Authors: Irvin Muchnick
As I've written, right-wingers went after Costas for talking about guns in his Jovan Belcher commentary on NBC Sunday night. Meanwhile, I and some others expressed disappointment that Costas, by his emphases, had put the ever-polarized gun debate at the center of the public conversation in the Belcher postmortem, and football's more consensus-friendly pathologies (brain injury, painkiller abuse, celebration of violence, etc.) on the margin.
In a just-concluded phone conversation, Costas explained that he believes he did no such thing. Bob doesn't want me to quote him, but I'll try to transcribe his train of thought faithfully, in the hope that those of us who feel more or less the same way about the excesses of football in our society can keep the right target in the cross-hairs going forward.
Sorry, bad metaphor â¦
In Bob's mind, he was delivering the absolutely strongest and most responsible editorial possible at that moment of known and verified information about the BelcherâKasandra Perkins tragedy â within the all of 60 seconds of air time he was allotted. In the ensuing 36 hours, considerably more Belcher info has surfaced, and we will be hearing what Costas has to say about it â perhaps as soon as his Thursday show on the NBC Sports cable network.
Notwithstanding the attacks on him by yahoos, Bob does not even see himself, in this context, as advocating gun control per se. Rather, he was reflecting on the gun
culture
so prevalent in America, perhaps especially among athletes, and perhaps especially, especially among football players.
Finally, Bob points out that he explicitly concluded his commentary with an observation extraneous to the Jason Whitlock column he was quoting about guns. Costas said that in the next days, “Jovan Belcher's actions, and their possible connection to football, will be analyzed. And who knows?”
Fair enough. I think I've made my point and I think Bob has made his. Onward.
7 December 2012..........
Matt Chaney, author of the superb but barely noticed 2009 book
Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football
, is our most fearless historian of football's harm. In a post at his blog last year, Chaney writes about the 1980 murder-suicide of retired Kansas Chiefs offensive tackle Jim Tyrer. Chaney calls Tyrer “one of the greatest offensive tackles in history,” who remains shut out of the Pro Football Hall of Fame only because “the league and media suddenly wanted to forget him.”
2
..........
1
mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/03/at-halftime-costas-put-spotlight-on-guns-by-morning-the-spotlight-was-on-him/
.
2
“Football Brain Trauma Can Twist Personality, Spur Violence,”
blog.4wallspublishing.com/2011/06/16/football-brain-Âtrauma-can-change-personality-spur-violence.aspx
.
MY FRIEND GEORGE VISGER
24 June 2011..........
Former San Francisco 49er George Visger comments on my criticism of Dr. Richard Ellenbogen, co-chair of the NFL concussion committee:
I agree with you, but think Ellenbogen is trying to do the right thing. I played DT for the 49ers in '80 and '81 when I developed hydrocephalus from numerous concussions, and underwent emergency VP shunt brain surgery at age 22. My shunt failed (in Mexico fishing) just four months after we won Super Bowl XVI and my brother brought me home in a coma. I underwent two more brain surgeries 10 hours apart and was given last rites. I was also given the hospital bills, and had creditors on me for nearly five years till I successfully sued the 49ers for WORKERS COMP! I am now on brain surgery No. 9, multiple gran mal seizures and currently taking my sixth different seizure med since starting on them over 25 years ago. The side effects have been catastrophic on my everyday life.
Ellenbogen called me ~ 1 1/2 years ago when I called him out on Dave Pear's blog immediately Âafter he was hired. He and I correspond regularly now. He asked I submit suggested rule changes which he would present to the NFL Rules Committee. Many of my suggestions have been implemented today (much to the chagrin of players). Only difference I had was I wanted all fines for head-to-head hits levied at the owners, not the players.
I was one of four ex players and five NFL Hall of Fame players asked to speak at a press conference in Washington, DC, last Monday, prior to the Carl Eller vs. NFL lawsuit.
We need more folks like you not afraid to air the NFL's dirty laundry.
George Visger
SF 49ers '80 and '81
Survivor of Nine NFL Caused Emergency VP Shunt Brain Surgeries
Benefactor of ZERO NFL Benefits
24 June 2011..........
There are a million concussion stories in the Naked City, and this blog can't possibly tell more than a tiny fraction of them. But it is worth repeating over and over again the story of George Visger, whose football brain injury turned him into a real-life version of the protagonist of the 2000 cult movie
Memento
â someone robbed of the basic human function of short-term memory. Fortunately for all of us, Visger attacks his plight with grace, zest, and educational meticulousness.
Visger isn't hunting for the murderer of his wife â he just seeks a scrap of justice for himself. So far, going on 30 years, there has been none from the $10-billion-a-year National Football League. (I think it's safe to upgrade from the “$9-billion-a-year NFL” after yesterday's announcement of a 10-year extension of ESPN broadcast rights at a
raise
of nearly $1 billion annually.)
I originally referenced Visger's case after he posted a long comment in response to a blog item. Yesterday Dave Pear's Independent Football Veterans blog republished my report on confronting DeMaurice Smith, executive director of the NFL Players Association, at the Santa Clara University Sports Law Symposium.
John Hogan, the wise and indefatigable attorney for disabled players, added in a comment under my post that Smith also had failed to answer the specific question in Hogan's own talk at the symposium about crater-sized loopholes in the new “neurocognitive benefit” the union is hyping in its collective bargaining agreement with the league. Hogan: “I don't see it helping many guys. You have to be vested, under 55, and not on Line-of-Duty or Total and Permanent. That pretty much leaves out all guys who are working. But how do you perform sustained, competitive work if you have a significant neurocognitive impairment?”
That's when George Visger jumped in again. The floor belongs to him:
John,
To answer your question, “But how do you perform sustained, competitive work if you have a significant neurocognitive impairment?”
I developed hydrocephalus (water on the brain) while playing DT with the '81 SF 49ers, and underwent emergency VP shunt brain surgery. Four months after we won Super Bowl XVI, my shunt failed and I had two more brain surgeries 10 hours apart and was given last rites. Virtually no memory for nearly a year after. My first recollection was of receiving bills for the brain surgeries from the 49ers front office with the total circled “YOU OWE THIS AMOUNT.” (I was hoping for at least flowers and a cheesy card.)
After fighting off creditors for four years, the 49ers counsel forced me to take the stand while he grilled me at my Workers Comp hearing on what I did my last day of practice (we're not talking malpractice or liability claim, just a simple Work Comp claim like ANY injured employee is entitled to). I won my case in '86 and they offered me $35K to disappear. It sounded appealing as I was living in a dirt-bag apartment, swinging a hammer for $12/hour and bouncing at nights for $10k to survive. I told them to keep their money and I kept my medical claim open AND asked to finish my biology degree through Vocational Rehab. All injured employees are entitled to Voc Rehab. I had four years of bio at Colorado before being drafted in '80 and wanted to finish. Thank God I kept the medical open and didn't take the cash.
I completed my degree in biological conservation in 1990 while surviving four more brain surgeries (in '87) and multiple gran mal seizures. During the four-and-a-half years it took to complete my degree, the 49ers Work Comp was responsible for every bill associated with my being retrained (books, tuition, mileage to school each day, mileage to doctors' appointments, doctors, meds, counseling), and I received disability while I was in school full time or recovering from my surgeries. I had two additional knee surgeries during this time, including a Gore Tex ACL transplant, repairing the sloppy job the 49ers did in '81. Everything covered but still not worth the price my family continues to pay for my having played two years in the NFL.
Twenty nine years later, I have now survived nine emergency VP shunt brain surgeries, multiple gran mal seizures, suffer from major short-term memory deficits, and have been diagnosed by Dr. Amen and Dr. Claydon as suffering from early onset dementia. I was on four different dementia medicines at once last year, to help me continue functioning as a self-employed environmental consultant. The side effects were worse than the treatment so I upped my hyperbarics and Omega 3's and only take two Arricept/day to increase my neurotransmitters. I am functioning better than I have in years.
How to Survive with an NFL Caused Traumatic Brain Injury
You get the picture. Some days I have 22-plus pages of notes to read through before doing my data reports.
Every couple nights I read through the prior week's work/life. After reading what I did last week 3â4 times I know what I did, even if I don't really remember doing it. I will highlight important items with various colored pens I need to come back to (red = work, Âyellow = home, blue = other). This eliminates wasted time reading unimportant information.
There are ways to function with TBI. The NFL certainly doesn't want to take responsibility for putting their ex-employees in these situations, as it's not only bad PR but costly.
Think what we could do if we all functioned at the capacity we are capable of. I hate to say it, but the last thing the NFL wants to see is a bunch of highly motivated players and families operating at optimum levels, calling them on their criminal handling of their injured employees.
Those of you in my situation and those family members dealing with a TBI survivor try these techniques. It's the only way I have learned how to function.
We need to take control of our lives again.
FYI: I have cc'd De Smith on this and will request he send his response to me via Dave Pears' blog. The man works for the players (though we are no longer considered a player even though we pay dues). There's no reason he didn't address questions at the Symposium. I am looking forward to your comments, De.
George Visger
SF 49ers '80 and '81
Survivor of Nine NFL Caused Emergency VP Shunt Brain Surgeries
Benefactor of ZERO NFL Benefits
15 October 2011..........
It's not nice to speak ill of the dead, and to be sure, Al Davis â the Oakland Raiders' owner who died Saturday at 82 â was a colorful figure whose dark side is easy to gloss over for the media types who too often serve as ruling-class stenographers. At the peak of his powers, he had a brilliant football mind, and he raised business ruthlessness to an art form. He also was intermittently droll, a quality that should not be devalued.