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Schwab: Tackling frequency in prep football under scrutiny

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St. Charles East’s Erik Anderson runs with the ball in 2012 during the Saints’ 19-6 loss to Batavia as Batavia’s Anthony Thielk closes in. (Kane County Chronicle file photo)

High school football coaches contend they’ve already received the message loud and clear when it comes to player safety.

A state legislator thinks it should become law to make sure that is the case.

State Rep. Carol Sente, D-Lincolnshire, is introducing a bill designed to protect high school football players from head and brain trauma by limiting tackling to one practice a week.

According to an article on CBS Chicago’s website, Sente is open to feedback when it comes to how the bill ultimately takes shape on matters ranging from how equipment such as dummies and sleds factor in, the way tackling would be policed during the offseason and other specifics that will need to be ironed out. She reportedly has scheduled a town hall meeting about her proposal for Feb. 25 at Vernon Hills High School.

Many football coaches have raised questions about the proposal’s merits, as well as how it would be implemented.

Burlington Central coach Rich Crabel said his team only hits in-season during Tuesday and Wednesday practices, and typically only tackles players to the ground during Wednesday’s defense-intensive practices.

In that sense, Crabel does not fear Sente’s proposal would be a major jolt to his program, but he also dismissed the notion that limiting players from being driven to the turf is the be-all, end-all when it comes to staving off head injuries.

“Just because you don’t take somebody to the ground doesn’t eliminate the things they’re talking about,” Crabel said. “Just because they didn’t take someone to the ground, they don’t get a concussion? I mean, when your offensive linemen and defensive linemen hit heads, nobody is being taken to the ground.”

In 2011, the state of Illinois passed regulations requiring players receive medical clearance to return from concussions, but doctors have noted that the cumulative effect of blows to the head from football pose a long-term risk that do not always trace back to concussions.

Aurora Central Catholic football coach Brian Casey noted that for smaller schools such as ACC, underclassmen often play in games at the freshman and sophomore levels, adding a potential complication to viewing the bill through the prism of allowing players to tackle in one practice and one game a week.

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