Manchester Magazine Fall 2016 | Page 42

MU| S p o r t s Spartan Beat MU ahead of the pack on preventing concussions These are not Nate Jensen’s father’s football helmets. Heck, they’re not even Jensen’s football helmets. Matte-black, the two helmets rest on a conference table in the Manchester football offices, and they come bearing secrets. One is the padded inner liner, which can be detached with a telltale rasp of Velcro and opened; inside are what look like metallic bumper stickers of varying shapes and sizes, but which are in fact electronic sensors. Not at all like the helmets Jensen, MU football coach, wore as a player. “Oh, heck, no,” he says. “The helmets I used to wear are so much heavier than what we wear now. (These) are a little lighter and ... we have almost like rollerblade straps on them so that the helmets fit tighter.” All of this is a response to research that has linked concussions to a degenerative brain condition called chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE. Its discovery has changed concussion protocols from peewee football all the way to the NFL. can understand and get a deeper knowledge for how serious this is.” “I think that’s where this has to start,” Dougal says. “We have 118 guys coming in this year, and (at practice) they’re spread out pretty far across several fields in their different position groups,” Foreman says. “This software just provides me with another set of eyes.” As befits its core values of innovation, leadership and community involvement, Manchester has been out in front on this issue and continues to be. The University is a foundation chapter in Team Up, a collaboration with the Concussion Legacy Foundation that offers free interactive education on concussions to area schools, parent organizations, recreation leagues and others. Manchester was one of only 12 partner universities in the United States and the only one in Indiana with a clear endorsement from the CLF when it joined last December. Two years ago, Manchester was the first school in the Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference to install the sensors. Sixty-eight of their helmets are equipped with them now. “It’s designed for grades 4-12,” says MU Assistant Athletic Trainer Zachary Dougal, the local program coordinator. “We teach, but there’s also an interactive component