Surely this can't actually be your position though. I mean, I know you are being a bit facetious here, and I see that. But we're not talking about prohibiting adults from doing an activity that is possibly deleterious to their health, but prohibiting children from being exposed to something that has apparently been empirically demonstrated to drastically increase the chance of incredible direness.They're all going to die some day anyway, and almost all deaths are unbearably painful. If you want to protect them from long-term damage your only option is to ban childbirth.
Honestly I don't know what position I hold. I'm conflicted. Part of me rebels against "policy by horror story", where millions of people are forced to change their behaviour because of a small risk of something horrific that starts making the headlines. I know logically that this is one of the more reasonable cases of that phenomenon, and the response hasn't even gone as far as it could have. But it's also an example where my own experience gives me a strong emotional response. It's not that I don't care about brain damage, but I don't think it's the slam-dunk argument everyone else thinks it is. Brains are degenerative, we've all got it coming sooner or later. If you don't suffer long-run brain damage it's only because something else, possibly something worse, got to you first.Surely this can't actually be your position though. I mean, I know you are being a bit facetious here, and I see that. But we're not talking about prohibiting adults from doing an activity that is possibly deleterious to their health, but prohibiting children from being exposed to something that has apparently been empirically demonstrated to drastically increase the chance of incredible direness.
Fair dos, and thanks for taking the time to explain.Honestly I don't know what position I hold. I'm conflicted. Part of me rebels against "policy by horror story", where millions of people are forced to change their behaviour because of a small risk of something horrific that starts making the headlines. I know logically that this is one of the more reasonable cases of that phenomenon, and the response hasn't even gone as far as it could have. But it's also an example where my own experience gives me a strong emotional response. It's not that I don't care about brain damage, but I don't think it's the slam-dunk argument everyone else thinks it is. Brains are degenerative, we've all got it coming sooner or later. If you don't suffer long-run brain damage it's only because something else, possibly something worse, got to you first.
It's tied up with my more general old-man anger about the gentrification of football. Football without heading isn't football. You're free to come up with your own sport, call it something else and play it instead. You can't take over an existing sport, decide you're not comfortable with the risks it involves, and change the rules so that tougher, more aggressive kids, who are invariably worse-off economically, become less and less valuable.
I know I'm losing the argument, which is maybe a good thing. Maybe if I was in charge I would come to the same conclusion. But I still feel like I should object, I don't want these changes to pass by without the acknowledgment that something valuable is being lost.
Also, don't necessarily disagree with this, but it struck me as funny how a game called football arguably isn't what it is without a body part that isn't... a foot.Football without heading isn't football.
Sure. I don't really have an opinion on the NFL changes. It's not my sport, I have no connection to it, it wouldn't be my place to tell people who are deeply invested in it what level of risk is or isn't acceptable.Fair dos, and thanks for taking the time to explain.
I do get where you are coming from, but a lot of your arguments/points sound very reminiscent of the comments made by those angry about the concussion prevention rules introduced in the NFL (e.g. banning unnecessary roughness, and headbutts etc.) "Game's gone soft" etc.
For me, what these rules are about, is allowing for the game to continue to be played whilst simultaneously preventing conduct that is unnecessarily harmful. Often, these rules may have the effect of stymieing aspects of the game that are, to many people, fundamental. But that's just it. It is just a game. And life > any game.
I suppose this is where we differ I guess, because I don't think it would. As I say, if you can strip out a feature of a game that is (for argument's sake, let's say) definitely very harmful to the participants, whilst simultaneously ensuring the game remains playable, and does not lose much of its fundamental character, why would you not do this?Sure. I don't really have an opinion on the NFL changes. It's not my sport, I have no connection to it, it wouldn't be my place to tell people who are deeply invested in it what level of risk is or isn't acceptable.
I do kind of object to your last bit of rhetoric. Sports have massive health and wellbeing benefits, and stripping them back in the name of saving lives would be perverse. This wouldn't really apply to the heading change on its own, but the gentrified-football era has seen participation rates fall off a cliff, and that can be a matter of life and death too.
I think this is fair enough, they are not taking it out of the game altogether. Seems sensible to avoid it for primary school children at a stage where their skulls and brains are still presumably developing.The heading guidance covers training for all age groups between under-six and under-18
No heading in training in the foundation phase (primary school children)
Headers will gradually get more frequent in training, for example under-12 teams will be limited to one session a month with a maximum of five headers, while under-13 age groups will have one session a week
The rules also advise not to over-inflate the football when introducing heading in training, instead using the lowest pressure allowed
The guidance also sets out required ball sizes for training and matches for each age group
If you think heading will be removed from football I have some tartan paint to sell you.Going back to the debate on the heading issue, it's a tricky one. I'm someone who is a lot more on board with football's gentrification and probably contribute to it in some ways myself, but I totally get a lot of the outcry against it. Personally I think heading will die out in football eventually, either naturally or by design. It seems inevitable to me with each study, not to mention all the other dangers that come with challenging for the ball with your head; think John Terry and Diaby, Ryan Mason etc. I think on it's own, simply stopping youngsters from heading the ball in training has no negatives; doesn't impact the game in competition, might even lead to improved all-round footballing skills etc in future generations etc. But I've little doubt it's a stepping stone to something more drastic further down the line.
He absolutely has not.Have you ever watched a non-top flight match?