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Junior Seau had degenerative brain disease when he committed suicide

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The NFL said the Seau finding underscores the need for additional research to better understand CTE, and that the league, working with the NIH and other leading organizations, is "committed to supporting a wide range of independent medical and scientific research that will both address CTE and promote the long-term health and safety of athletes at all levels."
League spokesman Greg Aiello said NFL clubs have already committed a $30-million research grant to the NIH, and, along with the NFL Players Association, plans to invest $100 million more for medical research on head injuries.

"We have work to do, and we're doing it," Aiello said.

It's conceivable that damages as part of concussion lawsuits could soar into the billions of dollars. Even if the NFL was able to withstand that, lower levels of football, from Pop Warner through college, would be hard-pressed to cover the insurance premiums to keep programs going.

The resolution of head-injury cases could fundamentally change the sport, and not just the nation's most popular professional sports league.

Already, the NFL has made significant rules changes designed to protect players from head injuries, and has increased the frequency and amount of fines issued to players who hit opponents in the head. The league is even flirting with the idea of taking kickoffs out of the game, reasoning an inordinate percentage of injuries occur on that play.

The measures that have been taken are not uniformly embraced by fans, and in fact are derided by many as the watering down of the game. That surprises Orin Starn, professor of cultural anthropology at Duke University.

"One wonders what it would take to get America's attention on this," Starn said. "Boxing kind of got redefined from a mainstream American sport into something that a lot of Americans thought was too bloody and too brutal to sit down in the living room and watch with their kids. One wonders if this could happen with the NFL.

"Thirty years from now, will we wonder how it is that we could have taken such great pleasure in watching people hit each other at very high speeds, causing brain injuries that then lead to suicide and other things?"

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