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The Air Force Academy takes to the sky for athlete safety

Football coaches have long enjoyed the benefit of assistants perched in the press box providing a more comprehensive view of the action than what is available to those on the sidelines.

Air Force is going to grant that same luxury to its training staff this year.

The Falcons will place two certified athletic trainers from its staff in a press box room for each home game. The trainers will have access to a video feed directly from the television truck that will be equipped with a digital recording device that will allow them to review plays. They’ll also have binoculars to track the action and will have communication headsets similar to what coaches use along with a direct phone line to the sidelines to alert the on-field trainers when a player needs to be removed from the action.

“There are times on the field where we may not be able to see because players on the field are blocking us or maybe we’re busy tending to somebody else,” Air Force’s head athletic trainer for football Erick Kozlowski said. “We’ll now have two more sets of eyes up in the press box looking down to give us an extra hand on whatever we need.

Some conferences have already implemented similar procedures to include more medical personnel on the action.

The Big Ten and SEC will each employ unaffiliated trainers with the power to buzz officials to stop play and remove a player after a suspected injury. The Mountain West has not adopted a policy yet, but it is not stopping its members from trying new ways of preventing serious injuries.

“If it helps one guy then it’s absolutely worth it,” coach Troy Calhoun said.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://gazette.com/air-force-football-medical-staff-gains-eyes-in-the-press-box/article/1558671

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Wake Forest in favor of new ACC rule

The start of another Atlantic Coast Conference college football season brought a new feature to the game medical observers for each team that will watch out for injuries on the field from the press box.

“We’re happy that the ACC would do this in a formal way to allow us to have an observer and have a spot for them to sit at all the games and have access to video and replay,” said Dr. David Martin, director of sports medicine for Wake Forest University.

Martin said this new approach will allow an athletic trainer to watch the game without having to worry about attending to injuries. The trainer will have access to the same replays that referees have so he can help diagnose problems and tell medical staff on the field where the point of impact was on a play in which is hurt.

Niles Fleet, an athletic trainer who works with athletes daily, will be up in the booth for the Demon Deacons. He believes having a bird’s eye view of the field for kickoffs and punts could help trainers get to athletes more quickly after injuries.

Martin said many players and coaches on the sidelines are already on alert for concussion symptoms, but they can be distracted by the game.

“Having another observer for us will be really helpful taking care of the student-athletes a little bit better,” said Martin.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
Medical observers watching for injuries at ACC football games

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NCAA hopes to improve player safety with medical observers

Tommy Stich never had to stop a game last season. Truth be told, he never even came close, and he is thankful that was the case.

Even if he never needed to exert that authority, the Florida athletic trainer is thankful someone had the power to bring a Gators game to a halt — just in case he spotted a potential head injury that went unnoticed by the sideline training staff.

“There’s so many people down on the sideline helping out that the chances of them missing something big like that are pretty slim,” said Stich, who was stationed in the press box at Florida home games last season and was instructed to watch for possible concussive injuries. “But I think, from a safety standpoint and just to protect our athletes, I think it’s necessary.”

Apparently many of the higher-ups within the sport agree. Last month, the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved an experimental rule that will allow medical observers to stop a game and order the officiating crew to remove a player if it appears that he has suffered a serious head or neck injury and remains in the game. The rule goes into effect this season and could become a permanent rule in 2016 if all goes smoothly.

SEC coordinator of football officials Steve Shaw called Florida’s 2014 effort the pilot program for what the conference will attempt this season.

“I think it will be very rare when the medical observer takes impact in the game,” Shaw said at the conference’s spring meetings. “But in that situation where they might, it could save a player from worse injury or concussion or whatever. So I think it’s a safety component. It’s a no-regrets [situation].”

The SEC will assign an athletic trainer with no rooting interest in a specific game to each conference contest. Seated in the press box, this independent medical observer will have the ability to watch replays of questionable plays and communicate with the replay official should they believe a player needs medical attention. The replay official can then notify the on-field officials to stop the game and remove the player from the field.

The officials would explain to the crowd that there had been a medical timeout without specifying which player was involved. The player would have to sit out for at least one play and be cleared to return to the field by the team’s sideline medical staff.

As with most new initiatives, there will certainly be some logistical hurdles the medical observers will face.

First of all, will they be able to make a conclusive decision quickly enough during the course of a fast-moving football game? It’s difficult to say at this point. Beyond Stich’s experience last year, there is not much precedent upon which to base any expectations.

“There’s certainly pros and cons with it,” said Tim Bream, director of athletic training services at Penn State, whose Big Ten Conference co-sponsored the medical observer rule proposal with the SEC. “One of the problems is if something happens, by the time the spotter sees it and gets the information down, there could be another play go off or two plays go off. So I think that’s always been an issue.”

Then there is the question of distance. Stich said he watched essentially every Florida play last season through binoculars, but he was still more than 100 feet away from the action.

“How often can they correctly identify that somebody had an injury from that kind of distance?” asked Dr. Christopher Giza, Director of UCLA’s Steve Tisch BrainSPORT Program.

“An observer in the box is not able to make a clinical diagnosis of concussion any more than an armchair fan sitting at home watching on TV can diagnose a concussion.”

Nonetheless, while Stich understands those concerns, he clearly sides with the SEC’s Shaw on the subject.

And even if it’s an imperfect system, Stich believes it will be a useful, necessary safeguard in the sport’s attempt to better protect its athletes.

“I really think that every football program that should be doing it because with all the research that continues to come out with concussions, we’re learning more and more about not only the short-term effects, but the long-term effects of concussions,” Stich said. “It’s so well-publicized now and we have so much information now, but at the same time, we don’t have enough information.

“So I think anything that we can do to kind of back up ourselves and get more eyes on these athletes is only going to help. It’s not going to hurt anything is what I’m getting at. It will only help us.”

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://espn.go.com/blog/bigten/post/_/id/122579/ncaa-hopes-to-improve-player-safety-with-medical-observers

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ACC to add athletic trainers to press box

So many of the hurried changes to college sports have that barn-door-after-the-horse-is-gone feeling, a desperate attempt to forestall the wave of lawsuits and other athletic activism that has erupted in recent years.

Giving athletes the same cost-of-attendance benefits as students on academic scholarships was as sensible as it was long overdue, even if the athletic community at large had to be dragged kicking and screaming into the 21st Century and is still complaining about having to pay for it.

On Monday, the ACC announced it has adopted one improvement that is neither forced or overdue. It’s actually timely, and perhaps even forward-thinking: The conference’s application of the NCAA’s new medical-observer protocol for football.

The NCAA last week adopted an experimental rule allowing conferences to use a medical observer to monitor for injuries, not specifically but obviously potential concussions, with the power to stop play if necessary.

The SEC will use one athletic trainer to monitor both teams, in communication with the referee. The ACC’s athletic directors voted Sunday night to adopt a different protocol, with one member of the medical staff for each team in the press box, in communication not with the referee but his sideline.

The issue isn’t whether this is a good idea. It is. It’s a no-brainer. The issue is whether what the ACC is doing goes far enough.

The SEC – and presumably Big Ten, which co-sponsored the NCAA legislation – will let its observers halt the game if needed. The ACC decided not to give its observers that ability, which leaves a narrow time frame for an observer to identify a potentially injured player, communicate with the sideline and remove that player from the game.

“We didn’t really see the necessity in that,” ACC commissioner John Swofford said. “The medical observer should be able in talking to the sidelines to have a timeout called or pull a player from the game. But this is all experimental. We’ll see how it actually works in real time. If there needs to be some adjustment to that then we’ll see. This is where we felt was appropriate. It’s a little different than what some other conferences are doing.”

It doesn’t happen often that a clearly staggered player returns to the huddle without the medical staff on the sideline noticing, but it happens often enough that conferences have seen the wisdom of adding an extra set of eyes in the press box. And in those situations, it’s a fair question whether the ACC’s process will work quickly enough to help that player, especially in an era of hurry-up offenses and quick tempo.

In their meeting Sunday night to debate and approve the observer protocol, the ACC’s athletic directors decided not to go as far as the NCAA would allow, focusing on a team-based model instead of a neutral, officiating-based model.

“This seems sufficient,” N.C. State athletic director Debbie Yow said. “It’s a common-sense approach.”

North Carolina athletic director Bubba Cunningham said there are other benefits to the ACC plan.

“There’s so much chaos on the sidelines that it can be confusing,” Cunningham said. “Someone out of the chaos may have a better perspective, especially if they have a view of a TV.”

The far greater priority was having someone doing the assessments who was aware of each individual player’s medical history, which led them to the two-person, two-team model the Pac-12 used on a limited basis last season and is expanding to all games this season.

“The important thing to us was that our observer was connected to the history of the student-athlete,” Pittsburgh athletic director Scott Barnes said. “We need an observer who’s part of our staff and knows the issues involved. That was our primary concern.”

And while there’s some expense involved in bringing an extra staff member on the road, it’s relatively minor compared to the benefits.

Cunningham said North Carolina typically travels with two or three doctors and may reallocate one to the press box.

“There might be an extra hotel room,” Yow said, “but so what?”

It is a small price to pay for an improved level of player safety and a change that is, for once in college sports, as much proactive as reactive.

Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/luke-decock/article27944956.html#storylink=cpy

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/luke-decock/article27944956.html