The Wrap: Concussion is a key area where Australian rugby can become a leader, not a follower

By Geoff Parkes / Expert

It’s the issue that’s never going away. What can rugby do about concussion?

Released last week, provisional findings from a University of Auckland research project found the risk onset for Alzheimer’s Disease was 42% higher for rugby players than the general population, and 17% higher for any neurogenerative disease.

Will players of the future – and their parents – feel confident that rugby is safe enough for them to continue playing? Will administrators instigate and oversee genuine improvements and advancements that lead to better safety outcomes, and do so with appropriate haste?

Compared to Australia’s other contact football codes, rugby is unique in that overall jurisdiction and administration of the sport resides in Dublin. Setting aside occasional law variation trials, it is a global game played in the same way, with the same behaviours, laws and sanctions applying in all locations.

That’s both a blessing and a curse for Rugby Australia. It doesn’t have to bother itself with research and policy-making, just ensure compliance with whatever World Rugby sends its way.

But what might be a good thing for a cash-strapped organisation also means there is little chance of Australia adopting a leadership position when it comes to head injury. As in so many things rugby, Australia is a follower, not a leader.

Two matters dominate the landscape; a group litigation currently before the London High Court, involving up to 300 ex-players, and a drive by World Rugby to lower tackle heights.

The former is at a messy stage around disclosure and whether the two sides can agree to have the case heard as a group claim, comprising a representative sample of 45 players, or as individual cases. At this stage, a full hearing before the end of 2024 seems unlikely.

For its part, World Rugby recently issued a joint statement in conjunction with the Welsh Rugby Union, stating; “We would want players involved to know that we listen, we care and continue to champion player welfare as the sport’s number one priority. Players and parents can have confidence that rugby is as safe as a contact sport can be. Rugby will always be led by the latest science when taking any action on player welfare.”

Fine words, but as the COVID years showed, politicians and administrators who tout “we are guided by the science” aren’t always as forthcoming in explaining why or how one man’s science is worth more than another man’s science.

One constant in the concussion debate is how sports, including rugby, have hidden behind the ‘science’ of the Concussion in Sport Group; a body previously headed by now-disgraced Australian Dr Paul McCrory, and overwhelmingly populated by academics and medical professionals on the payroll of various self-interested sports.

An updated statement from the CISG in 2023 stubbornly refused to acknowledge a causal relationship between contact sports participation and CTE; directly at odds with independent organisations like the National Institute of Health (USA), Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (USA), and the National Health Service (UK), who all concluded that CTE is caused by repeated traumatic brain injuries.

(Photo By Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

In November 2022, a World Rugby conference in Amsterdam included a session on brain health, where a number of handpicked speakers attacked the validity of the findings of those organisations, and the work of prominent experts in the field.

One danger with World Rugby ‘choosing sides’ like this is that it risks locking itself into a prescribed course of action; one that eschews wider, vigorous debate. It ensures, to the detriment of players, that progress is grindingly slow.

Also problematic – and less than scientific – is the continued use of match officials as proxy agents of change. The intent – to lessen the incidence of head injuries and concussions – can’t be argued with, but where is the conclusive evidence that a process which involves sending some players off for what is sometimes incidental or accidental contact, and others not, makes the game safer?

As if one TMO wasn’t enough, the recent World Cup saw the addition of more backroom officials, employed to scour through vision, a few seconds behind play, to identify purveyors of foul play. Once they had their man, match officials then curiously seemed to switch sides, trying to find mitigating factors to apply against the prescribed foul play sanction.

It remains to be seen whether World Rugby will realise the futility of torturing themselves at the margins trying to decipher the fine differences between Sam Cane’s and Siya Kolisi’s actions, heavily influencing the outcome of a World Cup final in the process, and think instead in terms of what made those instances broadly similar.

David Porecki receives medical attention. (Photo By David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Once that mind shift is made, rugby will be able to reserve the heaviest sanctions for true cases of deliberate or extremely reckless foul play, and focus resources and energy into changing behaviour at all levels of the game through a cohesive strategy that leans more heavily into education and coaching.

In the meantime, February will see the Australian roll-out of a two-year trial in community and junior rugby where the legal tackle height will be lowered to the ball carrier’s sternum and below. This is undoubtedly positive, albeit the measure comes six long years after data from previous trials conducted in France, England, New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland, Wales and Scotland showed a reduction in concussion instances of up to 30%.

Less convincing is World Rugby’s much-hyped introduction of ‘instrumented mouthguards’, at all levels of the professional game. The result of a Euro 2 million investment, ‘smart’ mouthguards provide in-game alerts to pitch-side doctors, to enable them to pick up players who have experienced a high level of acceleration as a result of contact, who have otherwise not been visually identified for head injury assessment (HIA).

While this ticks the box for ‘action’, some concussion experts are less convinced. Melbourne neuroscientist, and prominent advocate in the concussion and CTE space, Professor Alan Pearce, points to the NFL, which is now able to collect data from helmet impact and correlate this to CTE.

“This mouthguard benefit falls far short of this, is far less precise, and does little more than create a theatre of care. It doesn’t take into account individual player history and thresholds, and other variables such as angle and force,” Pearce told The Roar.

“The only real benefit is that we will get more HIA’s performed than via observation only. But then again, we know that the SCAT5 pitch-side test, or HIA, is flawed to begin with,” he added.

Like other sports, rugby has struggled to keep up with developments around understanding the distinction between CTE resulting from smaller, sub-concussive hits, and concussions arising from high-impact collisions.

Blues’ James Parsons walks off with concussion. (Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images)

To that end, guidelines around the amount of full contact training for professional players were introduced last year, and while Australia’s rugby franchises indicate they are compliant, adherence is largely self-regulated.

CTE is still only diagnosable post-mortem, although recent advances have enabled researchers to diagnose instances of ‘probable CTE’. There is mounting evidence that suggests that the incidence of sub-concussive hits to young brains that are not yet fully formed, is a leading indicator for CTE. Further, data from the Australian Brain Bank so far indicates better outcomes for players who started their careers at an older age.

With that in mind, and so much focus on the professional game, how much is being missed, in the areas where it really counts?

During the 2023 senate committee hearings on Concussion in Sport, nearly all of Australia’s central professional sports administrations admitted to having little or no idea as to how consistently head injury processes were being adhered to in the community. Most had no data around rates of compliance and rates of injury.

With this lack of accountability laid bare, an opportunity exists for rugby to take a positive lead, to highlight how their initiative and commitment to do more to ensure the safety of their junior and amateur participants can be a genuine differentiator and positive selling point to parents, when compared to other sports such as rugby league and AFL.

There are plenty of potential partners for Rugby Australia to align with, if it chooses. For example, the Concussion Legacy Foundation, which has a branch in Australia, is a strident advocate for the abolition of contact sport for children before the age of 14.

Last week the Australian Institute of Sport announced a suite of more robust protocols for community and junior sport, including a recommendation for a 21-day minimum stand-down period until the resumption of competitive sport, following a concussion.

Those proposed changes have been endorsed by a wide range of Australian sporting bodies, including athletics, cycling, hockey and touch football, but not by any of the main football codes, including rugby.

One of the anticipated outcomes of the senate committee hearings was that Australian sports would ultimately be required to provide participants with a ‘concussion passport’, which they would carry with them from junior sport through to adulthood, wherever and whoever they end up playing with and for.

Containing historical information, the ‘passport’ would enable players, their parents, clubs and club doctors to make better-informed decisions around individual players and their treatment and recovery after suffering a head injury or concussion.

The concussion space is punctuated by how slowly everything moves. There are always calls for more research, time for trials and to test new technology, and to consider potential impacts on the way the sport is played. One benefit of the passport proposal is that its implementation isn’t impeded by any of that.

With the senate committee having promised much, but ultimately fizzling out into a few vague, watery recommendations with no passport and no accountability mechanisms attached, sports like rugby have a choice.

They can view those findings as a ‘bullet dodged’ and a free pass. Or, they can seize the opportunity to take the best ideas, implement them, and become leaders in this critically important space.

The many intensely sad, personal accounts of ex-players suffering in their younger, middle and later ages are impactful and important. But there is a danger of these becoming so commonplace that they tend to become over-familiar and wash over the sporting landscape.

And where this leads to a disconnect on the part of administrators, there invariably follows a lack of accountability.

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It is not enough for rugby in Australia – and globally – to smugly believe, ‘at least we’re nowhere near as bad as rugby league’.

Players, and the great game, deserve more decisive action.

Rugby Australia was contacted for comment.

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-08T11:19:13+00:00

Bobby D

Roar Rookie


A good summation Adam. There are no answers to those questions you raise. RU is a body contact sport. Now there are countless rules being introduced about what you can do and can't do in body contact situations. How do you properly apply these rules every 5 seconds when body contact occurs. The game just cannot survive. Tackle safely they encourage. It's a curious phrase akin to saying "dance cautiously" or "run carefully", an intriguing juxtaposition of action and caution. In the realms of Rugby, the term "tackle" implies a forceful, strategic maneuver to bring down an opponent. "Safely", on the other hand, suggests protection & care. The 2 concepts are at odds yet they coexist in the context of player well-being. Who knows where this all will end but I have a pretty good idea that WR's future, under current management, is extremely vulnerable.

2024-02-08T10:40:49+00:00

Bobby D

Roar Rookie


Why are the NRL & AFL less concerned about multiple legal challengers than WR? Surely they are as vulnerable. Both entities and RU as well, have all come a long way in eliminating violence and rough-house play from their sports. Many, many head-knocks still occur (impossible to totally prevent) through accidental situations generally caused by the size & speed of current players and poor technique by some. It's amazing to me that RU has gone to the lengths it has in issuing cards - often red - for a player displaying poor technique. No intent to injure mind you but has to suffer the ignominy of, dare I say it, poor technique. The NRL & AFL, while recognising the problem, have not dramatically changed their games and that's why, here in Oz, they both remain outstandingly popular with their supporters and RU is at an all time low.

2024-02-08T10:19:17+00:00

Bobby D

Roar Rookie


The best thing for the game??? Let's wait and see. One thing for sure, the "experts" implementing these rules will soon find that they cannot eliminate concussions.

2024-02-07T11:23:39+00:00

RoadBike

Roar Rookie


This is QPL and Shute Shield etc. - equivalents to English Rugby Championship we are talking about though - big guys over 100kg and over 6ft tall - expecting them not to bend into a tackle - seriously?

2024-02-07T10:25:59+00:00

Bobby D

Roar Rookie


A couple of weeks to get used to it??? Very quick learners!!! Maybe tackling became safer but I reckon fewer tackles are being made and defensive lapses have markedly increased. Doesn't make the game better.

2024-02-07T08:27:35+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


Certainly in junior rugby there are already competitions where you can't tackle above the base of the sternum and you can't bend into the tackle. Anecdotally it took the kids a couple of weeks to get used to it, but they were soon tackling safer and there was more open rugby because of the offloads.

2024-02-07T03:58:19+00:00

Adam

Roar Guru


Agreed. They've also got plenty of old boys that blow up the joint every time there's a suggestion for players to be accountable when they make head contact.

2024-02-07T01:33:32+00:00

RoadBike

Roar Rookie


Not a research link, but an interesting article from the BBC [as always, need to be careful not to be selective in quotations, so worth reading the full story] - under certain circumstances concussions fall, and under other circumstances concussions rise - need to find that sweet spot of safety/engagement: https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/47000468 "....the trial saw approximately a 67% increase in concussions, from an average of 0.6 a game in the regular Championship season, to 1 per match in the Championship Cup. The number of concussions from upright tackles did fall markedly - as was hoped - but there was a drastic increase in concussive incidents around the breakdown, when both the ball carrier and tackler were bent at the waist."

2024-02-07T00:57:57+00:00

Cuddy

Roar Rookie


Australian Rygby can show leadership...the rest will follow. Many improvements can be made on the field (contact age, tackle height etc) and more off the field (concussion passports, coaching, strict no play rules). Courage and conviction.

2024-02-07T00:14:18+00:00

RoadBike

Roar Rookie


Yes - sadly there were too many concussions to the tacklers in the RFU Study, the RFU were forced to stop the trial early for safety reasons, and revert to the original tackle law. They did note that the most observable change stemmed from the running height of the attacker, when not upright, and hence the tackler was faced with force at a lower trajectory. "Nigel Melville from the RFU stated: “We need to analyse the data in more detail, but our preliminary analysis has shown all of these incidents occurred when a bent-at-the-waist tackler was attempting to tackle a bent-at-the-waist ball-carrier......" The trouble is that running upright isn't realistic for the attacker [when bracing for a tackle], especially when tall - but I note that with Australia's upcoming trial, the refs are expected to penalize those attackers who lower their running trajectory - which seems counter-intuitive from an attacker's perspective. I pity the poor refs, who have even more to contend with now.

2024-02-06T21:41:42+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


Removing rucking from the game certainly has had a lot of far reaching unintended consequences. I can't recall the game but Tate McD was picking the ball up from a tackle close to the line, in pretty much the legal position, head up etc. It means the centre of gravity is back to wards his feet (I guess) and he could have been knocked over relatively easily. Instead he was hit with a full blooded clean out leading to a card for the offender. Your suggestion may be part of the answer. If Tate stayed higher and put his foot over the ball, then the incoming attacker could have engaged him safely in a ruck over the ball. Then what happens to the ball carrier? He has to immediately roll EW and is bound to disrupt one of the players over the ball. I don't recall stomping or kicking a player on the ground as being that big a problem, mostly frowned upon by most players. When you look at the current safety challenges posed by concussions, rucking certainly was molehill flattened for no reason.

2024-02-06T20:51:26+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


That last point is fair. Thanks for posting the two links. I'm no scientist but I'm surprised at the flaws in the RFU study below. As I said in another post, "Ultimately, the degree of success will come from everything that goes with the initiative e.g. guidance/coaching on how to tackle safely." I don't think that the study gave the initiative a full chance of success because it didn't do this; chopping and changing from one law to another wouldn't have helped either.

2024-02-06T09:00:07+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Yeah I dont see that as an issue really. Rugby has become so stop start I just cant see anyone suffering from health problems because they were too fatigued in a 80 min game. We certainly dont want that, but I do think we need to bring the fast smaller guys back into the game somehow. Even the 9s are 6'2" and 100 kg these days. There has to be a reason a smaller guy can exist.

2024-02-06T08:00:36+00:00

HiKa

Roar Rookie


One of my mates had the suggestion that a fix to make the game safer for jacklers is to require them to step over the ball before picking it up. The pickup then should look like a dead-lift instead of a toe-touch. This means no hands onto the ground with head where it shouldn't be, and no late arrivers sticking their hands in to slow things down before being told to leave it alone. A Johnny-on-the-spot jackler would put a foot forward of the ball before bending (mostly at the knees) to pick it up. This would put them essentially side-on to the trylines, which means cleaners can contact them on legs/hips/torso (and not head/shoulders) without coming from the side. Side entry is tolerated up to a point currently because refs know that a head down, bent over jackler isn't a safe target for someone arriving straight on. If the jackler is turned 90 degrees instead, then the straight arrival becomes the safer play and side entry (on the side where the jackler's head is) could be strictly enforced. Putting that aside, I agree that actual enforcement of some of the laws as they are written and plainly understood, would make the game faster and at the same time safer.

2024-02-06T07:49:03+00:00

RoadBike

Roar Rookie


The other World Rugby / RFU Tackle Height sponsored study link is here: https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/55/4/220 Conclusions: Legislating to lower the height of the tackle meant that tacklers made contact with the ball carrier’s head and neck 30% less often. This did not influence concussion incidence rates. Tacklers in the lowered tackle height setting suffered more concussions than did tacklers in the standard tackle height setting.

2024-02-06T07:44:42+00:00

RoadBike

Roar Rookie


Sadly, statistically, 31% is not significant from their 2 year study (which was sponsored by World Rugby). That is the point - the result could have been due as much to climate change as to a change in the tackle laws. I am not saying that a change in tackle laws is the wrong way to go, simply that blindly quoting statistics, without reference, is misleading.

2024-02-06T07:34:58+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


They're not saying that it's made no difference. They're saying that under the rules of statistics one season isn't enough to know for certain. If they keep on getting a reduction of around 31% the statisticians will be much happier. 31% is obviously a significant difference.

2024-02-06T06:59:24+00:00

Cugel

Roar Rookie


AFL could mitigate a lot of their problems by disallowing attacks on players without the pill. Every time there's some incident, it's almost always some bloke crashing into some unsuspecting sod without the footy.

2024-02-06T05:36:33+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


Actually it’s not a short leap. People can be protected byWHS laws without being eligible for compensation. For example, you as a member of the public. Public safety applies to things like carnival rides, and it is regulated by WorkSafe. But you aren’t eligible for WorkCover if you are injured by a carnival ride. I would be confident that rugby players employed as professionals are entitled under law to establish themselves as a Designated Work Group and have their WHS issues voiced by a Health and Safety Representative. Irregardless of whether they are eligible for WorkCover compo.

2024-02-06T05:35:15+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


I think the Blue Card protocol is a significant improvement to the current HCP. It is difficult to even imagine a scenario where a tackler targets the hips and slip up to collide head on head. The smothering ball and all tackle will be very difficult to execute. This may also change the way the attacker approaches the contact as he/she should be able to free up their hands to offload, pop-up or place the ball by "taking the tackle" instead of trying to carry as low to the ground as possible to make a legal tackle difficult.

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