Should children under the age of 12 be allowed to play tackle football? People playing at a questionably young age risk early psychological trauma, in addition to developing brain disease(s) like CTE. CTE stands for “Chronic traumatic encephalopathy” a form of tauopathy, it is a progressive, degenerative disease found in people who have suffered repetitive brain trauma. According to the passage, Joseph Chernach, who played tackle football since 11 years of age, hung himself at 25 years old due to CTE. Chernach acquired this life-threatening condition while participating in tackle football. However head concussions and injuries aren't infrequent, they've been decreasing case wise, though, to engage at that young of an age remains absurd. The
In the book Broken Circle: The Dark Legacy of Indian Residential Schools, the author discusses his gruesome experiences while attending the Indian Residential School systems. Theodore Fontaine was stripped away from his family at the young age of seven, and sent to a residential school, operated by the Canadian government. Fontaine begins the book by explaining his joyful and culturally rich life as a young Ojibway child. Later, Fontanne was forced to attend Fort Alexander Residential School, where he was punished for displaying any aspect of his indigenous culture. These punishments include insidious forms of abuse: emotional, physical, and sexual. The story of a young, innocent child, experiencing such misery and distresses is an example
I think that kids shouldn't play football because it is too dangerous. People get concussions every day when they play football. After repeatedly bashing their skulls football players get concussions, caused by the spongy tissue in the brain hitting the hard skull. It is very painful to get a concussion, and leaves permanent damage to the brain. As well as being excruciatingly painful, and possibly never being the same, with many issues. "In milder cases, athletes can be left with lifelong pain, memory lapses, aggression, depression, personality changes, and many other issues."(Shotz[11]). This sport just keeps getting more and more dangerous, manifesting on itself, becoming more and more brutal as players become more competitive. There are
Since football is a very physical game people under the age of fourteen should not play organized tackle football. By age 4, the heads of kids are 90% of adult size. However, their necks are much weaker than an adult’s neck. Therefore if the child is hit he is more than likely to suffer from a concussion. When it comes to tackling at a very young age there are many delicate issues at hand and that needs to be
People have been playing a game that most call “tackle football” for decades, but they have also been asking one question: “Should children be allowed to play?” Young children should not be allowed to play tackle football in order to keep them safe and guarantee a healthy future. Football is a very dangerous sport and young people can not only get their brain permanently damaged, but they can also get CTE, or stunt their brain development.
Physician-assisted suicides (PAS) successful legalization in multiple locations, including four U.S. states, proves that opponents’ predictions of PAS leading to medical misconduct are inaccurate. Jacob Appel, a doctor in New York City, is quoted explaining, “ Despite predictions that legalization would lead to abuse or to decrease in palliative care, jurisdictions that have sanctioned the process, like the Netherlands and Oregon, have shown that a system of assisted suicide can be implemented responsibly” (qtd. in “The Right to Die: Do terminally ill patients have a right to die with the assistance of a physician?”). Appel’s claim is corroborated by Lewis Cohen who says,
“If only she knew then that her son would be dead at 25. Joseph hung himself in his mother's shed on June 7, 2012. His brain was later found to have severe CTE, a degenerative brain disease that has been linked to concussions in football. Joseph Chernach had played sports, including wrestling, pole vaulting and football most of his young life. But he spent almost four years playing Pop Warner football from ages 11 to 14.” When you get concussion after concussion it repetitively traumatizes your brain and it can lead to CTE it means Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy it is a brain disease found in athletes, veterans, and others with a history of concussions. That's why i think little kids shouldn't play in rough sports it can give concussions that affect them for a lifetime(...or the lack thereof), parents have unrealistic expectations, and its too force on to them if they are young
Imagine being a kid in a hospital dealing with a concussion.This is becoming a common cause.Should kids under 14 really be able to play tackle football?My claim is that kids under the age of 14 should not be able to play tackle football.
In a secondary that ranked 24th in the league allowing 241.1 passing yards, cornerback was an obvious need coming into the draft and the team selected Nick Nelson out of Wisconsin who only played one season but from that one season proved that he has the ability to make an impact in the NFL. In his one season with Wisconsin, Nelson broke up 21 passes most in the nation. Even though he did not get any interceptions, Nelson still had an impressive season. As long as Nelson can produce that kind of production in the NFL and work on getting interceptions, he will be a productive cornerback for the Raiders for years to come.
As a rule, a kid should wait until their brain is done. Next kids should not play tackle football because of concussion’s / brain damages because of Memory lapse. As a rule, if kids that keep on playing football and suffer a concussion numerous times they end up in memory lapse. Last is my final reason why kids should not play tackle football because concussions/brain damages because a child’s head can be hurt. A Small a child head cranium at 4 is about 90 percent the sized an adult that is imported discussion of concussions.
Imagine, your son comes home from a football practice and tells you his head hurts. You don’t think anything of it so you just give him some headache medicine and tell him to go to bed. He wakes up the next morning in excruciating pain and can barely even function with how bad it is. Your son has received a concussion from a teammate during practice because they haven’t learned the proper tackling techniques. All could have been avoided if you didn’t allow him to play until he and his body were ready for it. Young kids should not be playing contact football at too young of an age because, they are not fully developed, the kids won’t be held back in any way and the safety measures taken in youth football are just simply
Holding your child out of tackle football until an older age to keep him from getting brain damage later on in life is a great idea. Keeping your child out of tackle football until an older age can help prevent many different negative symptoms like “like developing thinking and memory problems as an adult” (Hard Knocks). This is important so your child can
Recent research found that when children who play football and other contact sports suffer repeated jolts to the head, it can cause lasting damage to the developing brain. That can be true even when kids do not suffer any concussions. This was startling news, given that Pee Wee and Pop Warner players sustain from 240 to 585 head hits per season between ages 9 and 12, a critical period of brain development. As a result, some prominent voices have urged parents not to let their kids play the game, among them neuropathologist Bennet Omalu, whose discovery of the progressive brain disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in former NFL players is depicted in the film Concussion. Omalu contends that children under 18 should not be allowed to risk their future by playing football. "Our children are minors who have not reached the age of consent," he says. A growing number of athletes now agree, including the hard-nosed former NFL tight end and coach
In the last five years, either an NFC West (Seattle twice; San Francisco) or NFC South (Carolina Panthers; Atlanta Falcons) team has represented the conference in the Super Bowl. However, as divisional powers shift, we could see a shakeup in the NFC during the upcoming season. With the NFL Draft completed and training camps beginning, let’s look at the NFC teams that could represent their divisions in the 2017-18 playoffs.
According to an article published under the name; “Don’t let kids play football” in the New York TImes, There has been a great deal of evidence that brain damage at the cellular level of brain functioning can happen in a high school football player even if the player experienced no documented concussions or even reported symptoms. If the child continues to play over many seasons, these cellular injuries accumulate to cause what the New York Times considers “irreversible brain damage” which is now known as C.T.E or Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy. This condition puts a child at great risk of developing symptoms such as major depression, memory loss as well as loss of intelligence and dementia later in life. The risk of C.T.E as well as other conditions of permanent brain impairment are heightened by the fact that unlike most other organs, the brain does not have the ability to fully cure itself from any types of injury. In other words, we are born with a certain number of neurons and we can only lose them, not replenish or replace damaged or dying ones and playing high school football is a great way to do this.
One reason I would not let my son play football is because it promotes violence. “I hate to say it, but no “heads up” campaign or the threat of a penalty or a fine will reduce football’s inherent violence” (Fujita 3) Some people go into football not knowing the violence and pain that come with it. Professional football players were unaware of the dangers that concussions can cause, while the NFL knows about the consequences that can happen when a player get concussed. “In August , ESPN pulled its name and logo from the “League of Denial,” a “Frontline” documentary about how the N.F.L., handled -or, more appropriately mishandled - the concussion crisis among its players.” (Sandomir 1) Violence is praised through the stands when someone gets pushed to the floor and seriously hurt. Football players are unaware of the dangers that come with getting a concussion, but the NFL knows all and lets them get into this danger for the sake of entertainment. The NFL hides the truth and mishandled cases of players, because they know the consequences and don’t want to be charged for it, leaving the players clueless for what could happen next.