Concept Helmets

Sunday, November 22, 2015

What Jeff Gordon has meant By Gray Caldwell

 By Gray Caldwell

HOMESTEAD, Fla. – Jeff Gordon has meant so much to Rick Hendrick that the Hendrick Motorsports owner struggled to decide whether he considers the driver like a younger brother or a son.
“It’s both the same – he’s family to me,” Hendrick said. “I love him like he was my brother or my son. He has been there for me, and I've been there for him.”
He called Gordon “a rare commodity,” who has the skills not only to dominate on the racetrack, but the chops to host Saturday Night Live and Live with Regis and Kelly and the appeal to appear on the cover of Fortune.
“He opened up a whole new world of fan base to us, to the sport of NASCAR,” Hendrick said. “He connects with everybody. He connects with young, old, male, female. You know, he's been -- he never did anything to alienate anyone. The only reason they didn't like him is because he won too much. But he's never been disrespectful to anyone or any driver. He created such a role model or a total package, it's hard to think you can replace him.”


Chevrolet Group Manager for NASCAR Programs Pat Suhy agreed that Gordon has been “a great ambassador to the sport” who “attracted a new generation of fans.”
And Alba Colon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series program manager for Chevrolet, said that new generation has been lucky to watch Gordon on the track as he helped change the face of the sport along the way.
“To talk about what is great about NASCAR is synonymous with talking about Jeff Gordon,” Colon said. “This generation has been honored to see Jeff Gordon race and to witnessing how great he is. At the same time, we at Chevrolet have been privileged to count Jeff Gordon as an ambassador for our brand. He represents what our brand is about, true American values, the real heartbeat of America. He has always been passionate about our vehicles, about our brand. All his 93 great wins have all been behind the wheel of a Chevrolet. It can’t get better than that.”
Ultimately, Gordon’s impact on Hendrick Motorsports and the sport of NASCAR as a whole aside, Hendrick is simply glad to have had Gordon in his corner.
“I'm just so thankful, as much as I love racing, that I got to race with him, that I didn't have to race against him,” he smiled. “But more than the wins, the friendship means the most to me.”
The feeling is mutual.
“Oh, my gosh,” Gordon said when asked about Hendrick. “For Rick to want to hire me, number one, and then all that we've accomplished together, to get him his first championship, to contribute to Hendrick Motorsports in the way I have, I'm just so thankful because I got an opportunity to drive for the best owner, the best organization, work with the best people, and I wouldn't have 93 wins and four championships and have a shot at a fifth if it weren't for Rick, as well as what he's taught me off the track as a businessman, as a person, as a father. I mean, he's been so, so much to me.”
Fortunately, the man Jim Campbell -- Chevrolet’s U.S. vice president of performance vehicles and motorsports -- called “the unequivocal example of a Chevrolet race car driver” won’t be going anywhere.
Though he will no longer be on the track, Gordon will still be a pivotal part of Hendrick Motorsports.
“I'm just thankful that we're going to still be together and still do things together -- hopefully do more together, and he'll have time and maybe I can slow down, he can help me take a load off of me,” Hendrick said. “He's just special, and I couldn't care for anybody any more than I do for Jeff Gordon.”
 420 NASCAR FANS

 Jeff Gordon Helmet Pipe

Friday, November 13, 2015

A Timeline History of Prevention of Head and Brain Injury in Football

Today, there are pending concussion-related lawsuits against the NFL, NCAA and National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS). Millions upon millions of dollars are being dedicated to medical research and improvements to helmets and other safety equipment. New rules are also being introduced at all levels of the sport on how to play the game and manage concussions to help prevent brain injury in football.
How did we get here?The following is a timeline look at major rules changes, equipment advances, medical research, legal action and other events that have helped to shape prevention of head and brain injury in football, one of the country’s most popular sports.
1893
First Football Helmet - Did little to prevent brain injury in football
A shoemaker in Annapolis, Maryland, creates the first leather football helmet. Admiral Joseph Mason Reeves wears the moleskin device in the Army-Navy game.
1896
helmet2
George Barclay of Lafayette College wears the first “head harness,” a leather helmet fixed to his head with three heavy straps to protect his head and ears.
1905
Vernon Wise, a 17-year-old at Oak Park High, dies from back injuries in a football game. His death generates heavy local press coverage. The Chicago Tribune calls the 1905 football season a “death harvest” as 18 players die in the U.S. School officials in Cook County, Illinois and across the country consider banning the sport.
President Theodore Roosevelt meets with Yale’s Walter Camp and others to discuss how to make the sport safer. The group creates rules that include setting first downs at 10 yards, creating a one-yard “neutral zone” at the line of scrimmage, mandating penalties for unsportsmanlike conduct and allowing the forward pass. These meetings lead to the establishment of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
1910
Football deaths and injuries continue, including the death of University of Virginia halfback Archer Christian from head injuries suffered in a “line-bucking play.” New rules are adopted that include bans on line-bucking and “flying tackles.”
1920
The first professional football organization is founded. It features 14 teams, including the Decatur Staleys (today’s Chicago Bears) and Chicago Cardinals (today’s Arizona Cardinals).
The group’s goals include raising “the standard of professional football in every way possible,” including prevention of injuries. Two years later, the group adopts the name, National Football League (NFL).
1928
A New Jersey pathologist, Harrison Martland, is the first to describe in medical literature a condition called “punch drunk” syndrome or “dementia pugilistica.”
This is later known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative brain disease linked to concussions. CTE is later found in many former football players.
1939
helmet3
The John T. Riddell Company introduces the first all-plastic helmet. A chin strap is added to the design in 1940.
One major problem: The material is brittle and tends to break at impact.
1943
The NFL requires all players to wear helmets. Six years later, the NFL officially adopts the plastic helmet.
1951
helmet4
At halftime of a game, Cleveland Browns coach Paul Brown orders a bar to be added to the helmet of his star player, Otto Graham. It’s the first single-bar facemask.
With money he earns from the patent, Brown creates the Cincinnati Bengals. By 1962, facemasks are worn by every NFL player.
1952
The New England Journal of Medicine publishes a study which concludes that no football player should continue playing after suffering a third concussion.
1962
helmet5
Riddell introduces “micro-fit technology” to helmets, which features padding inside that is aimed at absorbing blows to the head.
The NFL passes a rule that prohibits grabbing another player’s facemask. However, no penalties are attached to the rule until 1976. Those penalties include ejection for “vicious or flagrant” violations.
1969
The National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE) is created to establish standards and certification of athletic equipment, including football helmets, in order to prevent injuries and deaths.
1973
The NOCSAE publishes standards for football helmets. Companies that provide helmets to the NFL, college and high school sports teams release helmets to meet those standards.
By 1980, NOCSAE-certified helmets are required at every level of the sport.
1976
The NCAA and NFHS adopt rules that ban “spearing,” or using the head as the initial contact point.
1977
The NFL adopts the “Deacon Jones Rule,” which bans players from slapping an opponent’s helmet in an effort to get around them.
1979
The NFL passes a rule that bans “spearing.” However, 17 years pass until referees are finally allowed to call personal fouls for helmet-to-helmet hits.
1979
The NFL passes a rule that bans “spearing.” However, 17 years pass until referees are finally allowed to call personal fouls for helmet-to-helmet hits.
1982
The National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research is founded with funding, in part, from the American Football Coaches Association.
The center conducts vital research into fatal and non-fatal football injuries, including compiling statistics on brain injuries.
1986
The first helmets made with polycarbonate alloy plastic and alloy steel face masks are introduced. They become standard equipment within a few years.
1994
The NFL establishes the Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (MTBI) Committee to study concussions.
The committee releases studies that include a finding that team physicians had routinely allowed players with concussion symptoms to return to action, putting them at risk of suffering second impact syndrome.
2000
In Lake County Circuit Court, a jury awards $1.55 million to former Chicago Bears fullback Merril Hoge in his lawsuit against a former team physician.
In his lawsuit, Hoge alleged that the doctor failed to warn him about the severity of his concussions, which forced him to retire at age 29.
2002Revo Helmet - Great improvement to prevention of concussions and brain injury in football
The Riddell Revolution helmet is introduced. It is specifically designed to reduce the risk of concussions and widely hailed as the biggest advance in helmet design in a quarter of a century.
The “Revo” leads to “smart” helmets that include features that can monitor players for head injuries.
2005
Dr. Bennet Omalu teams up with researchers from the University of Pittsburgh to publish the first of two controversial studies that discuss CTE among former football players.
The studies are influenced by autopsies of two former Pittsburgh Steelers, “Iron” Mike Webster and Terry Long.
2006
The NFL Collective Bargaining Agreement includes the “88 Plan,” which provides medical benefits to former players who have developed dementia.
2007
The NFL holds a summit that results in new guidelines for the management of concussions in the sport. Two years later, stricter guidelines are adopted.
2008
The Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy (CSTE) is established in partnership with Boston University School of Medicine – the first center of its kind.
2010
The NFHS makes changes to its rule book, stating that any athlete who “exhibits signs, symptoms or behaviors consistent with a concussion (such as loss of consciousness, headache, dizziness, confusion or balance problems) shall be immediately removed from the contest and shall not return to play until cleared by an appropriate health-care professional.”
The NFHS also issues new guidelines on management of concussions.
2011
Before killing himself with a shotgun, former Chicago Bear defensive back Dave Duerson tells family members to donate his brain to the CSTE. Three months after his death, neurologists confirm that Duerson suffered from CTE.
The NCAA revises its 16-year-old guidelines on treatment of concussions to include language stating, “It is essential that no athlete be allowed to return to participation when any symptoms persist, either at rest or exertion.”
2013
The NCAA adopts a new “targeting” rule that calls for ejecting players who target a defenseless player with a helmet-to-helmet hit. The controversial rule is revised a year later.
Alvin Jobe, the father of a Mississippi high school football player, files the first federal class-action lawsuit involving concussions suffered by high school football players. The lawsuit against the NCAA and NFHS includes a demand that both organizations certify concussion management plans of NFHS members.
The family of former San Diego Chargers linebacker Junior Seau releases the findings of a National Institutes of Health post-mortem examination of his brain, indicating that he suffered from CTE. Seau, like Duerson, had taken his own life with a shotgun in 2012.
The NFL reaches a proposed $765 million settlement of a lawsuit filed by a group of former players who claimed the league had concealed the dangers of concussions and rushed injured players back on the field. The plaintiffs included former Chicago Bears quarterback Jim McMahon and the family of Junior Seau. All 18,000 former NFL players could be eligible for compensation in the settlement, including those suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, CTE and dementia. The NFL also implements its strictest concussion protocol to date.
2014
In the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois in Chicago, the NCAA submits a proposed $75 million settlement of claims brought by former athletes, including Eastern Illinois defensive back Adrian Arrington. The claims alleged that the NCAA endangered players’ health by putting concussion polices in the hands of its member schools. As part of the settlement, the NCAA would adopt new protocol for handling concussions and fund monitoring of former players. In the future, athletes could bring individual lawsuits against the NCAA but not class-action claims.
President Barack Obama hosts the first Healthy Kids and Safe Sports Concussion Summit at the White House. During the event, it is announced that organizations that include the NCAA, NFL and Department of Defense will spend millions of dollars on concussion research in the coming years.

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Disney CEO joins Carson Stadium Project

November 11, 2015 |By | News, NFL



STATEMENT OF CARSON HOLDINGS, LLC
November 11, 2015

Robert Iger, the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Walt Disney Company, has agreed to serve as the Non-Executive Chairman of Carson Holdings, LLC. Carson Holdings is the joint venture of the Oakland Raiders and San Diego Chargers formed in February 2015 that is responsible for working with the City of Carson in connection with the construction of the new Los Angeles NFL stadium by a municipal stadium authority at the 168-acre Carson site. Mr. Iger’s work on behalf of Carson Holdings is contingent upon the National Football League owners approving the proposed LA Stadium site at Carson as the new home of the NFL in Los Angeles.

“Should the owners approve the move, Los Angeles will proudly welcome two incredible teams to our community and build a stadium worthy of their fans,” said Mr. Iger. “LA football fans will enjoy unprecedented access to games during the season, in a state of the art stadium designed to deliver the most entertaining, exciting and enjoyable experience possible.”

In his role, Mr. Iger will be responsible for hiring the President of Carson Holdings. Following Mr. Iger’s strategic direction and leadership, the President will work with the teams to oversee on a day-to-day basis the teams’ participation in the NFL LA stadium project, including the design and construction of the stadium, the fan experience on game day, the marketing of the stadium to the Los Angeles region, the branding of the location and venue, and the successful re- entry of professional football into the Los Angeles marketplace.

Mr. Iger will continue to serve as Chairman and CEO of the Walt Disney Company under the terms of his contract. The agreement between Mr. Iger and Carson Holdings makes clear that Mr. Iger will not be required to provide services to Carson Holdings which conflict with his Disney duties and obligations. Mr. Iger’s appointment as Non-Executive Chairman of Carson Holdings will be for an initial term of five years, with an automatic two-year renewal option. Mr. Iger’s compensation as Non-Executive Chairman will be $1.00 annually. Mr. Iger will have the option, subject to League approvals, to acquire a minority, non-controlling equity ownership interest in one of either the Raiders or Chargers. Mr. Iger has committed not to exercise his option until he departs his role as Disney’s Chairman and CEO.

About Carson Holdings, LLC
Carson Holdings is a limited liability company jointly owned on an equal basis by the Chargers and Raiders football companies. Carson Holdings will be responsible for leading and coordinating all aspects of the teams’ collective efforts to help make the LA Stadium in Carson a world class facility and home for their football games in Los Angeles. Carson Holdings will be working with the City of Carson in connection with the construction of the LA Stadium by a municipal stadium authority, which will own the stadium and lease it to Carson Holdings in an arrangement similar to Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara