GB72
Money List Winner
Makes perfect sense. I could liken it to me going to the driving range. Hit 100 shots up there in a short period of time and my back gives me hell. Hit the same 100 shots over a 4 hour period on the course and no issues at all. The constant repeating of a header in practice has got to compound the amount of knocking around that the brain takes.I agree with that. Even in my Sunday League team's training, we might spend fifteen minutes on set pieces during which I've headed it out 4 or 5 times and starting to feel it, whereas in a game I might only have to head it that many times or less over the whole 90. Compare that to a kid's team that actually has proper training and potentially they've headed it even more teams. The answer isn't to take heading out of football, but if you can keep heading practise down to a minimum that would help.
Guess another answer would be that if you have to train and practice heading, use something softer to teach technique rather than a full weight ball.
Honest question as I do not know. Does amateur and kids football have qualified people on the sideline who can recognise a concussion and people who can carry out a proper HIA.