Michael Oher is the face of a scary NFL reality
MICHAEL Oher is the reason Hollywood hit “The Blind Side” was made, but his life in the NFL has taken a heartbreaking turn.
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A FORMER Carolina Panthers NFL star says Michael Oher’s sad situation is “one of the scariest things I’ve seen”.
Carolina released Oher, whose unlikely rise from childhood poverty to the NFL was told in the movie The Blind Side, last week after failing his team physical.
The 31-year-old has been in the NFL concussion protocol since last September. Oher started the first three games last season for the Panthers before suffering a concussion that kept him out the remainder of the season.
Bleacher Report’s Mike Freeman talked to an ex-Panther who spoke of his fear about the life-changing consequences repeated head knocks have on NFL players.
“It’s one of the scariest I’ve ever seen. I’ve never known any player to be in concussion protocol that long,” the player told Freeman.
Boston University School of Medicine researchers studied the brains of 202 former athletes who had played football in the NFL, the Canadian Football League or at the college or high school level and found signs of CTE in the brains of 110 of the former 111 NFL players.
The condition, which currently can be diagnosed only by taking brain tissue from a dead subject, has been diagnosed in former players including Hall of Fame linebacker Junior Seau and Pro Bowl safety Dave Duerson, who both committed suicide.
The Brain is a scary thing. You have to be careful with it.
â Michael Oher (@MichaelOher) July 20, 2017
“I can also say, with certainty, some players now are genuinely scared. I’m hearing a level of concern I haven’t heard before,” Freeman wrote in an article for Bleacher Report.
“I’ve heard from some who say the latest story and data regarding CTE rocked them more than any other. It was the near 100 percent number that triggered it. Some players tell me now they don’t see it any other way: If you play in the NFL, you will get CTE. It’s that simple to some of them.”
The NFL, which last year pledged $100 million for neuromedical research, said the study would help the league and players to understand the condition. “The NFL is committed to supporting scientific research into CTE and advancing progress in the prevention and treatment of head injuries,” said NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy, in an email.
The study found signs of CTE in the brains of 91 per cent of the 53 former college players whose brains were studied and 21 per cent of the former high school players.
— with AAP
Originally published as Michael Oher is the face of a scary NFL reality