Mostly Cloudy
60°
Crystal Lake, IL
Mostly Cloudy
Forecast »

Amended bill limiting contact moving forward

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
An amended version of House Bill 1205 would allow for two days of in-season full-contact drills, but would prohibit the practice during the off-season or during summer camps. Coaches could choose how much preseason full-contact work their players do under the bill. (Northwest Herald file photo)

When a proposed state law limiting contact among football players was met with stern opposition last month, the bill’s sponsor pledged to call an audible once she had more information.

State Rep. Carol Sente (D-Lincolnshire) will move forward with an amended version of House Bill 1205, which would confine full-padded football practices to two days a week during the season and prohibit it completely during the offseason and summer camps.

Sente will present the bill to the state education committee Wednesday in Springfield.

The amendments expand the number of allowed full-contact days from one to two days a week from Sente’s original bill. The revisions of the bill come after coaches, parents and IHSA officials criticized the legislation at public forums for being too vague – especially when it came to determining what constitutes contact or how it would be policed.

Coaches also argued that by limiting contact in practice, lawmakers would be putting players at risk because coaches would lose time to teach proper tackling methods. Still, Sente insists there has to be limits to cut down not only on concussions, but on repeated blows to the head that could lead to other health issues later in life.

A Cleveland Clinic study released this month showed that of 67 college football players studied, researchers discovered the more hits to the head they absorbed, the higher levels of the brain protein S-100B that leak into the bloodstream after the head injury.

The particular protein is found normally in the brain and researchers believe when it is found in a blood test, it is an indicator of a concussion.

Sente points to limits being put on full-contact drills by the NFL and organizations such as the Chicagoland Youth Football League and Pop Warner.

“So why is the group in the middle not doing as much?” Sente said in a phone interview Monday.

The amended bill characterizes full-padded practices as being workouts when players are wearing a helmet, shoulder pads, padded pants and cleats. Full contact practices would be at the coach’s discretion during the preseason. Marty Hickman, the IHSA’s executive director, said after a public forum in Vernon Hills last month that the proposed legislation is heavy-handed and that the IHSA already is doing enough to address head injuries.

Previous Page|1||||

Reader Poll

Which is your favorite Pixar franchise?

Cars
Monsters Inc.
Toy Story
Finding Nemo