North Carolina; 2008, Matthew Gfeller, age 15. 2010, Massachusetts; Michael Ellsessar, age 16, New Jersey; 2015, Evan Murray, age 17. Three of the over two hundred teenage boys who have passed away within the last three decades, due to injuries sustained during high school football games. It is stated in, “Parents Speak Out on Catastrophic Youth Sports Injuries” by Lisa Esposito that, in the year 2010 alone the National Athletic Trainers Association (or NATA), reported that, “catastrophic sports injuries killed 50 young athletes…” in addition to that, they also stated that,”…every year sports injuries put 30,000 high school athletes in the hospital.” The point is simple really, high school football should be disbanded indefinitely. Not due to budget or other logistics issues, instead because of the fact that kids are dying, mothers losing their sons, towns losing perfectly fine young men right in front of their eyes on what seems to be normal Friday nights. If it does not come off as a problem that “each year in the U.S. an average of a dozen high school and college football players die during practices and games” …show more content…
“Football is a port that will never be safe…” stated Dr. Robert Cantu, “a leading national expert on sports-related brain injuries and medical director of UNC's National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research” (Lavelle, “Concussions in high school football…”). Quite obviously there are many immanent risks associated with a full body contact sport such as football leading to the argument of, players knowing what they are getting themselves into to rise to the surface. At the same