“You’d rather be the hammer than the nail,” says Kevin Guskiewicz, from the Traumatic Brain Injury Research Center at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC. He’s on the forefront of the war we’re waging against sports concussions. His talk was billed as “translating data into concussion prevention.” I’m not sure we’re there yet.

But here’s what I learned (may not be new but was new to me):

What you can do with your team and your athletes:

  1. Start kids young (9-13 years) with exposure to motor skill learning and motor control of their bodies. Trying to learn new skills at the same time they are quickly growing in size and strength is a recipe for disaster.
  2. Track “hit counts” for each of your players. That means, collisions, falls, hard tackles, etc. in addition to knocks to the head or jarring impact that leaves them dazed.
  3. Train their dynamic vision. The better field vision they have, the quicker they react and and can anticipate and prepare for impact.
  4. Counsel players who have a “bad hits” profile. Get them on video if you can and show them what a brain study looks like for someone who has sustained a lot of collisions. Teach them how to play in a way that protects their brain (and others’.) Behavior modification works if the coach insists and sticks to his/her guns.

New directions:

Play hard out there, but play smart and stay healthy. That one brain they’ve got…it’s got to last them.

Fit2Finish training specializes in motor coordination and fitness for sports training in a fun environment for athletes 8-18 years old. Contact us for more information.