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The NFL meat grinder: US pro football player dies in training
camp
Comment by Kate Randall
10 August 2001
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The death July 30 of National Football League player Korey
Stringer, who collapsed of heat exhaustion following practice
in Mankato, Minnesota, demonstrates how the billion-dollar enterprise
that is American professional sports devours and discards human
beings in the interest of the bottom line.
Stringer, a 27-year-old offensive tackle with the Minnesota
Vikings, collapsed of heat stroke on the second day of pre-season
practice. Temperatures that day reached the mid-90s F (35 degrees
C), and high humidity created a heat index of 109 degrees F (43
C). Stringers body temperature rose to 108 degrees (42.2
C) and he died at the hospital 15 hours later, never regaining
consciousness.
He was the first professional football player to die from heat
stroke in the NFLs 82-year history. However, since 1995,
18 high school and college football players have died from overexertion
in the heat during training. Only five days before Stringers
death, 18-year-old University of Florida freshman Eraste Austin
collapsed and died at training camp. And then on August 5, Rashidi
Wheeler, a starting safety for Northwestern University in Evanston,
Illinois, collapsed during preseason conditioning drills and died
shortly afterward. A preliminary coroners report gave the
cause of Wheelers death as bronchial asthma, but his family
has called for a further investigation.
The death of this talented athlete was a tragic waste of human
life which was unquestionably preventable. Stringer had been unable
to complete practice the day before, exhausted from the heat.
His teammates reportedly needled him about a photograph that appeared
in the following mornings Minneapolis Star-Tribune,
which showed him bent over and gasping for air. He continued practice
the next day, despite vomiting three times and showing clear signs
that he was suffering the effects of heat exhaustion. No one intervened
to insist he stop training, get out of the heat and rest.
By continuing to participate in the practice the young player
was following the ethos promoted by professional football: push
the body to the limit and beyond. Any other behavior is considered
soft and not worthy of the game. This beyond-macho ethic is cultivated
by team owners, enforced by coaches and trainers, and perpetuated
by an understanding among the players. In this case it was a philosophy
that directly resulted in a mans death.
A number of NFL superstars earn huge salaries. But billions
of dollars more are generated by their performances, in the form
of ticket revenues, television rights and advertising. The media
plays a particularly pernicious role in cultivating an appetite
among fans for violence on the football field, sensationalizing
the brutality. But in order to continue to deliver on this, the
game needs more players like Korey Stringer.
Stringer was six-feet four inches tall and weighed 335 pounds
(152 kilos). His bulk is not unusual among offensive linemen in
professional football today, whose job it is to ram into opposing
defensive linementypically of similar sizeto clear
the way for running backs or protect the quarterback, the lighter,
faster skill players. Line play is frequently referred
to as being in the trenches, in keeping with the militaristic
terminology of American football, but the description has a certain
accuracy, suggesting a resemblance to the brutal, pointless battles
of World War I, in which thousands died to gain a few yards.
Players in this position have become bigger and bigger over
the last two decades. While players of Stringers size were
once merely overweight, today the majority of them have a high
muscle mass and body fat of 15 percent or lower. Their bodies
are the result of intense conditioning; and it is well known that
this is helped along in many cases by the use of anabolic steroids,
which pose grave health risks.
These players are not only bigger, but faster as well. Much
of the action on the football field involves collisions between
these dense, heavy bodies, including direct helmet-to-helmet contact
at high speeds. These collisions have resulted in numerous concussions
and spinal cord injuries, leaving players permanently disabled.
Even those who manage to escape catastrophic injuries spend only
a relatively short time in professional football, averaging just
over four years in the NFL. While some players sign multimillion-dollar
contracts, more than half of them earn less than $500,000 a year
during their brief careers. The long-term toll on the athletes
bodies has been little studied, but there are plenty of anecdotal
accounts of gifted athletes barely able to walk by age 50, because
of loss of cartilage in the knees, and of premature deaths from
a variety of causes.
While football involves brute force, speed, athletic skill
and strategy are also required. Some talented athletes have seen
their lives tragically transformed, as a result of injuries suffered
on the field. One of these men is Mike Utley, an All-American
from Washington State University who was drafted by the Detroit
Lions in 1989.
Utley became the starting right guard for the Lions his rookie
year. In the fifth game of that year, he suffered an injury that
put him on the injured reserved list for the rest of the year.
In his second year he fractured two ribs in the third preseason
game, sidelining him for a number of games. Later that same season
he dislocated his shoulder. This type of wear and tear is not
unusual for an offensive lineman.
On November 17, 1991, however, in a game against the Los Angeles
Rams, Mike Utley suffered a far more serious injury. His 6th and
7th vertebrae were fractured, leaving him partially paralyzed
and wheelchair-bound, ending his football career. With intense
rehabilitation and personal determination he has been able to
regain some movement in his legs.
Then there is the story of Lyle Alzado, an All-Pro defensive
lineman who played with the Denver Broncos, Cleveland Browns and
the LA Raiders. Alzado was extremely versatile, playing both end
and tackle in the front four, beginning his career with the Broncos
in 1971. Like many other professional football players, to enhance
his performance and increase his body mass he took steroids. The
chemicals caused him to develop brain cancer, and he died in 1992.
Shortly before his death, Alzado commented, I started
taking anabolic steroids in 1969 and never stopped. It was addicting,
mentally addicting. Now Im sick, and Im scared. Ninety
percent of the athletes I know are on the stuff. Were not
born to be 300 pounds or jump 30 feet. But all the time I was
taking steroids, I knew they were making me play better.
I became very violent on the field and off it. I did
things only crazy people do. Once a guy sideswiped my car and
I beat the hell out of him. Now look at me. My hairs gone,
I wobble when I walk and have to hold on to someone for support,
and I have trouble remembering things. My last wish? That no one
else ever dies this way.
But the steroid use unquestionably continues, as does the brutal
training which took the life of Korey Stringer last month. And
few regulations have been put in place by the National Football
League to prevent such abuse and tragedies from happening again.
NFL coaches and trainers are supposed to follow the guidelines
established by the National Athletic Trainers Association
(NATA) to prevent injuries and avoid health emergencies such as
heat exhaustion and heat stroke. In the aftermath of Stringers
death, one of their recommendations is that teams avoid
workouts during hot temperatures. But there are still no
league-wide rules covering such heat issues or the treatment of
heat-related injuries.
In fact, coaches welcome the extreme heat as a weapon to push
players to the brink of their endurance and beyond. At a practice
session only days following Stringers collapse, New England
Patriots coach Bill Belichick complained that the weather in Massachusetts
hadnt been hot enough, commenting: You need the heat
to get into condition. Extreme conditions produce athletes
pushed to their topmost limits, which means more weight, speed
and power on the field. This translates into increased profits
for team owners, advertisers and the media.
Coaches and trainers are well aware that players are being
pushed to the edge of their physical endurance. At practices conducted
in intense heat, nurses are on hand to hook players up to IVs
when they show signs of dehydration. After treatment, they are
often sent back into practice that same day. Teams have medical
specialists traveling with them at all times to tend to the inevitable
injuries, including doctors specializing in spinal cord damage.
This high level of medical supervision is testament to the inherent
dangers of the sport, as practiced in the NFL today.
Many boys in America, particularly from working class areas,
dream of a career in professional football as their ticket to
athletic stardom and financial success. From a very young age,
they are taught that if they are to have any chance of making
it to the NFL they need to adopt the kind of super-human attitude
which dominates college and professional football training regimes.
Korey Stringer grew up in Warren, Ohio, in the northeastern part
of the state, an industrial area which has produced football players
as regularly as it did steel and automobiles. Stringer was buried
there last Monday, one more victim of the NFL meat grinder.
See Also:
Performance enhancing
drugs and the commodification of elite athletes
[28 September 2000]
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