The trailer to a new mini-documentary titled βShocked: The Hidden Factor in the Sports Concussion Crisisβ concludes with Brett Favre stating, βNow Iβm thinking, wow, if I only knew.β
The NFL Hall of Fame quarterback and three-time league MVP is referring to all the times he heard bells ringing or saw fireworks exploding after having his head slammed by an opponent β often into the playing field β and what that may mean for his long-term health. He didnβt know then that even the times he felt mere dizziness or fogginess he had, in fact, suffered a concussion.
βI think the general public has always thought a guy gets hit, he goes stiff, heβs out cold β a boxer gets hit and he just falls straight on his face β we know thatβs a concussion,β Favre told Athletic Business Wednesday, on the eve of the documentaryβs debut. βThere are many more examples of concussions where a person is still conscious, but itβs no less damaging than the knockout blow. How many of those have I had? Oh, my gosh, too many to count. And thatβs scary.β
During a playing career that spanned 20 seasons and 321 consecutive starts, and ended when his head was slammed to the TCF Bank Stadium turf in Minneapolis during week 15 of the 2010 season, Favre admits he didnβt realize the potential damage being done to his brain, or that advances in playing field technology β namely the underlying shock pad in some synthetic turf systems β may have helped prevent it.
And thatβs why heβs speaking out now, to raise awareness among parents and youth coaches in particular. βThereβs no way you would let your child go out on the football field and play tackle football without a helmet. You wouldnβt even consider that,β Favre says. βBut you would let your kid go out in a helmet and play on the hardest surface out there. You just donβt think of the surface as a piece of equipment like a helmet or thigh pad or shoulder pads, but in reality it is. And Iβll be honest with you, I never thought of it that way either. There is something out there that is safer, and we have to press the issue and ask questions about the surface.β
Favreβs two worst concussions resulted from head-to-surface contact, and so does one out of every five concussions overall, he says. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that between 1.6 million and 3.8 million sports-related concussions occur annually within the United States.
βI donβt want to sound like a doctor, because Iβm not. Iβm no expert, but I do know that what little bit we know about concussions is not good,β says Favre, calling concussions the NFLβs hottest topic consistently over the past two years. βWeβre seeing former players coming out, they have CTE, they canβt remember where they live, guys have committed suicide. And itβs not going away. The seriousness of concussions has got my attention, and I think itβs got the attention of former players, obviously, but even current players and players who have just retired early who would never have retired early in previous generations.β
Asked if he, given his iron-horse reputation, ever felt pressure to return to play with a concussion, Favre says no organization ever pressured him. As for internal pressure, he adds, βThereβs no way I would come out of a game for a concussion,β relating a New York Giants game against Favreβs Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field in which he sat out a play, returned to throw a touchdown on the next play, and then couldnβt remember having done it. Then came the last helmet-to-surface hit on the last play of his career. βIβd had enough.β
Favreβs understanding of concussions has evolved even more since. βI thought when the headaches go away, the dizziness goes away, thereβs no more brain injury,β he says. βWell, thatβs not true. It doesnβt go away. Had I known that, Iβm almost certain that I would have erred on the side of caution more times than not. I look at my health a lot differently now than I did at 25.β
Favre says the NFL has done βa pretty good jobβ instituting the return-to-play concussion protocol, which coincided with his final playing season in Minnesota, though he contends that most players then didnβt know it existed. βNow, in the short time since itβs been instituted, concussions have become a much bigger issue,β he says. βIs it 100 percent foolproof? Absolutely not. Itβs still a work in progress. Theyβve spent a lot of money on helmets, and thatβs great. But one of the things that I never thought about until the past couple years is whatβs called a shock pad, put up underneath an artificial surface, and that has reduced concussions by a considerable number.β
βShockedβ premiers tonight at 6:30 p.m. (Eastern) on the new multi-platform sports network Stadium β the first of several appearances on the network in January. The documentary also features University of Tennessee turfgrass research specialist John Sorochan, Concussion Legacy Foundation president Chris Nowinski, and field designer Megan Buczynski, a principal at landscape architecture firm Activitas.