Legalized assault (football)

sabbath

Banned
I don't watch football anymore and the following article is just one reason I think it's a barbaric sport.

from Former NFL star Dave Pear is sorry he ever played football - Jeff Pearlman - SI.com

Former NFL star Dave Pear is sorry he ever played football

Dave Pear has a message for you.

"Don't let your kids play football," he says. "Never."

It is an odd thing, hearing these sort of words from a man like David Louis Pear, University of Washington standout, Pro Bowl defensive lineman for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Super Bowl champion with the Oakland Raiders. His five-year NFL career was one thousands of high school and college athletes would envy -- charging out of a darkened stadium tunnel, 70,000 fans screaming for you, loving you, praising you, idolizing you.

"You wanna know the truth?" says Pear.

The question lingers -- the 56-year-old ex-athlete preparing to unload one more skull-splitting hit.

"I wish I never played football. I wish that more than anything. Every single day, I want to take back those years of my life ..."

The words are not subtle. They spit from Pear's mouth, with a blistering contempt normally reserved for drunk drivers. We are speaking via phone. I am in New York, sipping a hot chocolate, leaning back in a chair. My two young children are asleep. A Pretenders song, "2000 Miles," plays in the background. No worries, no complexities. Pear is sitting at his home in Seattle. His neck hurts. His hips hurt. His knees hurt. His feet hurt. When he wakes up in the morning, pain shoots through his body. When he goes to sleep at night, pain shoots through his body. What does Pear do to stay active?

"My life is simple," he says. "It's hard to get out of bed, but eventually I do. I try and do a little walking on the treadmill. I take naps. I go to physical therapy once per week. I read my Bible."

He is, in basic terms, a train wreck -- a football-inflicted train wreck. Pear walks with a cane and, often, simply doesn't walk at all. He suffers from vertigo and memory loss. Over the past 18 years, he has undergone eight surgeries, beginning with a Posterior Cervical Laminectomy on his neck in 1981, and including disc removal and rod fusion in his back (1987), arthroplasty in his left hip (2008) and, earlier this year, four screws removed from his lower back. Though he chalks up his physical ailments to snap after snap of punishment, he pinpoints the biggest problems back to 1979 and '80, his final two NFL seasons. While playing for Oakland, Pear suffered a herniated disc in his neck that never improved. Despite the unbearable agony, he says the Raiders urged him to keep playing.

Be a man! Be tough! "Those last two years in Oakland were very, very difficult times," he says. "I was in pain 24 hours per day, and my employers failed to acknowledge my injury. Sure, I won a Super Bowl ring. But was it worth giving up my health for a piece of jewelry? No way. Those diamonds have lost their luster."

Throughout North America, many of Pear's retired football brethren hear his words and scream, Amen!Conrad Dobler, the legendary Cardinals offensive lineman, is about to go through his 32nd knee surgery. Wally Chambers, the Chicago Bears' three-time Pro Bowl defensive end, spends much of his time in a wheelchair. Earl Campbell, the powder blue bowling ball, struggles to walk and underwent surgery to remove three large bone spurs. The list is both heartbreaking and never-ending -- one NFL player after another after another, debilitated either mentally, physically, or both. I'm currently working on a book that has led me to interview more than 150 former players. I'd say 60 percent experience blistering pain from a sport they last played two decades ago.

"And the NFL," Pear says, "doesn't care."

Hence, he is fighting back. Two years ago, Pear started a blog, davepear.com, with the intent of supporting hobbled NFL veterans and calling out the league's laughable disability policy. Pear says he first applied for disability benefits in 1983, and was denied. He applied again in 1995, under a new provision that stated players would be compensated should they properly prove their injuries were permanently debilitating. A league-appointed physician examined Pear and filed a report stating that a man who once bench pressed 500 pounds could no longer sit, stand or bend for prolonged time periods.

To Pear's shock and dismay, benefits were again denied.

Finally, in 2009, Pear's request was accepted, and he now receives a whopping $40,000 annually. "Am I financially stable?" he asks with a laugh. "Let's put it this way. By the time I was 27 I had two children and medical bills that would reach $500,000. I can't work, my wife, Heidi, has had to hold two and sometimes three different jobs at the same time. And why? Because the NFL hasn't allowed me and my family to receiver proper benefits."

Pear pauses. He worries that he sounds like a typical whiner -- some ex-jock who didn't appreciate making it big. "This isn't even about me," he says. "It really isn't. There are guys so much worse off than me, it's criminal. We dreamed our whole lives to play professional football, and our dreams came true. And then they turn into nightmares."

Pear is blunt, like a rusty dental knife. He considered Gene Upshaw, the former NFL Players Association executive director, to be a criminal. "He was Ken Lay," he says of the deceased Enron CEO. "Same thing -- took all the veterans he supposedly represented for a ride." He holds out hope that Upshaw's replacement, DeMaurice Smith, might make things right. "I'm keeping an open mind," he says. "I hope Mr. Smith looks at the retired players and sees the wreckage.

"We need help," he says.

A long, painful sigh.

"We need help."

Jeff Pearlman can be reached at [email protected].
 

Jake123

Banned
I don't like football because it's boring. I don't care how violent it is. No one forces people to play so it's not really assault, lol.

Meh

I'm a big believer in natural selection, if people are stupid enough to get their skulls crushed with football or wrestling or whatever they had it comin' :p
 
Interesting post... I don't like barbaric sports either, including American football. Can't see the appeal with UFC and can't believe they put it on primetime tv now. I hate censorship, but I don't know, I just dislike guys bashing each others brains in.

And F**K hunting! Sport, yeah right.
 
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2ate

Member
I am a huge basketball fanatic. I always commend a two sport athlete who chooses basketball over football (nate robinson and Charlie Ward). NBA players make more money that's guaranteed. They get less injuries and trauma compared to NFL football.

Football players are like pawns to the puppet leader (quarter back). Players are dehumanized and are belittled for showing weakness.
 

DownInAHole

Well-known member
Wow, never seen so many football haters in one forum lol.
I for one wish I would have played football in high school.
 

206Raider

Well-known member
Football ain't so bad, it's really the only sport I watch besides basketball sometimes but rarely until the playoffs and hated it til' I understood it (and was convinced to play fantasy football and won $200 dollars [that's how I learned it lol]). I'm not one of those "Hoorah! Whoo! Let's get drunk and paint numbers on ourselves and act like idiots" football fans though, I just watch it casually.

The injuries are messed up and you hate to see them but then again if I got offered like 3 Mil a year to run with a football I would do it.
 
lol american football is awesome! they get paid well to do what they do and are very good at it. it's their choice to be in that profession.

i'm all about college sports too though, football and basketball! kentucky is looking great this year
 

Krista

Well-known member
I understand that many Americans aboslutely love their football and take it very seriously, but I have never been able to see what the point was. In my opinion, all this sport is is an excuse to tackle people. I love a big, strong guy as much as the next person, but I just can't watch those guys slam into one another like they do. I've seen some horrid injuries happen on the field and I would hate to think that this could be my husband, son, friend, or brother.

Lol if you don't understand football just try watching NASCAR....biggest waste of time ever.

I can't watch football but rugby isn't so bad but it's more vicious. I'd have to agree with the big strong guy thing lol. Not to bad to watch.
 
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