More and more people are seeing the dangers of the game, and more lawsuits like Debra Pyka’s becoming more and common. Debra Pyka claimed that her son, Joseph Chernach ,who committed suicide at twenty-five years old in 2012, did so because he suffered from Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy from playing youth football form the ages 11 to 14. Pyka sued the Pop Warner youth football league for five million dollars, but settled at right below two million, (Salzberg) . Football is a game that is very dangerous for full grown adults to be playing, so why does the United States allow for programs to be set up where untrained people can teach young children how to tackle and hurt each other and then act like nothing has happened? Youth football needs to be dismissed for the safety of the children. Physically the sport can break our kids, whose bones are not fully developed and strengthened. Mentally it can have lasting and deadly effects on the children through repetitive mild brain injuries which over a period of time can become severe. Socially there is so much outside pressure to succeed that the child puts his or her own needs and comfort aside to impress everyone. Followed by other facts like euphemisms of the terms and injuries gained while playing football to make them seem less pertinent, the lack of a well trained staff that would teach the proper and safe way to play football, children's influence by unsafe and risky plays
More and more people are seeing the dangers of the game, and more lawsuits like Debra Pyka’s becoming more and common. Debra Pyka claimed that her son, Joseph Chernach ,who committed suicide at twenty-five years old in 2012, did so because he suffered from Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy from playing youth football form the ages 11 to 14. Pyka sued the Pop Warner youth football league for five million dollars, but settled at right below two million, (Salzberg) . Football is a game that is very dangerous for full grown adults to be playing, so why does the United States allow for programs to be set up where untrained people can teach young children how to tackle and hurt each other and then act like nothing has happened? Youth football needs to be dismissed for the safety of the children. Physically the sport can break our kids, whose bones are not fully developed and strengthened. Mentally it can have lasting and deadly effects on the children through repetitive mild brain injuries which over a period of time can become severe. Socially there is so much outside pressure to succeed that the child puts his or her own needs and comfort aside to impress everyone. Followed by other facts like euphemisms of the terms and injuries gained while playing football to make them seem less pertinent, the lack of a well trained staff that would teach the proper and safe way to play football, children's influence by unsafe and risky plays