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Originally Posted by widgeon13
I realize concussions happen in many sports and with kids getting bigger they also happen more often and yes some probably even go undiagnosed. I stand by my recommendation that if you have a concussion, you don't play any sport for the balance of the season. Your brain needs time to recuperate. If the team doesn't have enough people to play perhaps the school shouldn't have a football team.
I don't know what schools spend on sports these days but it's a lot of money and my thought is that it could be spent more wisely on other things involving education rather than sports.
I don't know what the solution is but too many kids and young adults are suffering from sport related concussions these days and most of the incidents I hear about it's the second or third. In pro ball it's the second or third in a season. Right now it's a problem with no solution.
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Typically the football program financial intake finances the other non-revenue sports at a university, as well as many academic programs.
Your perspective sounds like someone that casually watched a cable news sensationalist piece. Concussions are probably less frequent today than they were 10 years ago. The equipment is better, the protocols to diagnose and remove a player from a game are better, the treatment is better. Yes it still happens. Injuries can happen in any sport. The value of sports greatly outweigh that risk in my book.
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