Disabled NFL Players Tell Woes To Congress
Aging NFL retirees told Congress Tuesday that playing professional football left them with broken bodies, brain damage and empty bank accounts. Lawmakers said they may get involved if a better pension and disability system isn't created.
For six years in the 1980s, Brent Boyd slugged it out in the trenches as an offensive lineman for the Minnesota Vikings.
"We didn't even know what a concussion was," Boyd told CBS News correspondent Cynthia Bowers. "You got your bell rung, you got dinged."
For years, Boyd suffered in silence as depression, dizziness and constant headaches left him unable to work. Still struggling to make ends meet, he only came forward after he learned that severe brain damage - dementia usually seen only in boxers - was discovered during recent autopsies of NFL greats Mike Webster and Andre Waters.
Even though two of three NFL doctors agreed Boyd is disabled as result of football-related concussions, his request for full disability of about $8,000 a month was rejected by the league and its players' union, reports Bowers.
Former NFL players told a sympathetic House Judiciary subcommittee tales of multiple surgeries, dementia and homelessness, all while trying to fight through the red tape of the National Football League and the NFL Players Association's disability system.
The league and the players association said pensions are improving and there's no need for Congress to step in.
Boyd talked about his bouts with homelessness as a single dad and brain damage he blames on multiple concussions from his football days. Curt Marsh, an Oakland Raider from 1981-87, described a leg amputation, more than 30 surgeries and multiple doctor visits before he was approved.
The late Mike Webster, the Hall of Fame Pittsburgh Steelers' center who suffered from mental illness that was widely attributed to head injuries, died homeless in 2002, his lawyer told the committee.
The players from the '50s, '60s and '70s laid the groundwork for the popularity of the NFL, a billion-dollar industry, and should be treated better, lawmakers said.
"Perhaps there ought to be a legal solution," said Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report. For six years in the 1980s, Brent Boyd slugged it out in the trenches as an offensive lineman for the Minnesota Vikings.
"We didn't even know what a concussion was," Boyd told CBS News correspondent Cynthia Bowers. "You got your bell rung, you got dinged."
For years, Boyd suffered in silence as depression, dizziness and constant headaches left him unable to work. Still struggling to make ends meet, he only came forward after he learned that severe brain damage - dementia usually seen only in boxers - was discovered during recent autopsies of NFL greats Mike Webster and Andre Waters.
Even though two of three NFL doctors agreed Boyd is disabled as result of football-related concussions, his request for full disability of about $8,000 a month was rejected by the league and its players' union, reports Bowers.
Former NFL players told a sympathetic House Judiciary subcommittee tales of multiple surgeries, dementia and homelessness, all while trying to fight through the red tape of the National Football League and the NFL Players Association's disability system.
The league and the players association said pensions are improving and there's no need for Congress to step in.
Boyd talked about his bouts with homelessness as a single dad and brain damage he blames on multiple concussions from his football days. Curt Marsh, an Oakland Raider from 1981-87, described a leg amputation, more than 30 surgeries and multiple doctor visits before he was approved.
The late Mike Webster, the Hall of Fame Pittsburgh Steelers' center who suffered from mental illness that was widely attributed to head injuries, died homeless in 2002, his lawyer told the committee.
The players from the '50s, '60s and '70s laid the groundwork for the popularity of the NFL, a billion-dollar industry, and should be treated better, lawmakers said.
"Perhaps there ought to be a legal solution," said Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah.
- no previous page
- next
1/2
Popular in Sports
- Sergio Garcia apologizes to Tiger Woods for "fried chicken" remark
- Bay Area hosting 50th Super Bowl
- Study: College athletes denied $6.2B over four years
- Watch: 7-foot-5 teen basketball player dominates
- NFL's Top 100 Players of All-Time: Debate
- Upset at the Preakness Stakes
- No Olympic wrestling? Sport nixed from 2020 Games
- Watch: Dodgers star makes cancer-stricken fan's day















At any rate, the unions are unable to negotiate, as their positions have been eroded by the neocon zeitgeist, so it may very well be apropos for government to step in. The club owners make billions off the blood and bodies of these men, a fairer compensation, on a case by case basis is in order, we're not talking about millions, or hundreds, or even tens of thousands of people here.
If the owners are too greedy to help those who made their fortunes, then by all means force them to do it.