American football is still one of the most popular sports for young athletes. Injuries in football, especially head and neck injuries, have recently attracted great interest in public media and medical literature. Due to the recognition of these injuries and the possibility of long-term sequelae, several doctors are also demanding reductions in contact count, postponement of attack to a certain age, even prohibition of high school football. In this statement we are reviewing the literature on football injuries, in particular head and neck injuries, the relationship between steel and football related injuries, and the potential impact of limiting or delaying the risk of stealing injuries.
Delaying the introduction of football to age 14 is not as radical as it seems. Football has existed for 150 years, but modern youth football has existed for 50 years. When Pop Warner "Vietnam" participated in a football game, the youngest player was 15.1. Until the legendary coach Pop Warner dies in 1954, Pop Warner Little Scholars, Inc. In order to solve the problem of football, let's become a company that began to advertise 5-year-old children nationwide. Hiring gradually advanced, but by 1970 thousands of popular Warner Youth teams nationwide took charge of the football team. Players of that era began to die and their families are donating their brains to science because people are concerned about how football affects their brain and behavior.
In terms of organizational structure, youth football is still wild west. You have American football, a national governance body, but there are other domestic organizations such as Pop Warner and American Youth Football. According to my estimates, these two organizations account for over half of all youth football programs. Many alliances are independent or irrelevant to any domestic organization. For example, my son is playing football in Indiana's unrelated casual league. In that league, as a 7 year old child, he needs to wear padded football pants instead of shoulder pads or helmets. Despite wearing very small equipment, he was taught as if he blocks football and "hit the ball with a shovel". He even taught a song of a local high school soccer team.
In 2015, Pyka sued Pop Warner Youth Football Organization for $ 5 million in the Western District Court of Wisconsin State. The lawsuit asserts that the alliance is "knowing that unlocking football is dangerous to children", but "I warn children and parents of the risk of permanent brain injury I'm failing to do that. The number of national high school soccer participants has also declined - the National High School Association Association reported 25,901 players in 2017 or 2.5% of the year. Nonetheless, "Football is the first sportsman at a high school level to participate in a big deal," the Federation pointed out