Personal stories - Because butterflies dance indefinitely, football mainly hurts nerves in his stomach. "Is everything okay, will everything proceed as planned?" He could not stop thinking about what would happen. The image went roughly when he thought that he did not have a teammate to fight. He could not understand why they had to treat it on their own. They have played with them since the eighth grade.
Soccer is contact sports. Orthopedic injuries are common in football players, mostly in knees, feet, ankles, shoulders, neck, and back. Various body muscles such as hamstrings, limbs, calves, abdominal muscles may be injured. Other injuries include concussion, pulmonary contusion, rib fracture, abdominal injury, spleen tears and kidney damage
Due to the dynamic and highly colliding nature of these movements, traumatic injuries include ice hockey, association football, rugby league, rugby league, Australian football rules, Gaelic football, and like American football and Canadian football Contact sports injuries are the majority. Collision with the ground, objects, and other athletes is common, and if unexpected dynamic force is applied to the limbs and joints, sports injury may occur. About 2 million people are injured each year by sports and are receiving treatment in the emergency room. Fatigue is a factor that causes many sports injuries. As an athlete, sometimes you experience degradation of technique or do low-energy exercise, reaction time will be delayed and muscle stability and injury compromised.
A devastating injury is not common in American football. Between 1982 and 2011, 468 nonfatal injuries of all high school sports in the United States brought about permanent nerve damage, according to the National Center for devastating sports injuries. In the field of football, catastrophic injuries are rare, but they are devastating when they occur. Since the introduction of the modern football helmet in the 1970s, the incidence of catastrophic head trauma was low, but the high school level is much higher than the university level. In the 2007 survey, there were an average of 7.23 devastating head injuries per year in high school and college football games. 0.67 cases per 100,000 high school students, 0.21 cases per 100,000 college students. This study suggests that players showing neurological symptoms strongly encourage players not to return to the game.