How To Avoid Concussions In Football?

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It is a hundred degrees on the gridiron, and the heat can be seen radiating off of the battlefield. The men have been practicing for three hours, but the length of the practice is unknown. The length of practice is based on how well they do. There are sounds of "thunder" popping off everywhere from the explosive hits of people aching for relentless contact. This is how football was “born and raised”. Today, football is drastically different from these days; the game and practice have new regulations in an effort to minimize head injuries. These new regulations have had major effects on the game, practice, and players.
According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, in 2007, more than 920,000 athletes under the age of eighteen were treated for football-related injuries (Football Injuries 2). The injuries that worry football advocates the most are head injuries. Concussions are one of the most typical types of head injury in football. American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine defines a concussion as "a change in mental state due to a traumatic impact" (Football Injuries 2). Some symptoms of a concussion are headache, nausea, dizziness, loss of balance, trouble concentrating, blurry vision, etc. Football is one of the leading sports for concussions. In football, most concussions are caused from hard …show more content…

"You practice like you play" is a quote that is very true, and coaches stress this to their players. In order to play a game with an up-tempo mindset and do an effective job at the same time, the player must practice it, but it has become hard. Every play of practice, players have the thought of whether the hit they just delivered would have been legal in a game. Therefore, as a player, practice is becoming more so worrying if he is playing within the guidelines that he has to obey in a game. Practice is becoming less of learning the

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