Johnson Says Belichick Ignored Condition
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Press Release from:
Ancoso Development GmbH
Former New England Patriots linebacker Ted Johnson said coach Bill Belichick subjected him to hard hits in practice while he was recovering from a concussion _ against the advice of the team's top trainer.
Johnson, who helped the Patriots win three Super Bowl titles before retiring two years ago, told The New York Times that a collision with another player during that 2002 practice led to another concussion. And, after sustaining additional concussions over the next three seasons, he now forgets people's names, misses appointments and suffers from depression and an addiction to
amphetamines.
"There's something wrong with me," the 34-year-old Johnson told the Times in a story posted on its Web site Thursday night. "There's something wrong with my brain. And I know when it started." The Boston Globe, which is owned by the Times, posted a similar story on its Web site. Johnson, who played 10 years in the NFL, said he began to deteriorate in August 2002 with a concussion during an exhibition game against the New York Giants. He sustained another concussion four days later after Belichick prodded him to participate in a full-contact practice, even though he was supposed to be avoiding hits, Johnson said. The next month, with their relationship already strained, Johnson confronted Belichick about the practice after the coach asked him to meet in his office. "I told him, `You played God with my health. You knew I shouldn't have been cleared to play,'" Johnson told the Globe. Belichick told the Globe he got no cue from Johnson in practice that day that he was hesitant about participating in the full-contact drill. "If Ted felt so strongly that he didn't feel he was ready to practice with us, he should have told me," Belichick said. The Patriots did not allow Jim Whalen, still their head trainer, to comment for this story, according to the Globe. Patriots spokesman Stacey James told The Associated Press on Thursday night that the team was aware of the report but was not prepared to comment. In a story last month, the Times reported that brain damage caused on the football field ultimately led to the suicide of former NFL defensive back Andre Waters last November, according to a forensic pathologist who studied Waters' brain tissue. "We have been focused on the issue of concussions for years," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello told the AP. "It remains one of our prime concerns as we continue to do everything possible to protect the health of our players." NFL commissioner Roger Goodell is expected to answer questions about the issue at his annual state of the NFL news conference Friday. Dr. Lee H. Schwamm, the neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital who examined Johnson, wrote in a memo on Aug. 19, 2002, that Johnson sustained a second concussion in that practice, the Times reported.
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