Ryan Mason: I almost lost my life and football still isn’t taking head trauma seriously
Tottenham coach was forced to retire as a player at 26 due to an almost fatal head collision and is campaigning for better protocols
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Your support makes all the difference.The fractured skull suffered by Raul Jimenez has Ryan Mason sending strength and best wishes to the Wolves forward and his family, with the incident giving the former football flashbacks to his own experience with the same injury.
Mason was forced to retire at the age of 26 while representing Hull City against Chelsea following a clash of heads with Gary Cahill in January 2017.
He was operated on 61 minutes after the incident, with 14 metal plates inserted into his skull and 28 screws holding them in place as well as 45 staples.
Mason, who is now Tottenham Hotspur’s head of player development for their senior academy age groups, has been campaigning for football to implement more advanced protocols for head injuries - following rugby, the NFL, cricket and other major sporting codes - as well as appreciate the dangers of the type of challenge itself.
“I was so, so lucky to stay alive. It was very touch and go and I almost lost my life,” he told the Between The Lines podcast.
READ MORE: Wolves striker Raul Jimenez leaves hospital after surgery
“And I would like to say a lot has changed since then on the football pitch, but it actually hasn't which is probably why I'm so passionate talking about it now, because obviously Raul has suffered a similar incident.
“And firstly, I hope he's ok. I hope his family and everyone around him are ok. But it does bring back memories for me and my family, which aren't pleasant because we suffered a lot.
“We went through a lot together. And you never really expect something like that to happen on a football pitch.
“I could have a list of so many things that actually affected me for so long afterwards, and sometimes I forget, so I've got it all written down. I was sleeping for like 20 hours a day.
“I couldn't really hold a conversation. When the brain gets an injury, the body just instinctively responds and it almost shuts everything else down because the main focus is on making sure the brain's ok, because it is fundamental to how we live as humans. The body invests so much energy into recovery.”
Dr Willie Stewart, the neuropathologist who proved football’s link with dementia, also contributes to the episode. He is frustrated by the game “trying to reinvent the wheel” instead of following the template of other sporting codes that have stronger protocols for head impact.
“I think it’s damaging to players because the best evidence on how to manage it is already established,” he says.
“Why is football not taking that on board? This problem is bigger in the game than it is in American football, possibly even than it is in boxing.”
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