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September 7, 2013

America's Most Dangerous Football Is in the Pee-Wee Leagues, Not the NFL

Alan Barra:

This weekend, the National Football League would like you to see The Butler, We're the Millers, or maybe The End of The World--anything but The United States of Football. Sean Pamphilon's documentary, controversial even before its release, is about the dangers of America's No. 1 sports obsession, football, from youth leagues to the pros. Pamphilon, a Emmy and a Peabody Award-winning filmmaker who exposed the New Orleans Saints' "Bountygate" scandal in April 2012, has assembled nearly three years' worth of investigative reporting on the damage football, as it's played today at all levels, can do to the human brain.

Like the game itself, The United States of Football is, in turns, exciting, stimulating, and heartbreaking. There's no other word but that last one to describe what too many hits to the head did to the late, great Baltimore Colts' Hall of Fame tight end John Mackey: In 2000, when he was just 59, he became the first NFL player to be diagnosed with frontal temporal dementia. In Pamphilon's film, Mackey's wife Sylvia feeds him, constantly calling to him "John Mackey!" because, she says, "I don't want him to forget his name." The United States of Football also tells the story of Dave Duerson, an 11-year veteran, most notably of the 1985 Chicago Bears Super Bowl champions, who shot himself in the chest in 2011 at age 50. Neurologists later confirmed that Duerson suffered from a neurodegenerative disease linked to concussions.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at September 7, 2013 12:41 AM
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