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Suspending NFL games for injuries still reserved for most serious incidents


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After a preseason in which two games ended prematurely in the fourth quarter following concerning player injuries, the NFL had all of its Week 1 regular-season games finish on schedule.

There were still injuries, of course. Sunday, Houston Texans safety Jalen Pitre went to the hospital after his chest hit the knee of Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson and he was diagnosed with a bruised lung. Pitre was released the next day. Also Sunday, Denver Broncos safety Kareem Jackson hit Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Jakobi Meyers low and hard in the head, leaving Meyers motionless on the ground for a short period before he eventually was helped up. Meyers walked off the field with the help of two members of the Raiders’ medical team before being taken to the locker room and later ruled out with a concussion.

But there were no life-threatening injuries similar to that of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin in January, nor ones jarring enough for officials to suspend games, as they did in the preseason twice.

New England cornerback Isaiah Bolden was immobilized and taken from the field on a stretcher in an Aug. 19 game against the Green Bay Packers, after a collision with Patriots teammate Calvin Munson. Then, on Aug. 26, Miami Dolphins wide receiver Daewood Davis also left the field immobilized and on a stretcher following a hit by Jaguars linebacker Dequan Jackson as Davis attempted to catch a pass. Bolden and Davis were released from the hospital the next day.

The NFL says those games are the only three it has suspended because of injuries in the league’s modern era. 

With nothing at stake in the preseason exhibitions, the league’s decision to suspend play — supported by the head coaches — was a quick one. But would the NFL be as quick to postpone regular-season games because of a serious injury? Has anything significant changed in how the NFL approaches these decisions since the controversy about the long delay to suspend the Buffalo Bills-Cincinnati Bengals game after Hamlin suffered cardiac arrest on the field?

There’s no hard-and-fast threshold league officials adhere to when determining whether to resume play immediately or postpone to a later date. It’s always the NFL’s goal to see games played to completion. However, according to Rule 17, Article 4, of the league rule book, commissioner Roger Goodell holds the power to decide whether to resume games halted by emergencies.

Rule 17, Article 4 says:

The NFL affirms the position that in most circumstances all regular-season and postseason games should be played to their conclusion. If, in the opinion of appropriate League authorities, it is impossible to begin or continue a game due to an emergency, or a game is deemed to be imminently threatened by any such emergency (e.g., severely inclement weather, lightning, flooding, power failure), the following procedures (Articles 5 through 11) will serve as guidelines for the Commissioner and/or the duly appointed representatives. The Commissioner has the authority to review the circumstances of each emergency and to adjust the following procedures in whatever manner the Commissioner deems appropriate. If, in the Commissioner’s opinion, it is reasonable to project that the resumption of an interrupted game would not change its ultimate result or adversely affect any other inter-team competitive issue, the Commissioner is empowered to terminate the game.

So, the decision rests with Goodell, but his review of the circumstances could involve consulting with chief medical officials, emergency response teams, NFL Players Association officials and the coaches of each team to determine the best course of action. Each game also includes an NFL football operations representative, whose tasks include serving as a communications liaison with the league about any on-field issues, including game delays.

After Bolden’s injury last month, Patriots coach Bill Belichick and Packers coach Matt LaFleur were quick to confer with officials. All agreed the remainder of the game should be canceled, and the league’s official ruling in favor of the coaches’ decision came shortly after.

“It’s a scary situation and one that you never want to see in the game and I thought it was in the best interest of both teams,” LaFleur told reporters afterward. “Obviously, anytime you see somebody getting carted off like that it’s a tough situation to witness, and we could see the care for that young man by his teammates and the coaches. … We just felt like that was the right thing to do.”

The decision to reschedule the finish to the Jan. 2 Bills-Bengals game was a much slower process. Hamlin collapsed at 8:56 p.m. ET, but the game wasn’t officially suspended until 10:07 p.m. By then, Bills coach Sean McDermott and Bengals coach Zac Taylor had already sent their teams back to the locker room.

Neither coach wanted to continue with the contest, and Taylor said when he first spoke with McDermott after Hamlin’s collapse, McDermott told him: “‘I need to be at the hospital for Damar, and I shouldn’t be coaching this game.’”

“So that, to me, provides all the clarity,” Taylor said.

No one could have foreseen a situation like Hamlin’s, but the NFL — specifically the medical team at Paycor Stadium in Cincinnati — was ready that January night.

The league’s emergency preparedness protocol requires all teams to have Emergency Action Plans in place at every training camp site, practice facility and game day venue. The protocol also requires every stadium to have a designated Level I or Level II trauma center equipped to readily provide the highest level of care to injured patients. Two EMT/paramedic crews must be on site for each game. In all, the league’s emergency response plan requires 30 healthcare providers (team physicians, team athletic trainers, emergency response physicians, airway management physicians, unaffiliated neurotrauma consultants and athletic trainer injury spotters) to work each game.

“When the Damar Hamlin situation occurred, those of us who have been involved in this work realized this is why we do this training, this is why we have these rehearsals. It’s so that when we get in that situation, there’s a coordinated, prepared and rehearsed response that everyone feels very comfortable with,” said Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’s chief medical officer, on a recent conference call with reporters.

“And I don’t think it’s an exaggeration at all to say the positive outcome in that situation was a direct reflection of that preparation. This is something we’ve been doing in the league for almost a decade now. But I think it’s taken on even more importance and more urgency, and we are working to make sure that everyone involved in the emergency response network is involved in these rehearsals. Because again, we don’t ever want to be in a situation on game day that we haven’t gone through and rehearsed for.”

The extraordinary medical care available during games is one reason games can typically resume quickly after a player injury. The course of action for diagnosing and/or treating a player’s injury can vary. The medical team leaders on site are charged with determining the best course of action for the moment at hand.

But the decision to suspend a regular-season game — which is a league call, and not medical — is reserved for the most extreme injuries, as Hamlin’s represented.

“There he goes. One of God's own prototypes.

A high-powered mutant of some kind, never even considered for mass production.

Too weird to live, and too rare to die.”

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They're setting you up for more fake injuries this season.

Football is on its way out or they'll change the rules so bad, that QBs will wear flags.

If that Hamlin thing were real ,they would have immediately shoved him in ambulance and gotten out of there.

Tua still played last season as well. He wasnt hurt at all or not even that bad.

Players in the 70s weren't having all these problems. Yet now when the rules are pussier, and the equipment is supposed to be better, players are getting hurt worse? It's pure bullshit 

 

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3 hours ago, thinwhiteduke said:

Players in the 70s weren't having all these problems. 

You just get more and more stupid every day.

Do a little reading up on the health players from the 70's have. Their bodies are wrecked and many have damage to their brains.
Go read up on how they kept those players going when they were injured

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“There he goes. One of God's own prototypes.

A high-powered mutant of some kind, never even considered for mass production.

Too weird to live, and too rare to die.”

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1 minute ago, HipKat said:

You just get more and more stupid every day.

Do a little reading up on the health players from the 70's have. Their bodies are wrecked and many have damage to their brains.
Go read up on how they kept those players going when they were injured

That's a generality that has nothing to do with what I said.

Yada yada ,players get injured playing a sport like this.

I'm saying...you blithering idiot.

.that they had it alot worse and didn't stop games about it. Most of these guys are living full long later lives for all the head injury they supposedly got.

I guarantee you that half the time they take a player into that tent. He has nothing. It's just part of the script.

I'm not saying it's all healthy to get hit, you idiot.

I'm saying it's still being exaggerated and overblown and the fact is nothing happened to Hamlin or Tua.

But they will fake another dramatic injury.

Football will be gone by 2030.

Just like all the other food,gas, climate crap they are planning.

 

 

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9 minutes ago, HipKat said:

You just get more and more stupid every day.

Do a little reading up on the health players from the 70's have. Their bodies are wrecked and many have damage to their brains.
Go read up on how they kept those players going when they were injured

Yeah, there are two from the seventies who can tell you all you need to know.  Terry Bradshaw who cannot remember stats of players he has talked about and poor Mike Webster.  Worse, the NFL fought its veterans tooth and nail to deny them benefits.  They also denied CTE.  

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43 minutes ago, thinwhiteduke said:

That's a generality that has nothing to do with what I said.

Yada yada ,players get injured playing a sport like this.

I'm saying...you blithering idiot.

.that they had it alot worse and didn't stop games about it. Most of these guys are living full long later lives for all the head injury they supposedly got.

I guarantee you that half the time they take a player into that tent. He has nothing. It's just part of the script.

I'm not saying it's all healthy to get hit, you idiot.

I'm saying it's still being exaggerated and overblown and the fact is nothing happened to Hamlin or Tua.

But they will fake another dramatic injury.

Football will be gone by 2030.

Just like all the other food,gas, climate crap they are planning.

 

 

Every post you make, shows off how stupid you are.

And too stupid to do anything but keep on posting.

You're a moron of the highest echelon!

“There he goes. One of God's own prototypes.

A high-powered mutant of some kind, never even considered for mass production.

Too weird to live, and too rare to die.”

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NE walking away from a preseason game benefits them. Coach B would never walk away with home-field throughout the playoffs on the line.

NFL concern for the players rings hollow. Average life expectancy for an offensive lineman is in the low 50s.

Players know, and except the risk. Financial rewards, make it worth it for them. NFL made a big deal out of Damar  Hamlin because otherwise they would’ve looked bad. 

Our coach was a dip shit for leaving a game with everything on the line. In the future, non-playoff teams in December will take advantage of this new loophole.

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1 hour ago, Herodotus said:

Yeah, there are two from the seventies who can tell you all you need to know.  Terry Bradshaw who cannot remember stats of players he has talked about and poor Mike Webster.  Worse, the NFL fought its veterans tooth and nail to deny them benefits.  They also denied CTE.  

Terry Bradshaw is fine. Acting jobs and nfl shows. Im not saying he's not beat up but it's nothing extreme.

Do people who do manual labor their whole life get a

Anything for the pain financially?

Terry made more from tv than from Playing. 

I don't disagree that players get chewed up and thrown away.

But the nfl  still fakes injuries for its own agendas 

 

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