Failure to Pull Concussed Player from Game Costs District $600K

Football Players

Among the biggest issues facing sports administrators over the past decade is the long-term effects on athletes of concussions and subconcussive blows to the head. From youth sports to the professional level, leagues and organizations have taken steps to prevent their players from suffering — or from exacerbating the adverse impacts of — head injuries. The most common step is to implement concussion management protocols requiring athletes to be evaluated and cleared by a physician or athletic trainer before an athlete suspected of a head injury can return to play.

While professional teams and college programs have large medical staffs to oversee concussion management protocols, at the high school and youth sports levels, the responsibilities to assess injuries — especially head injuries — typically fall to coaches. What happens when a coach fails to follow proper protocol? This was the question posed in Sarah Wood v. Horry County School District, Case No. 2017CP2606643.

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