For instance, the NCAA does not require that a concussed high
school football player receive a postseason medical assesment.
Not exact matches
That's when news surfaced that the NCAA was investigating the
school's
football program — initially to learn whether
players had
received impermissible benefits.
QUICK 6
FOOTBALL is designed to challenge high school & youth football teams to put their best skill players to the ultimate challenge: Play together as a team to capture the early season bragging rights as the top passing and receiving core in your region and
FOOTBALL is designed to challenge high
school & youth
football teams to put their best skill players to the ultimate challenge: Play together as a team to capture the early season bragging rights as the top passing and receiving core in your region and
football teams to put their best skill
players to the ultimate challenge: Play together as a team to capture the early season bragging rights as the top passing and
receiving core in your region and America.
«THE SMARTEST TEAM» had as its genesis an email in February 2012 de Lench
received from Kerali Davis, the mother of a high
school football player in Newcastle, Oklahoma.
All of us involved in youth sports - from parents, to coaches, from athletic trainers to
school athletic directors to the athletes themselves - have a responsibility to do what we can to make contact and collision sports safer, whether it by reducing the number of hits to the head a
player receives over the course of a season (such as N.F.L. and the Ivy League are doing in limiting full - contact practices, and the Sports Legacy Institute recently proposed be considered at the youth and high
school level in its Hit Count program), teaching
football players how to tackle without using their head (as former pro
football player Bobby Hosea has long advocated), changing the rules (as the governing body for high
school hockey in Minnesota did in the aftermath of the Jack Jablonski injury or USA Hockey did in banning body checks at the Pee Wee level), or giving serious consideration to whether athletes below a certain age should be playing tackle
football at all (as the American Academy of Pediatrics recommend).
«The Smartest Team» grew out of an email in February 2012 de Lench
received from Kerali Davis, the mother of a high
school football player in Newcastle, Oklahoma.