NRL could face concussion class action

By Steve Larkin / Wire

A class action against the NRL on behalf of players suffering concussion is being considered by two law firms.

The firms, Bannister Law and Cahill Lawyers, have been investigating a potential class action for the past year and want current and former players worried about their brain health to come forward.

“We are looking at the clubs’ and associations’ liability for what are, we will allege, reasonably preventable brain injuries,” Bannister Law principal Charles Bannister said in a statement on Wednesday.

“We will also allege that ARL, NRL and the clubs have had the resources, both medical and paramedical, to understand and implement protocols and policies that could and should have protected player welfare long before they were introduced.”

The investigation revolves around the degenerative brain condition Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE), which has been found in retired American NFL players and athletes from other high impact sports.

There was widespread concern CTE was caused by concussion incidents during play and that the rules of the respective games did not sufficiently take precautions to protect player safety.

The potential NRL class action was two-pronged.

Firstly, whether the rules took sufficient steps to protect players against concussion incidents.

And secondly, whether rules and safety protocols were implemented properly and allowed players time to recover from concussion incidents without sustaining permanent injury.

Bannister Law and Cahill Lawyers said in Tuesday’s statement they had been jointly investigating the issue for 12 months.

The investigations were exploring the root causes of post-retirement medical issues among numerous former NRL players, stating many of the symptoms experienced by these players were consistent with CTE.

The firms said they had already been in contact with many league players who held serious concerns about their brain health, and called for others to follow their lead.

The Crowd Says:

2019-07-03T06:11:40+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


4?? 4??! God damn it… (I seem to have missed a day this week…)

2019-07-03T05:26:36+00:00

BA Sports

Roar Guru


The latter I imagine. Here is what you need to know from a couple of years ago... TOP compensation lawyer Thomas Cahill has a $3 million Mosman home and earns a fortune — but was too cheap to pay for his own train and bus fares, a court has heard. The 43-year-old was caught by police using an Australian Defence Force free travel pass and admitted having used it for six years. He was arrested after being caught on a bus in May 2014, when he was using a pass in the name of Clayton Smith, an ex-defence force member. His years of free travel on Sydney trains and buses were revealed last week when he was fined $5000 for professional misconduct by the Civil and Administrative Tribunal, though the NSW Law Society had first wanted him struck off the roll of solicitors. Cahill (pictured), whose LinkedIn page says he has worked for the past six months as special counsel at class action specialists Bannister Law, told the tribunal­ he used the free travel card for convenience, not “financial gain”. Classy guy...

2019-07-03T05:07:54+00:00

Nick

Roar Guru


Really? I've only seen advertising for July 4?

2019-07-03T04:01:05+00:00

Pete

Guest


Sue RA for infringing on your right to free speech

2019-07-03T03:53:17+00:00

RandyM

Guest


The AFL are already further along in this (ofcourse i doubt you would find any article on the theroar about it.....) . They have players who have come forward and ready to start proceedings.

2019-07-03T03:44:00+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


And another question for any legal experts on the site, the new Stranger Things series was advertised to start today but it still hasn't, what are my legal options?

2019-07-03T03:38:45+00:00

Emcie

Roar Guru


Soo, do they have players/explayers pushing this as their clients or are they opening this up publicly in the hopes that players will jump on board? Genuine question.

2019-07-03T03:30:10+00:00

BA Sports

Roar Guru


Bannister Law love a good class action.... Ambulance chasers.

Read more at The Roar