February 11, 2009 4:57 PM

John Mackey: From The NFL To Dementia

By
James M Klatell
(CBS)  Football Hall of Famer John Mackey once helped win free agency for his fellow players, but now, as CBS News correspondent Thalia Assuras reports, he's helping to win another battle for players who have long since retired.

Mackey's record-breaking 75-yard touchdown reception carried the Baltimore Colts to a 16-13 Super Bowl win over Dallas in 1971, and it helped propel one of the league's greatest tight ends into the Hall of Fame.

"Mackey was the smartest man in the room," former quarterback Jack Kemp said at his induction ceremony.

But these days, John Mackey is a shadow of the man who had such an impact on football during his ten year career – a career in which he was tackled hundreds of times and sustained a concussion.

Today he still wears his black cowboy hat – once his trademark – atop his six-foot three inch athlete's body, but his mind is not longer as fit.

At age 65, Mackey has dementia.

He showed us his championship rings several times, unaware that he was repeating himself.

We asked his wife, Sylvia, if he can take care of himself.

"It's possible that he could," she said, "but I wouldn't chance it anymore."

Sylvia Mackey doesn't blame head trauma for her husband's condition, and scientists have not established a direct connection. However, a University of North Carolina study into 2,500 former NFL players showed they faced a 37 percent higher risk of Alzheimer's disease than other men their age.

Former players do not qualify for disability from the NLF because they can't prove their injuries are caused by playing football.

Old-timers like Mackey didn't make anywhere near the multimillion dollar salaries of today, so families are struggling to pay for care. Last May, in a letter to then-NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue, Sylvia pleaded for a financial assistance for former players like her husband.

"We recognize that there are a number of players, and a growing number of players, recognized to be struggling," Harold Henderson, the Executive Vice President of the NFL said.

The league and the NFL Players' Association have responded with the "88 plan" – named after Mackey's number. It provides $88,000-a-year for nursing home care and up to $50,000 annually for adult day care.

Still, there's the nagging question of whether football-induced concussions can lead to illnesses like Alzheimer's and how the league should protect its athletes.

"We have certainly stepped up the research on protective equipment," Henderson said. "We are looking at new rules and procedures to determine if we need a different handling of players who suffer concussions in terms of when they might return to the field."

Sylvia Mackey says she's just grateful for what she has.

"It's disappointing but you can't cry over spilled milk," she said. "You can't go back and wish that something is that can't be, so you have to look at how to make the best of the future."

For Mackey the future is again being part of the fight for his old football colleagues.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by dowjones20k April 29, 2007 1:01 PM EDT
"We asked his wife, Sylvia, is he can take care of himself.

"It's possible that he could but at this point," she said, "but I wouldn't chance it anymore."



HAHAHA


My 10 year old can cut and paste better than this!!


CBS you gotta love them ..... they cant seem to figure out how to get reporter's to write or edit properly, nor can they figure out how to get folks to watch the Katie evening news ... we wonder why?

Journalism is dead and gone, America has become tabloid news ... unchecked in all aspects ....

PITIFUL! WE are DOOMED !!!
Reply to this comment
by louklou51 April 29, 2007 11:00 AM EDT
The NFL is making money hand over fist via clothing contracts, footware, etc. Why not help the past greats of the game who have fallen on hard times due to health or financial hardship? It is time for the millionaire players and billionaire owners to pool their resources and help the players who made the game what it is today, how about it, folks?
Reply to this comment
by j_flood April 29, 2007 10:14 AM EDT
We'll see if the NFL of today can own up to the NFL of yesterday by doing the right thing - taking care of the men that made the league what it is today.
Reply to this comment
by jrsaturn April 29, 2007 7:24 AM EDT
Do you have proofreaders? These typos wouldn't get past most 8th grade editors.
Reply to this comment
by iceman_1960 April 29, 2007 2:24 AM EDT
"The NFL should switch to "Flag Football".

If it would save just one player...

"Flag football is a version of American football that is popular across the United States. The basic rules of the game are similar to those of the professional game, but instead of tackling players to the ground, the defensive team must remove a flag or flag belt from the ball carrier ("deflagging") to end a down. In most organized play, players wear a belt with flags around the waist, but the number of flags varies from league to league. Like touch football, flag football was designed in an effort to minimize injuries that playing tackle football could bring. Over the years, however, contact leagues have emerged, where offensive and defensive players can block in certain zones or downfield, adding to the myriad styles of the game.

The game is now common among many high school gym classes as an alternative to contact sports."

Wikipedia
Reply to this comment
by iceman_1960 April 29, 2007 2:21 AM EDT
"Still, there's the nagging question of whether football-induced concussions can lead to illnesses like Alzheimer's and how the league should protect its athletes."

The NFL should switch to "Flag Football".

It's just as exciting without the injuries.
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 April 28, 2007 11:39 PM EDT
Re: "We asked his wife, Sylvia, is he can take care of himself."

Is our children learning, CBS? Is they?
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