Attempted Robbery In Cape Town
ChatterBank1 min ago
...need to head the ball?
An article in the Telegraph yesterday featured an interview with former England player, Dave Watson, and his wife.
He now suffers from dementia. I don't know if this was caused by injuries received while playing, but it's a possibility.
No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There has been debate about the connection between football headers and dementia for years.
Some studies showed there is no increased risk; another study the risk increased by 50%.
One study showed that fewer goalkeepers got dementia than their team mates, suggesting it was because goalkeepers don't head the ball.
Other studies have shown that boxers are more prone to early onset dementia.
Maybe it is time that headers were shown the red card.
The footballs of yesteryear were much heavier than the modern ones. They were made of panels of leather and the treated with dubbin, - a sort of grease making them very heavy to head.
When you see a goalkeeper today kicking a ball deep into the other half it couldn't have been done with an older football, they were too heavy to travel that distance.
"Perhaps they could introduce a simpler version of the rugby player's head guard ?"
I don't think it would help much, Khandro.
As I understand it, the damage occurs when the brain strikes the inside of the skull during the heading process (the skull itself decelerates whilst the brain keeps moving within it). Protective headgear would only prevent external damage to the skull which is not the issue.
Of course they could simply ban heading. The clue, after all, is in the name of the game.
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