Quote ="SmokeyTA"As someone who has had a broken jaw, 3 times, I can tell you that isn’t true. Any break of the jaw will result in that bone being weaker forever. Any additional plating (which would happen in a bad break) leaves a big risk of infection and will generally need to be replaced multiple times if the patient is young and healthy. There is a nerve that runs through the jaw which controls the feeling to the mouth, any degradation in that nerve from either the break or subsequent surgery causes a loss of feeling and control over the mouth which gives difficulty eating and speaking.
The medical term for concussion is mild traumatic brain injury. A concussion is damage to the brain. Most people, from one concussion probably wouldn’t see any further health problems. But that damage is still there, and a particularly bad concussion will cause obvious immediate health issues, but the cumulative effect of multiple, even very minor concussions can have serious and life threatening effects. There are risks which are acceptable and those that arent. '"
Most injuries will probably leave some reminder they were there. That doesn't make them a permanent injury.
The medical profession seems to think that most instances of concussion or bone breaks will heal without permanent problem. Yes, of course there are exceptions. That's good enough for me.
3 jaw breaks? You should stop rubbing people up the wrong way.
Quote Because Dr’s have given there opinion, and there really is no argument against it. We know that the shoulder charge is a risky play, we know the tackler has less control, and we know it poses an unacceptable risk of serious injury if performed incorrectly. We have had the NRL and RLIF ban it, that changes the context, it changes the argument from why should the game ban it, to how can the RFL justify not banning it when everyone else in the game accepts how unacceptable that risk is.'"
That last doctor I saw, for a broken metacarpal, told me Rugby League is dangerous and ill-advised. Most doctors will. Let's just ban the sport.
Quote But the attacks to the head aren’t just attacks to the head. They are the results of your ‘acceptable’ shoulder charge gone wrong. I think we all agree that the shoulder charge, executed correctly and with no contact with the head doesn’t pose a risk. What does pose a risk is someone attempting a shoulder charge, intending to execute correctly with no contact with the head and getting it wrong. So if someone attempted a shoulder charge and got it wrong, as we are seeing fairly often, they would miss a huge amount of matches. In an environment where the reward is a big tackle and momentum change, but the risk is a red card and a 10-15 match ban I cant think of any coach who would do anything other than give any player a kick in the balls for even trying it'"
We're not seeing it fairly often, we're seeing isolated examples. A couple a season.
If a player goes for a big arm into the upper body and gets it wrong they can smash someone's throat or face. We see that at times as well. Shall we ban arms in the tackle?