NFL Vet Kyle Turley, Showing Signs Of Brain Damage, Crusades To Make League Help Players Like Himself

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Posted on 13th June 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Brain Injury

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 Former Kansas City Chief Kyle Turley was the Ben Roethlisberger of his day. After sustaining several bad concussions playing, Turley began having what you could call anger-management issues and acted erratically.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2009/09/18/kyle-turley-experiencing-potentially-serious-brain-issues/

He will always be remembered as the player involved in the infamous helmet-throwing incident when he was playing for the New Orleans Saints in a game against the New York Jets in 2001. Trying to protect the Saint’s quarterback,  Turley pushed  Jets safety Damien Robinson to the ground, ripped off his helmet and threw it across the football field. 

http://nfl.fanhouse.com/2010/05/20/helmet-tossing-kyle-turley-goes-country-to-settle-scores/

Turley was tossed out of the game, fined $25,000 by the Saints and ordered to take anger management courses.

Today it would hard to find any former player more active than Turley in the battle to make the National Football League really try to help present and former players who have brain injury.

 It makes sense that Turley is championing this fight,  because it looks his concussions have had a permanent impact on his brain. Last August he collapsed in a club, and later went in and out of consciousness. Now doctors suspect he may be showing the first symptoms of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, a degenerative neurological disease that contributed to the deaths of ex-NFL players Andre Water and Justine Strezelczyk.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ms-thegameface091809

Turley is a textbook case of how concussions might impact a player’s behavior, and not for the better. The helmet- tossing incident was not his only embarrassing moment in football.    

 After suffering a severe concussion in 2003 when he was playing for the Los Angeles Rams, Turley went into the locker room, took a shower and was sitting by his locker naked when team owner Georgia Frontiere came in. He stood up and gave her a big hug, standing there stark naked.  

 In a recent exclusive interview with the blog Arrowhead Addict,  Turley offered some talk about his problems after sustaining head injuries, why he’s donating his brain to research on head trauma, and about how the NFL has failed for so long to admit the relationship between football-related-brain injury and later brain disease.

http://arrowheadaddict.com/2010/06/08/aa-exclusive-interview-with-former-chief-kyle-turley/

Turley testified before a Congressional committee last fall about his experiences, and lack of proper care, after sustaining numerous head injuries while playing for three NFL teams.  He didn’t like what he heard when he was in Washington from the NFL and still doesn’t think the league is taking its responsibility to stop brain injury and help players very seriously.  

Turley, who is now pursuing a music career in Nashville, told Arrowhead Addict that he agreed with prior remarks by Terry Bradshaw, namely that the NFL has been reactive, not proactive, in terms of dealing with the repercussions of player brain trauma.

At the hearings on the NFL and brain injury, Turley recalled watching a league doctor deny that football was the cause of long-term brain injury in players.

 ”So many guys have gone without being approved for disability and having the ability to get treatment,” he told the blog. “Guys have died, guys that were great players in this game, you know Andre Waters and Justin Strzelczyk and a few other guys that have had the same, I mean, Mike Webster had the same brain trauma as Justin Strzelczyk and Andre Waters and these others. The long-term effects from playing the game of football. There’s no question that there’s a direct relationship….To deny that this evidence exists and deny that there is any relation to these issues from football was offensive and shows exactly the NFL’s stance on the matter.”

Turley is one of a number of  ex-NFL players who have agreed to donate their brains to the Boston School of Medicine, which is creating a bank of brains to examine as part of its research on head injury and future brain disease. That research may spare potential future players, like his 1-year-old son, from the  brain trauma and the anger-management problems that Turley has lived with, he said.  

 ”I’ve suffered some issues with my feelings with my head injuries from football and its been difficult for me to deal with certain things and it has caused me to have take different medications and all kinds of other things that I don’t want my son to have to do,” he told Arrowhead Addict.

  The NFL in April donated $1 million to help fund BU’s brain-injury research. Whether it was a PR stunt or genuinc gesture  on the part of the league remains to be seen.  

 Besides, Turley pointed out that $1 million is not a lot of money for the NFL to ante up.

“If they want to make a dent in this thing the NFL’s going to have to commit some serious dollars to this research so that they can come up with solutions and not just play this fame,”  Turley said in his blog interview.   

 

Pittsburgh Steelers Roethlisberger Apologizes, Says Won’t Appeal His Suspension

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Posted on 26th April 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Brain Injury

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Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, suspended for six games last week by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell,  Monday said he’s accountable for his actions and apologized to his team and fans.

“The Commissioner’s decision to suspend me speaks clearly that more is expected of me,” Roethlisberger said in a statement on the Steelers’ website.

 http://www.steelers.com/news/article-1/Statement-By-Ben-Roethlisberger-Regarding-His-Suspension/43bb2d11-6003-4873-9226-8962140ddc9aaa

 “I am accountable for the consequences of my actions. Though I have committed no crime, I regret that I have fallen short of the values instilled in me by my family. I will not appeal the suspension and will comply with what is asked of me ─ and more.”

 The embattled football player has been accused of sexually assaulting an intoxicated 20-year-old student in the bathroom of a Georgia bar March 5, and is being sued for allegedly raping a woman in Lake Tahoe, Nev. Although Roethlisberger wasn’t criminally charged, the NFL found that he had violated its personal conduct policy.  http://espn.go.com/blog/afcnorth/post/_/id/12139/nfl-statement-on-roethlisberger

 The NFL, in an intervention, called for Roethlisberger to undergo a comprehensive behavioral exam as well as being penalized with the missed games without pay.

 “Missing games will be devastating for me,” he said. “I am sorry to let down my teammates and the entire Steelers fan base. I am disappointed that I have reached this point and will not put myself in this situation again. I appreciate the opportunities that I have been given in my life and will make the necessary improvements.”

 Roethlisberger has sustained traumatic brain injury that can impact behavior. He was nearly killed in a motorcycle accident where he was thrown, and hit his helmetless head. He has also sustained four concussions on the field.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What The NFL’s ‘Intervention’ With Pittsburgh Steelers Quarterback Roethlisberger Entails

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Posted on 23rd April 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Brain Injury

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Make no mistake about it, the National Football League’s punishment this week of Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was really an intervention.

 Roethlisberger was not only suspended without pay for six games for an incident in which he had sex with an intoxicated 20-year-old student in a bar bathroom, he was also ordered to undergo a comprehensive behavioral evaluation.

 NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell is trying to help the quarterback, who was accused of – but not criminally charged –  with committing a sexual assault in the Georgia bar incident. Goodell flat out asked Roethlisberger, once a hero who lead his team to two Super Bowl wins, to help himself and turn his life around.

 “Your conduct raises sufficient concerns that I believe effective intervention now is the best step for your personal and professional welfare,” Goodell wrote in a letter to Roethlisberger.

 “I believe it is essential that you take full advantage of the resources available to you,” the commissioner said. “My ultimate disposition in this matter will be influenced by the extent to which you do so, what you learn as a result, and the demonstrated commitment to making positive change in your life.”  

 The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote a detailed story on what kinds of  tests Roethlisberger faces to determine to what degree his violation of the NFL’s personal conduct policy can be blamed on psychological, behavioral or neuropsychological disorders.  http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10113/1052700-66.stm

 Then, a plan for treatment and intervention must be devised.

 If anyone is a candidate for having neuropsychological problems, it’s Roethlisberger. A foolish daredevil who distains helmets, he was almost killed in a motorcycle accident several years ago when he was thrown and hit his head. As a Steeler, he sustained four concussions. That’s all a recipe for behavioral issues.

 The quarterback won’t be able to play ball until he completes his evaluation and therapy.  

 The evaluation will be done by medical professionals hired by the NFL. The process is likely to begin with a one or two-hour interview. As Roethlisberger talks about his problems in the past, doctors will be paying close attention to his actions and demeanor.

 Neuropsychological testing will hopefully be part of the NFL evaluation, to determine if the quarterback’s frontal lobe, the part of the brain that controls judgment and impulse control, was damaged from his motorcycle accident and football concussions, according to the Post-Gazette.

 The evaluation will also determine if Roethlisberger has an alcohol or drug addiction.

 Finally, the doctor in charge of the evaluation will have to study all the information and suggest treatment, it it’s deemed necessary. That could mean treatments such as cognitive behavioral therapy or anger management.