Football periodically faces extinction, but never has the game been enveloped in a crisis as odd as the current one.
Just when the game plays safer than at any time in its 144-year history, its critics threaten to make it history. Sportswriter Frank Deford calls football "barbarous." Author Malcolm Gladwell labels it a "dumb 19th century game." But it's that characterization that appears backward to anyone paying attention.
In 1905, when President Theodore Roosevelt intervened to help make the game he loved safer, more athletes died from on-field collisions on a single Saturday afternoon (three) than died from hits during all of the 2012 season (two). In 1968, a year of assassinations and bombings at home and peak casualties in the Vietnam War, football meshed with the violent times: An all-time high of 36 players were lost to collision deaths at all levels of competition. The rough sport, which could boast just two seasons of single-digit contact deaths between 1931 and 1977, has since 1977 experienced just one season of double-digit collision deaths — in 1986, the birth year of today's average NFL player.
The dramatic reduction in fatalities should have caused football's boo-birds to cheer, or at least chirp. Relative to its past and the present of other pastimes, football looks good. For instance, California suffered seven times as many collision deaths from skateboarding last year as the entire United States did from football.
Instead of putting football safety into perspective, the sport's critics have shifted the conversation to chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, a degenerative brain disease found in a number of deceased football players, including Hall of Famers John Mackey and Mike Webster.
Unlike fatality numbers, generalizations regarding CTE are just that. The absence of a randomized study on CTE leaves football's critics making sweeping assertions about the sport, though science can't yet pinpoint the prevalence or even the cause of the condition.
It's irresponsible enough that pundits extrapolate autopsy findings from a few former pros to the entire NFL. But projecting the damage endured by a tiny fraction of athletes who toiled for years at elite levels onto youngsters who will never play beyond Pop Warner or high school competition goes beyond reckless.
In April, five scientists writing in the British Journal of Sports Medicine cautioned against such "causal assumptions" regarding contact sports and CTE because a "cause-and-effect relationship remains to be shown scientifically."