Couldn’t find an existing thread, sorry if there is one. What do we all think? Seems inevitable that steps will be taken. I can already see the Nike Predator Headguard that puts spin on the ball whilst protecting the brain.
Football’s governing bodies are preparing to make England the first country to formally limit heading in professional training as part of a wide-ranging strategy to tackle the national game’s dementia crisis. (Telegraph - subscription required)
I think it needs to be limited at youth football and no doubt the footballs used in the 60s and 70s contributed.
The question we can’t answer is do the new footballs effect it? I can’t head the ball to save my life so I’d happily see it go from amateur football training
I would say continuous heading during training can’t be helped, I think you may see less of it in the players who come of age around the mid 90s just because the game developed, if studies start to show some big issues in the modern pros then it could easily disappear.
But you are right, the head gear will probably come in for defenders.
We obviously don’t head the ball, but my teammate copped a wet Sherrin in the nuts one night at training, twas a 40m pass in a long, full ground drill. That pill was travelling.
He dropped instantly and didn’t move for about 20mins. We just trained around him.
Yep. We basically played on a dirt track, maybe one glove and maybe one leg pad. No one had a helmet.
And if someone had a proper leather ball that was great until the skin was f*****. We’d then pull the skin off and play with the cork core (corky) inside.
Maybe not down in’t mamby pamby south; but up in’t’north it’s part and parcel, not that we could afford a proper cricket ball. We used to dream of playin’ wi’ a proper cricket ball. We ‘ad t’make do wi’ a lump of coal.
Anyway, where do you think the term “head-the-ball” came from?
Considering he is minister why doesn’t he step up and announce some kind of investigation instead of pontificating about the pointless waving of flags.