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Rugby Brain Injuries

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Rugby Brain Injuries
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  • Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid Schnitzel
    replied to mariner4life on last edited by
    #65

    @mariner4life said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    @siam said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    @kev said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    Those front on tackles where two defenders converge and take each other out with friendly fire is difficult….

    Those freak the shit outta me! I find myself looking away on the replay. I hope they look worse than they might actually be.

    my last decent head knock was that. Was low, hit the guy full tilt around the hips, head went around the back nicely out of the way...

    and my team mate coming form the other side did exactly the same thing. bang!! 8 stitches in my temple.

    i am still of the opinion that, the bet thing rugby can do, rather than being out of control strict on all incidental head contact (in a game of large men throwing themselves at each other at full force for extended periods of time) is to be far more strict on concussion protocols. Longer stand downs, regular checks. We've got rid of most of the foul play, now protect players from themselves.

    100% this. People seem to forget what a crazy game rugby is. No way would it be allowed if invented these days. I mean they mandate the use of mouthguards because there’s a good chance of you losing teeth if you don’t have one. Everyone here who played for any length of time can probably talk of at least one serious injury and you’re probably in the minority if you go an entire career without being concussed or suffering a nasty knock to the head. Everyone who plays it must surely be aware of the potential consequences. Shit, I stopped playing in my mid 20s because I didn’t want to get injured. I won’t let my son play unless he’s serious and focussed enough when on the field. I’ve been playing in or watching more than one game that was abandoned because some poor prick had a suspected spinal injury. You have to sometimes wonder whether some people have suddenly come to the realisation of what rugby actually involves. It’s a ridiculous, brutal and potentially very dangerous game regardless of how much they try to sanitise it.

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to Rancid Schnitzel on last edited by
    #66

    @rancid-schnitzel said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    you’re probably in the minority if you go an entire career without being concussed or suffering a nasty knock to the head.

    Me!

    My only one was from racing BMX with a big old helmet not stopping my concussion.

    mariner4lifeM Rancid SchnitzelR 2 Replies Last reply
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  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #67

    @taniwharugby said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    @rancid-schnitzel said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    you’re probably in the minority if you go an entire career without being concussed or suffering a nasty knock to the head.

    Me!

    My only one was from racing BMX with a big old helmet not stopping my concussion.

    try sticking your head over a ruck once in a while....

    i played my whole life right up until my mid-30s. Then i coached. I loved everything about it. I still miss it (coaching juniors is about as much involvement as i have)

    but

    My eldest tried it and didn't like it. My youngest still plays now, but it's U10s/12s. if he decided to give it away i wouldn't try to change his mind. It's enormously fun to play, but the toll it takes on the body is insane.

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to mariner4life on last edited by
    #68

    @mariner4life fuck you

    I played alot at 9 (but was a loosie wearing 9) and then 6 in senior rugby.

    I played up to about 30, dropped a few seasons, played a few more and now just play golden oldies, LOVE IT!

    TR Jnr is missing it, the coach of the U16s asked him if he was gonna come along to trainings on Saturday, so we will see how that pans out, in his mind he is still smaller than these guys, even though he isnt.

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  • Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid Schnitzel
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #69

    @taniwharugby said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    @rancid-schnitzel said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    you’re probably in the minority if you go an entire career without being concussed or suffering a nasty knock to the head.

    Me!

    My only one was from racing BMX with a big old helmet not stopping my concussion.

    Your jersey must have had less mud on it than David Campese. 😜

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    wrote on last edited by
    #70

    Had to bin the boots back in ‘96 aged 30 due to blown left knee and my bell being rung every couple of matches.

    Small sample size and anecdotal but when I walk around my home town, in my peer group of 50-60 year olds there doesn’t seem to be more wear & tear and premature brain deterioration compared with the boys who played other sports, predominantly football.

    Compared with the boys who did no organised sport post-school we’re in far better shape, even the props.

    I come from an area where most people have their first kid between 20-25 and by the time they get to 55-60 they’ll be grandparents to 5-15 year old children.

    What’s really worrying is the children of parents who did no post-school sport are obese and already on the Diabetes Express.

    To me, that long term cost far outweighs the ‘barbarity’ and subsequent later life injury of rugby.

    M 1 Reply Last reply
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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    mikey07
    replied to MiketheSnow on last edited by
    #71

    @mikethesnow said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    To me, that long term cost far outweighs the ‘barbarity’ and subsequent later life injury of rugby.

    That’s exactly why I play and not for the beers afterwards 😂

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by Rapido
    #72

    I have never had a concussion.

    Played from age 5 to 21. Then a few occasional season at age 24 and 28.

    But, they had rucking for all that time, not collisions.

    Except when I was 28. I had to learn what 'jackalling' rules were when I played that season. Hands in the ruck? what you doing you moron, jeezus H christ - my 8 year old self would have said to my 28 year old self.

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  • barbarianB Offline
    barbarianB Offline
    barbarian
    wrote on last edited by
    #73

    So World Rugby have released new guidelines for pro rugby teams, suggesting the following limits on training:

    • 15 minutes of full-contact training per week
    • 40 minutes of controlled contact training per week
    • 30 minutes of live set-piece training per week

    More info here: https://www.the42.ie/world-rugby-contact-guidelines-5555799-Sep2021/?utm_source=shortlink

    Hard to see how professional teams can maintain any level of play with those limits. My old 4th grade suburban side practised more than that.

    I am all for the preservation of our players' bodies and minds, but surely this will impact the overall quality of the game. Will just mean endless unopposed skill drills and time in the gym. So we will have beefcake players with terrible technique at the ruck.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    wrote on last edited by
    #74

    you cannot remove the risk of brain injuries in rugby players.

    If that is your goal, call the game off. Just cancel it. Because all this death by a thousand cuts shit is actually worse.

    gt12G 1 Reply Last reply
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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    Machpants
    wrote on last edited by
    #75

    Paywalled, but https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/elite-game-is-not-safe-researchers-shocking-issue-with-world-rugby/Q5ATGSVWFJ5HK63QC3DARJS4R4/

    The British foundation behind research into rugby's cumulative impacts on the brain says the elite game is unsafe, and in an ominous warning accuses World Rugby of marking its own homework.

    The Drake Foundation, which funded a study conducted by the Imperial College London that found half of elite adult rugby players showed a reduction in brain volume and almost a quarter displayed abnormalities in brain structure, believes World Rugby has not done enough in tackling head impacts.

    "The elite game is not safe at the moment and that disturbs me," Drake Foundation founder James Drake told the Herald this week. "I don't have any reservations in saying that. The body of information across contact sport is a worrying picture. There is a problem here."

    Drake has been on a crusade since establishing the foundation in 2014, investing more than $4 million into the long and short term effects of contact sport's impacts on brain heath.

    The results of the latest study in July, published in the journal Brain Communications, found concerning links between elite rugby and changes in brain structure.

    The study involved 44 rugby players - from seven unnamed professional union and league clubs in the UK - who had suffered mild injuries. It found 23 per cent of participants experienced changes to their brain structure in the neuronal white matter and blood vessels of the brain, while 50 per cent showed a reduction in brain volume.

    The average age of participants was 25.

    KruseK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KruseK Offline
    KruseK Offline
    Kruse
    replied to Machpants on last edited by
    #76

    @machpants said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    Drake has been on a crusade

    Reading the summary of the results is interesting - but that particular quote is a bit concerning.

    It sounds like this guy has a particular axe to grind, and would be quite willing to publish results slanted towards what he wants to show.
    I'm in a job at the moment where I'm doing exactly the same thing... gathering shitloads of data... but then realising you can just put the spotlight on certain bits, or create certain graphs - to "paint the picture" that you want to.

    Anyway - I think any research into this stuff is always going to show... yeah, contact sports... not so good for the body or brain. An impartial study, if that were ever possible, would be super interesting reading... but trying to guess what the reality is- somewhere between World Rugby's obviously partial "studies", and this guy Drake's studies...

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    replied to mariner4life on last edited by
    #77

    @mariner4life said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    you cannot remove the risk of brain injuries in rugby players.

    If that is your goal, call the game off. Just cancel it. Because all this death by a thousand cuts shit is actually worse.

    You're right.

    I wanted to write some ideas here but all of my suggestions will just make the game more like league, except perhaps not allow hands over the tackled player as soon as another player joins the action. And, I mean, right away.

    Essentially remove jackeling from the game.

    All of my (few) head-knocks in my very low-grade playing experience came from being over the ball while waiting for the bodies to pile in. I still marvel at the bravery of some of the little guys who constantly put themselves in that position. Fuck that.

    For me, the game could be improved if turnovers could only be won by driving over the ball. If someone gets a boot or two, well too bad.

    That won't happen though.

    The game is pretty fucked in the toll it takes but equally life is life.

    I was playing touch rugby the day I had my stroke and it may even be that the the one fall I had that day (just ran into another player and we both went down) actually caused it. Funnily enough, on that day, I got asked to play club rugby for them (as most were from the same club) and I said 'no, fuck that, I might do something serious and be really fucked up'.

    Seven years later and I still get MRIs twice a year.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • sparkyS Offline
    sparkyS Offline
    sparky
    wrote on last edited by
    #78

    Video probably won't work outside the UK. Ex-England scrum half and BBC commentator Nigel Starmer-Smith is in a bad way with dementia:.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/av/rugby-union/59438801

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • DuluthD Offline
    DuluthD Offline
    Duluth
    wrote on last edited by
    #79

    Another player with early onset dementia

    Simon Thomas  /  Jul 16, 2022  /  Rugby News

    Former Wales rugby captain Ryan Jones diagnosed with dementia at 41 | Wales Online

    Former Wales rugby captain Ryan Jones diagnosed with dementia at 41 | Wales Online

    Jones has opened up on his condition in an emotional newspaper interview

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • antipodeanA Online
    antipodeanA Online
    antipodean
    wrote on last edited by
    #80

    Looks like someone should get tested.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to antipodean on last edited by
    #81

    @antipodean I don't really get what's so stand out about the quote - what am I missing? I was hoping not to have to get tested too.

    KiwiMurphK antipodeanA 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • KiwiMurphK Offline
    KiwiMurphK Offline
    KiwiMurph
    replied to Bones on last edited by
    #82

    @Bones Andy Powell is basically threatening Gareth Anscombe's wife. Not cool.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    Machpants
    wrote on last edited by
    #83

    Why is she smack talking him online? Bizarre shit

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to KiwiMurph on last edited by
    #84

    @KiwiMurph said in Rugby Brain Injuries:

    @Bones Andy Powell is basically threatening Gareth Anscombe's wife. Not cool.

    Oh sure, but why did she put that quote up? What's significant about it? Has he got 3 kids or something?

    1 Reply Last reply
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