Derek Sheely's head was bleedingagain.
It was August 2011, and Sheely, a fullback for Frostburg State's football team, was in the middle of ramming his helmet into his teammates, over and over again, on his coaches' orders. (Specifically, Sheely and his teammates were performing a variation of the "Oklahoma drill," which requires two players to run full speed at each other, until one ends up victorious and the other ends up on the ground.)
But it was the fourth time in three days that a wound on Sheely's head had re-opened, and he was suffering a headache, he reportedly told his coach.
The coach's alleged response? "Stop your bitching and moaning, and quit acting like a pussy and get back out there, Sheely!"
Sheely collapsed a few minutes later, and died within the week.
The post-mortem diagnosis: Brain trauma.
NFL vs. NCAA: Why College Players Have It So Rough
The sad story of Derek Sheely began to emerge last week, after Sheely's family filed a lawsuit against the NCAA and several officials at Frostburg State. The timing was interesting; it came just before a settlement in the NFL concussion case made front-page news and wound down that legal front, at least for now. And although the two stories are nominally connected, given their focus on brain injuries, they're actually quite different in details and scope.
First, the NFL settlement itself illustrated that while the league controls the balance of power, its athletes possess a share of leveragea well-funded group of ex-players were able to go toe-to-toe with the NFL and put the fear of God, or at least billions of dollars in potential losses, into Commissioner Roger Goodell.
And NFL players, too, are acting as working professionalsmaking an informed judgment to chase dollars, despite potential health hazardsunder a collective bargaining agreement negotiated by a strong union.
None of that holds true within the NCAA.
There's no union lobbying on athletes' behalf. In most cases, a coach isn't just the man trying to lead a player to victory on the football field; he's the guarantor of that player's scholarship, too.
It's why even President Obama has called for health and safety reforms to the sport.
But college officials have largely fought these efforts, instead relying on several tired gambits to protect the NCAAan umbrella organization, keep in mind, that was founded a century ago to protect players, not to make money off of them.
For instance, the NCAA continues to use the ambiguous term "student-athlete," a clever legal maneuver designed to help avoid paying worker's comp.
The NCAA also has tossed the responsibility for head injury prevention and care to its member schools, which are supposed to come up with a "concussion plan" to manage and mitigate potential head injuries.
That plan is famously toothless. And that lack of controls may have helped lead to Sheely's death.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario