• last month
A former NRL player has joined Concussion Australia's call for mandatory training for players under 25 and parents of children under 16. This comes as the federal government responds to a Senate inquiry, agreeing that better education is needed.

Category

đź“ş
TV
Transcript
00:00Watching ex-NRL player PJ Marsh pass a football to his teenage son, it's hard to believe he
00:09didn't want him playing the game he loved.
00:11He pretty much signed us up for tennis, golf, everything like that.
00:16With his injuries and stuff, he didn't want us playing footy.
00:19Serious injuries and head knocks forced Marsh to retire earlier than he'd planned.
00:25When I did finish playing rugby league, I was a little bit dirty on rugby league.
00:28I felt like they'd left me and hung me out to dry.
00:33The pint-sized player was a Queensland state of origin Eels, Warriors and Broncos hooker.
00:39We're finding out a lot more about those these days, how serious it was and I suppose there
00:47wasn't concussion rules as such back then.
00:50Marsh, alongside Concussion Australia, is calling for mandatory independent education,
00:56particularly for young players.
00:58This concussion crisis, we need to be seeing action from not only the federal government
01:02but also the state and territory governments and that includes principally mandating education
01:09in particular areas of society for particular or deemed sports.
01:15And it's not just for the players, but for parents of kids under the age of 18.
01:20This is for your more at-risk sports as it relates to head injuries, rugby, AFL, combat
01:26sports and other sports of that nature.
01:30More than a year after a Senate inquiry, the federal government says it supports a recommendation
01:35to improve community awareness and that better education strategies are needed.
01:41Marsh says his body and brain will never be the same.
01:46With the education, I think the players will understand that that's just silly.
01:51It's not toughness to keep going.

Recommended