…
KCPT Partners With KCTV5 to Investigate High School Football and Brain Injury
This week, the PBS investigative series Frontline took you inside the closed world of the NFL in a two-hour expose, League of Denial: The NFL’s Concussion Crisis. “What did the NFL know, and when did they know it?” asks Mark Fainaru-Wada, whose new book on the correlation between football and brain trauma is the basis…


