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>> NARRATOR: Tonight on Frontline, the epic story of
football's concussion crisis.
>> These players come down with dementia and then Alzheimer's
and then they're gone.
>> NARRATOR: A major Frontline investigation of what the NFL
knew and when it knew it.
>> The level of denial was just profound.
>> We strongly deny those allegations that we withheld any
information or misled the players.
>> We don't know who is at risk for it.
We don't know if concussion in and of itself is what causes
the abnormalities.
>> NARRATOR: A decades-long battle between scientists,
players and the nation's most powerful sports league.
>> You can't go against the NFL.
They will squash you.
>> NARRATOR: Next, "League of Denial: The NFL's Concussion
Crisis."
>> I'm really wondering if every single football player
doesn't have this.
(horns blowing) >> Erenberg touchdown!
>> Listen to this crowd, they're on fire!
>> The Steelers have their key receivers in.
Stallworth on the left, 82, Swann, 88, on the right.
Franco Harris is now at the 30, big pileup.
He fumbled the ball!
And let's see...
Minnesota has it!
Jeff Siemon on it.
>> Oh, yeah!
It's still wild and woolly, and I love 'em that way.
>> You love 'em wild and woolly and you're seeing it now.
>> Impressive drive by the Steelers.
>> Everybody loves everybody when you win.
>> The drive has used a lot of time.
Here's a roll-out.
Bradshaw fires...
Touchdown!
An awesome physical team were the Steelers today.
(crowd chanting) Pittsburgh, the Super Bowl
champs.
>> NARRATOR: Pittsburgh.
For 70 years, they've loved their football team:
the Steelers.
>> This is a tough town.
The people here are tough, tough-minded.
The way the Steelers played the game meshed perfectly with the
people.
>> Hit him! Hit him!
>> They loved that hard-hitting, punishing, brutal defense
that they played.
>> NARRATOR: They called the defensive line
the Steel Curtain.
>> That just fit perfectly into the way they saw their own lives
and what they had to be in order to survive.
>> NARRATOR: And if there was one iconic Steeler, it was
number 52, Iron Mike Webster.
>> Mike Webster exemplified what it was like to be a player
in the Steel City and a player in that era that for me was
the greatest team of all time.
>> Pittsburgh's going to the Super Bowl!
>> NARRATOR: In the 1970s, Webster anchored four Super Bowl
championship teams.
>> Mike was a legend and a hero.
He may have been the legend and the hero because here's that
blue-collar worker center who doesn't get any glory, doesn't
catch the touchdown passes, doesn't kick the 52-yard field
goal to win a game.
He's just in every play.
>> I just loved watching him play.
And Mike's favorite games were the ones that were cold
and snowy and frigid, and he could get up there
with these short sleeves.
And the dirtier and muddier it got made things better.
>> NARRATOR: Then, 11 years after he retired, the people
of Pittsburgh received some bad news.
>> At what price glory?
The Hall of Fame center Mike Webster died at the age of 50.
>> He died on Tuesday.
He was just 50 years old.
He was known as Iron Mike.
>> He had heart disease...
>> NARRATOR: The news that day would start a chain of events
that would threaten to forever change the way Americans see
the game of football.
>> It is hard to find a former pro football player whose body
hasn't paid a very high price.
>> NARRATOR: Mike Webster's body was delivered to the Allegheny
County coroner's office.
>> Webster ends up in the autopsy room.
And the pathologist who's on call that day is this guy,
Bennet Omalu.
>> Omalu parked his car and walked into the office and he
said, "What's going on?"
And one of his colleagues said, "It's Mike Webster.
He's up in the autopsy room."
And Omalu's response was, "Who's Mike Webster?"
>> And everybody looked at me like, "Where is he from,
is he from outer space?
Who is this guy who doesn't know Mike Webster in Pittsburgh?"
>> He's a Nigerian-born, incredibly well-educated guy,
but he doesn't know anything about football.
>> NARRATOR: A doctor, Omalu was also a trained neuropathologist.
From the beginning of the autopsy, Dr. Omalu could see
the effects of 17 years in the football wars.
>> Mike looked older than his age.
He looked beat up.
He looked...
He looked worn out.
He looked drained.
If I had not been told his age, I would say he looked like 70.
>> NARRATOR: Omalu started at the feet and worked his way up.
>> There were cracks running the length of his feet and they
were incredibly painful, and so Webster would duct-tape his feet
as well to sort of close those cracks and keep them together.
>> His feet and his legs were definitely... you could
just tell were destroyed.
You know, he had veins all over his leg, varicose veins and
stuff like that.
>> NARRATOR: There were several herniated discs, a broken
vertebra, torn rotator cuff and separated shoulder.
>> His teeth were falling out.
His body... he had cellulitis, his heart was getting enlarged.
>> You know, he was supergluing his teeth back into his head,
and he actually made that work.
I mean, I think Dad's the only person who could actually have
a medical problem like that and decide to fix it with superglue.
>> NARRATOR: Then there was the matter of Webster's forehead.
>> Webster's forehead was essentially fixed to its scalp.
The skin on his forehead had built up almost a shelf of scar
tissue from the continuous pounding of his head into other
people.
>> NARRATOR: Webster's death certificate made Omalu suspect
he may have suffered from a brain disorder.
>> When I opened up his skull, in my mind, I had a mental
picture of what his brain would look like based on my education.
I was expecting to see a brain with Alzheimer's disease
features, so a shriveled, ugly-looking brain.
But upon opening his skull, Mike's brain looked normal.
>> He didn't understand why that would be, but he became
more and more curious.
It became sort of like his little private mission.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Omalu wanted to fix the brain, preserve it in a
chemical bath for further study.
>> I said, "Let me fix this brain.
Let me spend time with this brain.
There is something...
something doesn't match."
I remember the technician telling me, he said, "What are
you fixing the brain for?
That brain is normal."
>> And Omalu becomes very firm in that moment, and he says,
"Fix the brain.
I want you to fix the brain."
>> NARRATOR: What Omalu could not see was that hidden inside
Webster's brain was evidence of a chronic disease.
>> And that decision would change the NFL, because if
Webster's brain had not been examined, I don't honestly think
that we would be where we're at today.
>> NARRATOR: Steve Fainaru and his brother Mark Fainaru-Wada
are investigative reporters.
Steve has a Pulitzer prize for reporting in Iraq.
Mark broke the Barry Bonds steroids story.
For Frontline, ESPN and in their own book, they've been
investigating how the NFL has handled evidence that football
may be destroying the brains of NFL players.
>> I think in the simplest form, one major piece of our reporting
just revolves around the simple question of what did the NFL
know and when did it know it.
>> NARRATOR: The NFL would not cooperate with the Fainaru
brothers, nor would it talk to Frontline.
>> We went to New York to meet with them and say, "Look,
this is what we're doing.
We'd like you to participate.
We'd like you to make available these various people."
And the NFL's message was, "Sorry, we're not going to help
you."
>> NARRATOR: But they continued to report the story, beginning
with Mike Webster's career in the NFL.
>> There's almost a Darwinian quality about the NFL.
Webster wanted to prove to the world that he was going to be
the toughest, and he did anything that he possibly could
to do that.
>> NARRATOR: Webster's Sunday afternoons were spent on the
line of scrimmage, brutal territory known as the pit.
>> He had violence in him.
He could explode into the player.
Every play was a fight.
>> NARRATOR: Webster's favorite weapon was his head.
>> Webby would hit you with his head first, and with that head,
he'd pop you, and then he'd lift his shoulders.
Now, he'd get you up in the air.
Once you hit full speed and you're moving backwards
and he hits you, you're gone.
>> When he would fire off the ball, he's coming to block me,
and if I'm not ready for him, you know, he's going to pancake
me, you know, he's going to hurt me.
>> NARRATOR: Hall of Fame linebacker for the New York
Giants Harry Carson went to war with Mike Webster.
>> And so I have to meet force with force.
All of my power is coming from my big rear end and my big
thighs into my forearm, and I hit him in the face.
I have to stun him, get my hands on him, throw him off when I see
where the ball is going.
And when I hit him in the face, his head is going back.
He's going forward, but all of a sudden, his head is going back
and his brain is hitting up against the inside of his skull.
>> In football, one has to expect that almost every play of
every game and every practice, they're going to be hitting
their heads against each other.
That's the nature of the game.
Those things seem to happen around 1,000 to 1,500 times
a year.
Each time that happens, it's around 20G or more.
That's the equivalent of driving a car at 35 miles per hour
into a brick wall 1,000 to 1,500 times per year.
>> NARRATOR: For Mike Webster, the head hits just kept on
coming for 17 years.
>> You have to survive, so you learn the methods to survive and
be the best at surviving in that environment the minute you put
your pads on.
You're only one play away from getting seriously injured.
>> NARRATOR: For Webster and others on the field, physical
injuries went with the territory.
>> I mean, it's affected my life, it surely has, but I'm not
out there crying about it.
I know that I went to war, and I came out of the battle
with what I got.
And you know, that's the way it is.
That's the way Mike Webster would say it too,
I'm sure he would.
I mean, we battled in there, and this is the result of it
right here, sitting here looking at you.
>> NARRATOR: But what Otto and others do not know is whether
football has also caused injuries they cannot see:
the result of what they called "getting their bell rung."
>> Oh, did they hit him that time!
His helmet went off.
>> I don't know how he held onto that.
Sammy White, well, he did, a remarkable catch with Skip
Thomas and Jack Tatum jackknifing him as he caught the
ball for a first down on the Oakland 45-yard line.
>> NARRATOR: In 1991, Mike Webster left football.
Soon, he and his family would come to believe
those hits to the head had taken a devastating toll.
>> Mike wasn't Mike.
He was angrier quicker than before and didn't have the
patience to have the kids on his lap or take a walk with the
kids, like he didn't have that stamina physically.
>> NARRATOR: Over the years, he became increasingly confused.
>> He would forget, you know, which way the grocery store was,
which way it was to go home.
He actually broke down in tears in front of me a couple of times
because he couldn't get his thoughts together and he
couldn't keep them in order.
>> NARRATOR: At home, there were bouts of rage.
>> He took a knife and slashed all his football pictures.
They were all destroyed and gone and broken glass,
and they were all down.
It wasn't Mike.
>> NARRATOR: They'd been college sweethearts, but 27 years and
four children later, Mike and Pam Webster's marriage ended.
>> We didn't understand what was happening.
You're just trying to get by in this storm.
I mean, your money's gone, your pride's gone,
our bills are all overdue, our house is getting foreclosed,
all the security is gone.
All those parameters are removed.
So everything's crumbling.
>> NARRATOR: Once one of Pittsburgh's greatest football
heroes, Webster began living out of a pickup truck.
>> I'd come outside sometimes and just see him sitting in the
truck and it would be freezing, and he'd just be sitting there,
looking miserable.
He'd say, "The worst thing is I'm actually getting to the
point where sometimes, or if I don't have my medicine,"
he said, "I'm cold and I don't realize that I can fix it
by putting a jacket on."
>> NARRATOR: Webster was often unable to sleep.
>> He had a lot of pain and he hasn't slept for days,
so he asked me, said, "Sunny, can you tase me?"
And I'm like, "What does that mean?"
So he pulls out this stun gun and goes, "Bzz, bzz."
I'm like, "Mike, that's not healthy."
He said, "But I haven't slept nothing."
He said, "All you got to do is tase me right here."
And I'm like, "Okay."
I don't know, you know, he's my hero, I'm going to do
whatever he tells me.
So I tased him and he goes to sleep.
I'm like, "Wow!"
>> A true champion who wound up homeless, depressed...
>> NARRATOR: The story of Webster's decline was revealed
on ESPN, and then the local newspapers.
>> He was arrested for forging 19 prescriptions for Ritalin,
which he used to combat the erratic behavior caused by his
damaged brain...
>> I think he was embarrassed.
He was a leader on the team.
He was Mike Webster.
And then to be down to a place of poverty, a place where your
brain can't function to finish a sentence without some help from
Ritalin or whatever you need to function for a short period of
time.
>> NARRATOR: For Iron Mike, TV interviews became impossible.
>> No, I'm talking about...
No, I'm trying to find...
Yeah, well everybody went through trauma as a kid, I'm not
saying I was different than that, I'm just saying...
The things we do to one another, okay...
Uh...
Hell, I don't know what I'm saying.
I'm just tired and confused right now, that's why I say
I can't really... I can't say it the way I want to say it.
I could answer this real easy at other times, but right now
I'm just tired.
>> Maybe the saddest I ever heard him say was when someone
saw my dad and said, "Aren't you Mike Webster?"
And he said, "I used to be."
I think that was really how he felt, because he really
was, he wasn't the same person.
It was like a picture of him that was just shattered into a
million pieces.
>> NARRATOR: Nearly broke, homeless and losing his mind,
Webster decided football had hurt him, and the NFL was going
to pay for it.
In 1997, he went to see a lawyer.
>> The thing that struck me the most was how intelligent
Mike was.
And the problem was that he just couldn't continue those thought
patterns for longer than a 30-second period or a minute
or two minutes.
He would just go off on the tangents at that point.
It was pretty obvious, actually, the first interview
that he had some type of cognitive impairment.
>> NARRATOR: Attorney Bob Fitzsimmons drew up a disability
claim against the NFL.
>> He began to assemble a case with Webster to basically say
that Webster had suffered brain damage as a result of his
17-year career in the NFL.
>> NARRATOR: Fitzsimmons pulled together Webster's complicated
medical history.
>> So I took the binder of records and got four doctors
together, four separate doctors, asking them, "Does he have
a permanent disability that's cognitive, and is it related
to football?"
>> NARRATOR: Webster's final application for disability
contained over 100 pages and the definitive diagnosis of his
doctors: football had caused Webster's dementia.
His claim for disability was filed with the National Football
League's retirement board.
>> The Disability Committee is part of the NFL.
The head of the Disability Committee is the commissioner
himself, so it's very much a creature of the NFL.
>> NARRATOR: From the beginning, the league's board was
skeptical, reluctant to give Webster money.
>> They were fighting it from the beginning, against
just the common sense of, "Here's this guy, look at him.
He played for nearly 20 years in a brutal and punishing sport,
and this is what's going on with him."
Why would you fight that?
What possible motive?
>> NARRATOR: The league had its own doctor review Webster's
case.
>> The NFL had not only hired an investigator to look into this,
they also hired their own doctor and said, "Hey, we want to
evaluate Mike Webster."
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Edward Westbrook examined him.
>> Dr. Westbrook concurs with everything that the four
other doctors have found and agrees that absolutely, there is
no question that Mike Webster's injuries are football-related
and that he appears to have significant cognitive issues,
brain damage, as a result of having played football.
>> NARRATOR: The NFL Retirement Board had no choice: they
granted Webster monthly disability payments.
>> "...Mr. Webster is currently totally and permanently
disabled..."
>> NARRATOR: And buried in the documents, a stunning admission
by the league's board: football can cause brain disease.
>> "...his disability is the result of head injuries he
suffered as a football player..."
>> The NFL acknowledges that repetitive trauma
to the head in football can cause a permanent disabling
injury to the brain.
>> NARRATOR: The admission would not be made public until years
later, when it was discovered by the Fainaru brothers.
>> And that was a dramatic admission back in 2000, and
in fact, when you talk about that later with Fitzsimmons,
he describes that as the sort of proverbial smoking gun.
>> NARRATOR: It was now in writing: the NFL's own
Retirement Board linked playing football and dementia.
At the time, it was something the league would not admit
publicly, and Webster felt he'd never received the
acknowledgment that his years in the NFL had caused his problems.
>> Mike would call this his greatest battle.
He'd say it was like David and Goliath, over and over,
because it was.
He was taking on something that was bigger than him.
He took on this battle for the right reasons.
He was the right person to do it.
Unfortunately, it cost us everything.
>> NARRATOR: Just two years later, in 2002, Mike Webster
died.
>> 15 seconds to air.
Stand by all cameras.
Ready with slow-motion...
>> NARRATOR: The first broadcast of Monday Night Football in 1970
marked a turning point in the game's popularity and its
revenues.
>> Take tape.
(upbeat music playing) >> I think the NFL has done
an incredible job at marketing itself and turning itself
into a spectacle, a sort of cultural part of our lives.
(lively music continues) >> It fit the personality
of society that became more violent, that became faster,
wanted instant gratification.
>> O.J. Simpson gets the call.
Look out!
>> Football from the opening kickoff, it's full go.
>> What a football player!
>> NARRATOR: The Monday night games were always among the
highest-rated television broadcasts.
>> Look out!
>> Monday Night Football-- it's not just for football fans.
>> Speaking of color commentators...
>> It became an entertainment show.
>> Vivid picturization of the excitement.
(laughing) Number one in the nation.
>> It became a happening.
>> ♪ Are you ready for some football?
A Monday night invasion... ♪ >> NARRATOR: The glory and the
violence of football was beamed into tens of millions of
American living rooms during primetime.
>> ♪ Here come the hits, the bangs,
♪ the blocks and the spikes, 'cause all my rowdy friends
drop in on Monday night. ♪ >> People liked the violence
of it.
>> Oh!
>> You watch a pro football game and naturally, the biggest
cheers are for the touchdowns, but the second-biggest cheers
are for a nasty hit.
>> I describe it as the moment of impact, the moment when you
actually have to go tackle somebody.
It's really a game of will.
>> The actual logo of Monday Night Football, it showed
helmets hitting together.
And it became part of the popular jargon, you know,
"He knocked him silly.
He knocked him to the moon."
>> Set the tone!
Knock him out!
Knock him out!
Let's go!
>> There's no question the NFL marketed that violence.
That's what we love about the game.
>> NARRATOR: The NFL's own highly crafted film productions
celebrated the violence and the spectacle.
(classical piano playing) >> On this down and dirty
dance floor, huge men perform a punishing pirouette.
(players grunting) The meek will never
inherit this turf...
(players grunting) ...because every play is
hand-to-hand and body-to-body combat.
>> NFL Films captures the essence of football itself,
that tension between the violence and the beauty.
>> In the pit, there is more violence per square foot
than anywhere else in sport.
(players grunting)
>> The sense of football as something powerful and elemental
and mythic and epic.
>> When you talk about big hitting safeties, the Eagles'
Brian Dawkins always emerges.
>> We're gonna dominate this thing.
Respect is not given, it is earned!
>> What the NFL would do was they would market tapes--
Crash Course, Moment of Impact, Search and Destroy--
in the context of describing the brutal nature of the
violence of the NFL.
>> NARRATOR: But away from the glamorized hits, there was a
darker side.
Superagent Leigh Steinberg saw it firsthand.
>> I watched athletes I represented
play with collapsed lungs.
I watched them completely fight with doctors at every time
to get into the game.
I watched players deceive coaches on the sidelines
when they were injured and run back into a game.
>> NARRATOR: The inspiration for the movie sports agent
Jerry Maguire, Steinberg was a powerhouse alongside
the new NFL.
>> He was very much a creature of this expanding juggernaut
of the NFL.
He ends up at one point representing 21 quarterbacks
in the NFL, 21 starting quarterbacks in the NFL one
year.
>> NARRATOR: In the early 1990s, Steinberg represented one of
football's top stars: Dallas quarterback Troy Aikman.
>> Second and 14, passing down, coming up for Aikman again...
>> NARRATOR: In 1994, during the NFC championship, Aikman took a
knee to the head.
>> Down he goes.
Stubblefield was there first.
Troy Aikman took a knee to the head...
>> You see it right here.
It's Dennis Brown coming in, you see the knee right there,
knee right on his helmet.
>> NARRATOR: Aikman's concussion was bad enough that he could not
return to the game.
Aikman was taken to a local hospital.
>> I went to visit Troy, who was sitting in a darkened
hospital room all alone.
>> The room is dark because Aikman can't even stand
looking into the light.
It's this sort of surreal scene where the city is celebrating
and the quarterback who won the game is in the hospital with his
agent.
>> He looked at me and he said, "Leigh, where am I?"
And I said, "Well, you're in the hospital."
And he said, "Well, why am I here?"
And I said, "Because you suffered a concussion today."
And he said, "Well, who did we play?"
And I said, "The 49ers."
And he said, "Did we win?"
"Yes, you won."
"Did I play well?"
"Yes, you played well."
"And so what's that mean?"
"It means you're going to the Super Bowl."
>> Five minutes later, they're sitting there, they're
continuing to hang out, and Aikman suddenly turns
to Steinberg and says, "What am I doing here?"
And then next thing you know, they are reliving
this conversation they'd had five minutes earlier.
>> For a minute, I thought he was joking.
And I went through the same sequence of answers again.
And his face brightened and we celebrated again.
Maybe ten minutes passed.
And he looked at me with the same puzzled expression
and asked the same sequence of questions.
It terrified me to see how tender the bond was
between sentient consciousness and potential dementia
and confusion was.
>> Third down and nine, Young throws and that's incomplete.
And... down...
>> NARRATOR: 49ers quarterback Steve Young was another one of
Leigh Steinberg's clients.
>> A sight that is the last thing in the world the 49ers
would want to see.
It looks almost as if he's out cold.
>> Well, I've been there.
And there he is, he's up, that's a good sign.
What I like is he wants to get up off the ground.
>> Look at this.
He looks like he's out cold and now he's walking off.
>> I remember thinking as I walked to the sidelines,
"This is not good," you know?
"This is just not the right thing to happen."
>> NARRATOR: It was Young's seventh concussion.
>> That's a sight we thought would be impossible.
Steve Young apparently knocked cold, knocked out cold,
walks off the field.
>> NARRATOR: He would never play again.
>> If my knee is hurt, everyone knows it and I know it
and we can go deal with it, and shoulders and...
There's only one place in your body that you really don't
understand, and people always say the brain is the last
frontier.
>> NARRATOR: For Steinberg, there was a growing recognition
of just how dangerous the sport was.
>> The damage was occurring every week, and I had people
who I loved and cared for.
And I intuitively knew that this was not just a football issue,
that it was happening to football players in the pros,
it was happening in college, it was happening in high school.
It was happening to every player in every collision sport.
So not only was it an issue for my clients, it was a huge
societal issue.
>> We have put football injuries on the American agenda tonight.
>> Playing with pain, increasingly the price of life
in the National Football League.
>> We've heard so much recently on the danger of concussions in
sports.
>> This year, injuries in the National Football League may be
out of control.
>> NARRATOR: By the mid-'90s, the concussion crisis had made
its way to NFL headquarters on Park Avenue in New York City.
>> ...concern rapidly escalates of the long-term effects of
taking hits to the head on the football field.
>> NARRATOR: NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue orchestrated
the league's response.
>> Obviously, it's an athletic competition...
>> NARRATOR: Tagliabue had begun his career as a lawyer.
>> People have suggested strongly to me that he picked up
a lot of techniques about how to aggressively defend things that
could turn out to be class actions.
And the NFL has had this strategy of going nuclear
every time it goes to court because the first time you ever
lose, you open up the floodgates to potentially billions
of dollars of damage.
>> NARRATOR: And Tagliabue said he was skeptical about the risk
from concussions, once calling the controversy the result of
"pack journalism."
>> Concussions I think is one of these pack journalism issues,
frankly.
There is no increase in concussions, the number is
relatively small.
The problem is it's a journalist issue.
>> This is the commissioner of the NFL saying that
there's no concussion issue.
>> If it was ignorance, they should have known.
They should have known because the issue is so critical.
>> NARRATOR: Still, Tagliabue created a scientific committee,
the Mild Traumatic Brain Injury committee: the MTBI.
To lead it, he chose Elliot Pellman, the New York Jets' team
doctor, a firm believer that concussions were not a serious
problem.
>> And so you had this behind the scenes, this dynamic going
on where you had a guy, Elliot Pellman, who very clearly
believed that this wasn't a problem, it just wasn't a big
problem for the NFL.
>> NARRATOR: To outsiders, the choice of Pellman was unusual.
He was not an expert in neurology and had no background
in brain research.
>> He went to a school in Guadalajara.
Dr. Pellman is not a neurosurgeon, he's not
a neuro-anything.
He's a rheumatologist.
>> Putting a rheumatologist in the head of a committee that
arguably was going to have more influence over brain research
than any particular institution in the country at the time was,
I think a lot of people felt, surprising.
>> NARRATOR: Most of Pellman's committee was made up of NFL
loyalists.
Nearly half the members were team doctors.
>> If you're going to put together a blue ribbon committee
to study brain trauma, it should have as its chair somebody who
has that as a background: either a neurologist, neurosurgeon,
neuropathologist, preferably a clinician.
>> NARRATOR: For years, Pellman's committee would insist
they were studying the problem, that the danger from concussions
was overblown.
>> The way the NFL handled this was for 15 years to do research
that looks awfully like it was designed to say that the league
was okay in doing what it was doing, which wasn't much,
to protect players from the dangers of concussions.
>> NARRATOR: Pellman's committee began writing a series of
scientific papers, and in 2003, got the first of them published
in the medical journal Neurosurgery.
>> Those initial studies from the NFL were notorious in
telling the world over and over and over again, "No, there is no
relationship between hitting your head in football and later
life problems.
No, there is no relationship."
>> NARRATOR: The papers downplayed the risk of
concussions...
>> "Mild TBIs in professional football are not serious
injuries."
>> NARRATOR: Insisted that players could return to the same
game after suffering a concussion.
>> "Return to play does not involve a significant risk of a
second injury."
>> NARRATOR: Denied players suffered any long-term problems
from concussions sustained while playing football...
>> "...that there was no evidence of worsening injury
or chronic cumulative effects of multiple MTBIs..."
>> NARRATOR: And in one of the papers even suggested their
research might apply to younger athletes, despite the fact they
had not studied high school or college players.
>> "It might be safe for college/high school football
players to be cleared to return to play on the same day as their
injury."
>> They were making comments which were greatly at odds
with prospective, double-blinded studies done at the college and
the high school level that just weren't finding the same things.
And that just didn't make sense to anyone that's a scientist.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Robert Cantu edited the journal's sports
medicine section.
The papers were published despite his objections.
>> The papers that started to make statements about:
multiple head injuries were not a problem in the NFL.
If they went back into the same contest with a concussion,
it didn't matter.
If they got knocked out and went back into the same contest,
it didn't matter, and there were no long-term
psychological problems or cognitive problems in these
athletes, in essence saying it wasn't a problem.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Cantu says he took his concerns to the
journal's editor in chief, Dr. Michael Apuzzo.
Apuzzo was also a consultant for the New York Giants.
>> I said that I really think this data is flawed.
I really think it shouldn't be published.
He's the one that made the decision to publish papers,
no matter whether the reviewers felt they should be published or
not, no matter whether the section editor felt they should
be published or not.
>> NARRATOR: Mark Lovell was a member of the committee and an
author on some of the studies.
He now admits there were problems with the research.
>> I look back on some of the papers, yeah, I think I could
have done it differently.
I think the fault of the paper was it was maybe too early to be
making those statements based on a fairly small sample of
players, which is the major criticism of the study,
which I think is a valid one.
>> NARRATOR: The NFL committee published 16 papers.
Neither Dr. Apuzzo, Dr. Pellman, nor commissioner Tagliabue
would speak to Frontline about the papers.
But in those articles, the league had issued
its definitive denials.
>> The closer you look, the less this holds up,
but it did establish this kind of impressive-looking set of
findings which pushed off the day of reckoning for the league.
That's really what is happening here, right?
During this whole run of research that's being
published, the day of reckoning where the league has to answer
to somebody about what it's doing about concussions just
keeps getting pushed off and pushed off and pushed off.
>> NARRATOR: In Pittsburgh, at just about this time,
Mike Webster's brain tissue was being examined.
Dr. Bennet Omalu was studying the microscopic samples.
>> I put the slides in and looked.
"Whoa."
I had to make sure the slides were Mike Webster's slides.
I looked again.
(gasps) I looked again.
I saw changes that shouldn't be in a 50-year-old man's brain,
and also changes that shouldn't be in a brain that looked
normal.
>> He saw collections of tau protein, collections
which shouldn't be there in someone of Mike Webster's age.
And this is what jumped out at him as he looked at it
through the microscope.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Omalu believed he saw physical evidence
of the long-term damage playing football could have
on the brain.
It was a scientific first.
>> Because after I looked at it over and over and over,
I was convinced this was something.
>> NARRATOR: It was a disease never previously identified
in football players: chronic traumatic
encephalopathy-- CTE.
>> Chronic traumatic encephalopathy is a disease, a
progressive neuro-degenerative disease where the end stage
leaves tau protein deposition in distinctive areas of the brain,
in distinctive locations that separate this disease
from any other, like Alzheimer's or some other dementia.
>> For some reason, the repetitive brain trauma
starts this cascade of events in the brain that changes the
way this tau looks and behaves.
It goes awry.
And it starts destroying the integrity of the brain cells.
>> The tau is effectively closing in around the brain
cells and choking them and it's impacting the way the brain is
working and ultimately erupting in issues around memory,
agitation, anger.
>> NARRATOR: Omalu shared his evidence with leading brain
researchers who confirmed his findings.
Then he submitted a scientific paper on the Webster case to the
one journal that seemed to be most interested in head injuries
in football: Neurosurgery.
And Dr. Apuzzo accepted it.
>> Omalu is a junior pathologist in the Allegheny County
coroner's office, but the people he published with were one of
the leading Alzheimer's disease experts in the country, one of
the leading neuropathologists in the country, one of the most
well-known coroners in the country.
>> NARRATOR: It was the first hard evidence that playing
football could cause permanent brain damage.
>> Certainly we knew that if you got hit on the head so many
times, maybe you had a 20% chance of having dementia
pugilistica if you were a former professional boxer,
but we didn't really relate that in a modern sport like football,
in a helmeted sport, that it could lead to that.
And that was the big discovery, I think.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Omalu believed the National Football League
would want to know about his discovery.
>> That was what I thought in my naïve state of mind.
But unfortunately, I was...
I was proven wrong.
It wasn't meant to be that way.
>> NARRATOR: In a letter to the journal Neurosurgery,
Dr. Pellman and other members of the NFL'S MTBI committee
attacked Dr. Omalu's paper.
>> "These statements are based on a complete misunderstanding
of the relevant medical literature..."
>> NARRATOR: They even questioned whether Mike Webster
was suffering from neurological problems.
>> "There is inadequate clinical evidence that the subject had a
chronic neurological condition..."
>> The league officials, the doctors and scientists
serving on the MTBI committee, not only disputed those
findings, they went after Dr. Omalu with a vengeance.
They publicly said he should retract his findings.
>> NARRATOR: The NFL doctors insisted Dr. Omalu was
misunderstanding the science of brain injury.
>> "We therefore urge the authors to retract their
paper..."
>> It's an extraordinary move under any circumstances.
Like, you don't try to get a paper retracted unless there's
evidence of fraud or plagiarism or something like that.
>> "Omalu et al.'s description of chronic traumatic
encephalopathy is completely wrong."
>> They went after him with missiles, I mean, like a nuclear
missile strike on a guy's reputation.
They basically told him to go away and never come back.
And that was just for starters.
>> NARRATOR: In the end, Dr.
Omalu's paper was not retracted.
And now Omalu had another case.
>> Terry Long killed himself by drinking anti-freeze...
>> NARRATOR: A second Steeler had died.
>> Terry Long committed suicide by drinking anti-freeze.
>> Terry Long was young...
>> NARRATOR: And Dr. Omalu received his brain.
>> I came to work one morning and everybody there said, "Hey,
we have another case for you."
I said, "What are you talking about?"
They said, "Oh, Terry Long died."
I'm like, "Who's Terry Long?"
They said, "Oh, he's another NFL player.
He died."
>> NARRATOR: Long was an offensive lineman with the
Steelers for eight years.
He battled in the pit alongside Mike Webster.
>> He, like Webster, his life had sort of fallen
apart in a lot of ways.
He had issues certainly during his career.
>> He was a steroid user.
He had been involved in some serious financial problems.
>> And so ultimately, he committed suicide
by drinking antifreeze.
>> NARRATOR: As he had for Webster, Dr. Omalu sectioned
part of Long's brain and again had it stained.
>> He ran the same test, same stains, found the same
splotches.
CTE in this brain too.
Now two former Steelers who had gone crazy about the same time.
>> When I saw Terry Long's case...
I became more convinced that this was not just an anomaly,
a statistical anomaly.
>> NARRATOR: Omalu submitted another paper to Neurosurgery,
this one about Terry Long.
>> That caused the MTBI committee to say,
"This is preposterous.
This is not good science.
This is still not something that we're buying into."
>> If you read, Pellman made statements like what I practice
is not medicine, it's not science.
They insinuated I was not practicing medicine,
I was practicing voodoo.
Voodoo.
(thunder rumbling) >> NARRATOR: The NFL would not
publicly sit down with Dr. Omalu, but one night
in a private meeting, he brought his CTE slides and finally met
face-to-face with one of the NFL's doctors.
>> And the NFL doctor at some point said to me, "Bennet,
do you know the implications of what you are doing?"
I looked.
He was on my left.
I said, "Yeah, I think I do."
He said, "No, you don't."
(laughing) So we continued talking,
talking.
At some point, he interrupted me again, "Bennet, do you think
you know the implications of what you are doing?"
I said, "I think I do.
I don't know."
He said, "No, you don't."
So we continued talking again.
Then a third time he interrupted me, and I turned to him and I
said, "Okay, why don't you tell me what the implications are?"
He said, "Okay, I'll tell you."
He said, "If 10% of mothers in this country would begin to
perceive football as a dangerous sport, that is the end of
football."
(thunder rumbling) >> For the most part,
people didn't want to believe it's true.
They didn't want to admit to themselves or anybody else
that our beloved sport, probably our most popular sport,
could end up with brain damage.
I didn't want to admit it to myself either.
It was a hard message, a difficult message,
a bad message, but it appeared to be true.
(thunder rumbling) >> Just minutes ago,
owners of the 32 teams...
>> NARRATOR: Then in New York, a change in the NFL's top
leadership.
>> The NFL will have a new commissioner...
>> There's a changing of the guard at the National Football
League...
>> NARRATOR: In September of 2006, commissioner
Paul Tagliabue stepped down.
>> The right-hand man to Tagliabue is running the show...
>> Tagliabue will be succeeded by Roger Goodell...
>> NARRATOR: His second- in-command and closest aide,
Roger Goodell, took over.
Goodell had grown up in Washington, the son of a United
States senator from New York.
Early in his career, he worked as former commissioner
Pete Rozelle's driver.
>> He basically got his job by writing to the commissioner
and saying, "Please, I'd like to work in the NFL."
>> NARRATOR: It took Goodell 24 years to work his way
to the top.
He was chief operating officer when the league's scientific
committee sent those controversial papers to the
journal Neurosurgery.
>> Here's a guy who spent more than half of his life in the NFL
and more than anyone should be acutely aware of sort of
the dangers that are lurking in this problem.
>> NARRATOR: Now Goodell was fully in charge of the league's
handling of the concussion crisis.
He soon replaced the rheumatologist Dr. Elliot
Pellman and promoted the neurologist Dr. Ira Casson.
>> Dr. Ira Casson, who is an expert, but an abrasive person
who is contemptuous of the arguments that concussion
can cause damage.
>> NARRATOR: Casson had once joined Pellman in attacking
Omalu's work.
Now one of Casson's first moves: a public denial of Omalu's
conclusions.
>> Ira Casson leads a team of NFL doctors who did a study of
several hundred active players and reported that the concern
over head injuries is overblown.
>> Is there any evidence, as far as you're concerned,
that links multiple head injuries among pro football
players with depression?
>> No.
>> Dr. Ira Casson ends up with this very famous exchange that
earns him the nickname "Dr. No."
>> With dementia?
>> No.
>> With early onset of Alzheimer's?
>> No.
>> And Ira Casson was asked repeatedly, "Is there any link
between trauma, head trauma, and the kind of dementia
we're seeing in these players?"
And he says, "No, no, no, no."
>> Is there any evidence as of today that links multiple head
injuries with any long-term problem like that?
>> In NFL players?
No.
>> NARRATOR: Then, just one month later in Chicago,
a dramatic gesture from Commissioner Goodell.
At an airport hotel, the league gathered the top NFL brass,
team doctors and trainers.
>> The NFL convenes a summit in the summer of 2007.
>> About 200 people are gathered there, and running the show is
Ira Casson.
The stakes for the NFL are obvious.
It's huge business.
If the business is potentially lethal, then that's going to
have major implications for the game.
>> NARRATOR: On this day, the commissioner would take a front
row seat to listen to the best medical minds in the league.
>> All the teams are present.
All the teams had to send doctors and trainers.
And the league's concussion people are there.
>> NARRATOR: They had even invited outside scientists
who had become some of the league's biggest critics.
But one person was missing.
>> Dr. Omalu is excluded, just underscoring how they don't
want to do business with him.
>> I was not aware of it.
Nobody ever told me.
Dr. Bailes called me and said, "The NFL is putting together
a conference on CTE, and you were not invited."
>> He is shunned.
I mean, it was a loud, just, "No, not you.
Yes, you're the guy with all the research, you're the guy who's
published the papers, you're the guy who's got the brains,
but no, you're not coming."
>> NARRATOR: Former Steelers team doctor and neurosurgeon
Julian Bailes had become a true believer in CTE and Omalu.
They were now research partners.
He offered to present Omalu's work to the group.
>> So I presented and showed our data, which was four or five
cases at that point.
>> NARRATOR: Besides Mike Webster and Terry Long,
Omalu also found CTE in the brains of Andre Waters
and Justin Strzelczyk.
Bailes delivered Omalu's message: playing football could
cause permanent brain damage.
>> It wasn't met with any broad acceptance, to say the least.
>> Julian Bailes got up and talked about Omalu's work,
and while he's up there, Casson is off to the side
and he's rolling his eyes.
He's clearly distressed by what he's hearing.
And that was basically the idea that was conveyed by the NFL
in that moment.
>> There was skepticism, there was dismissiveness on his part.
There was great doubt.
>> NARRATOR: As Bailes left the meeting, he ran into New York
Times reporter Alan Schwarz.
>> I remember Julian being furious, absolutely furious
at how they had been treated in that room.
And there was clearly, among the NFL committee, there was just
a very steadfast belief that, "This is not a problem,
you guys don't know how to do research the way we do,
and thank you for coming."
>> I was not the bearer of good news probably in many people's
minds.
But this was not something that I made up.
This was showing what the findings were.
>> NARRATOR: Earlier, Goodell had watched his mentor Tagliabue
downplay the concussion controversy.
Now he had heard firsthand how serious some respected
scientists thought the issue was.
>> Roger Goodell is on notice.
The NFL has a serious issue around the question of
concussions, around the issue of brain trauma, on the rising
suggestion that there is a link between football and
neuro-degenerative disease amongst its former players,
and that there is a growing body of science that clearly
establishes this link.
>> NARRATOR: Outside the conference's closed doors,
the new commissioner insisted that the NFL had the problem
under control.
>> The evidence is that our doctors are making excellent
decisions.
That's proven by the six-year study that we have and the
research that's been done that looks at that issue intensively.
>> NARRATOR: The head of Goodell's concussion committee,
Dr. Ira Casson, took on the critics.
>> Anecdotes do not make scientifically valid evidence.
I am a man of science.
I believe in empirically determined, scientifically valid
data, and that is not scientifically valid data.
>> NARRATOR: Casson insisted there was no evidence that
football players were at risk for CTE.
>> In my opinion, the only scientifically valid evidence
of a chronic encephalopathy in athletes is in boxers and
in some steeplechase jockeys.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Casson declined to be interviewed by Frontline.
>> This venerable stadium will be a wild scene tonight...
>> NARRATOR: And as the teams took the field just a few months
later in the fall of 2007, the league's definitive statement on
brain injury was given to every single player in a pamphlet.
>> The cover says, "What is a concussion?"
It said, "If I get a concussion, am I further at risk
for long-term problems?"
And the answer was, and I'm virtually quoting,
"Research has not shown that there are any long-term
consequences to concussions in NFL players as long as each
injury is treated properly."
>> The message was that football is safe to your brain.
That was the message.
"Don't worry about it."
>> NARRATOR: The commissioner and the league had successfully
held the line, denying the dangers of football.
>> They refused to listen to people who didn't share their
opinions about the research, and it was very much putting
a stake in the ground, saying everybody else is wrong.
And that's what they did.
>> NARRATOR: Shunned by the league, bruised by the struggle
and looking to make a change, Dr. Omalu left Pittsburgh.
He moved to Lodi, California.
>> He ends up in the dust bowl of North Central California,
and he's working as a medical examiner there, as far removed
from the NFL as anybody could be and trying to figure out
how to stay in it.
>> I wish I never met Mike Webster.
CTE has dragged me into the politics of science,
the politics of the NFL.
You can't go against the NFL.
They'll squash you.
I really sincerely wish it didn't cross my path of life,
seriously.
>> Second and three, ball on the three...
In motion...
Wide open...
Touchdown!
>> The brains are precious cargo.
>> Now back to the third, and he goes outside...
>> We have to get the brain usually within hours of the
death.
>> Touchdown.
>> Play action...
Going deep...
>> You have a brain that's intact; it's been removed from
the upper spinal cord.
>> Picks it up, looks for running room.
He's at the 40, he's at the 45, midfield, he's gonna go!
DeSean Jackson!
>> NARRATOR: It is the brain of a former football player.
>> This is a process that is awe-inspiring in the old
fashioned sense of the word.
>> You have the responsibility of actually possessing
somebody's brain, which is probably the best representation
of who they were.
You really treat it with the utmost respect.
>> From a scientific perspective, there's this
secret that's being unlocked.
>> We take it out, we weigh it, we photograph it,
all the external surfaces.
>> The attitude is so careful about that this is a person
that's being delivered into their care.
>> I never forget that the brain is the human being.
I feel very privileged that someone has trusted me
with this duty.
>> NARRATOR: In 2008, Dr. Ann McKee was a leading
Alzheimer's researcher.
>> This is what I do.
I look at brains, I'm fascinated by it.
I can spend hours doing it.
In fact, if I want to relax, that's one way I can relax.
>> NARRATOR: Then one day, she received a phone call
from the Boston University Medical School.
>> I called her and said, "Are you interested in looking at the
brains of former football players?"
And she didn't drop a beat, and said, "Are you kidding?"
I had no idea that she was a super football fan.
>> I was born with football.
My brothers, my dad.
I played football when I was a kid.
I mean, you know, it was part of life, it's part of growing up.
It's, you know, it's a way of life, so I get it.
>> NARRATOR: Now Dr. McKee was joining a team of researchers to
build on Dr. Omalu's discovery.
>> She's learned a little bit about the work that had
previously been done on this issue by Omalu and others, and
she's eager to find some brains.
>> NARRATOR: McKee and colleagues from Boston
University were determined to examine as many brains as they
could.
And this man knew how to get them.
>> Chris Nowinski shows up and says, "Look, I'll find the
brains for you, I'll bring them to you, and they're going
to be football players.
Are you interested?"
And she says, "Absolutely."
You know, she describes this as the greatest collision
on earth for her.
>> NARRATOR: For Nowinski, the issue of CTE is personal.
He worries he has it.
>> I'd be a fool not to worry about CTE personally.
And I took as much brain trauma as anybody.
I think I have more than enough reasons to believe that I'm
going to be fighting this myself, I am fighting it.
>> NARRATOR: At Harvard, Nowinski was a punishing
tackler.
He suffered countless head injuries.
Then, instead of the NFL, he became a professional wrestler.
>> He ends up with the nickname Chris Harvard, the persona of
this sort of snobbish wrestler who's smarter than all the fans.
>> You people should be grateful to have someone of my
intelligence in your presence.
>> NARRATOR: For Chris Harvard, the performance often ended
with a blow to the head.
>> Chris Harvard landed on his head quite a bit.
You know, as much as wrestling is performance, there's
a very, very small margin of error.
And especially when you're learning the thing,
you fall on your head a lot.
>> NARRATOR: Nowinski began to have violent nightmares
and migraine headaches.
>> And I said, "There's something really wrong with me."
And the headache didn't go away for five years.
>> NARRATOR: Brain trauma became an obsession.
>> What motivated me every day was the fact that my head was
killing me and I knew that I felt awful and I knew that
I wasn't the only person, but I was a person in a
position to make a difference.
>> NARRATOR: He would take on the task of finding brains
of former football players for Dr. McKee.
>> They call him the designated brain chaser, like that's his
job, to go out and get the brains.
>> NARRATOR: Nowinski made the hard calls, asking families to
donate the brain of a deceased loved one.
>> At the beginning, when I first kind of got up the nerve
to do it, I wrote down a script and I prepared and I practiced,
mentally preparing myself for wandering into someone's life
like this.
>> NARRATOR: Almost right away, Nowinski secured a portion
of the brain of a 45-year-old former Tampa Bay Buccaneer,
Tom McHale.
>> Tom McHale was a brilliant guy, went to Cornell, had been
playing football since a kid.
His brilliance intellectually was matched by being an
incredible athlete.
>> NARRATOR: Tom and Lisa McHale had three sons.
Once his career was over, McHale ran a successful chain
of restaurants.
But then, uncharacteristically, trouble.
>> Restlessness, irritability and discontent describe Tom
to a T today, but no way is it anywhere near the man I had
known and the man I had been married to for years.
>> The change was so diabolical.
He became a drug addict, he became depressed, he
became... had irate moments of violent temper.
>> NARRATOR: McHale's addictions spiraled out of
control: painkillers, ***.
>> I remember so clearly him looking at me-- and
this is going back, you know, in the final months of his life--
and saying, "Lisa, when I look in your eyes, all I see is
disappointment."
And I honestly don't know whether he was seeing
my disappointment, or whether it was his own disappointment that
he was seeing reflected back.
But it pains me to think of how much that hurt him.
>> A former Tampa Bay Buccaneer was found dead this morning...
>> Former Tampa Bay Buccaneers player...
>> NARRATOR: He had died of an overdose.
Dr. McKee had read Dr. Omalu's research, but she wanted
to see for herself.
>> We dissect and section his brain, do a whole series of
microscopic slides, look at it with all sorts of different
stains for different things, and then come to a conclusion about
what the diagnosis is.
>> NARRATOR: What she saw was that tell-tale protein tau.
>> This is a 45-year-old with terrific disease.
I mean, he had florid disease.
He has tau in all these regions of his brain.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. McKee had examined thousands of brains,
but the location of the damage from CTE was different.
>> I remember my feeling.
I was scared.
I was really scared.
It really was a turning point.
It was a new understanding that, "Hey, this might be bigger
than we think."
>> NARRATOR: Dr. McKee soon had three brains, all with CTE,
but rather than just publish in scientific journals,
Chris Nowinski was determined to get the word out.
>> Nowinski, who is not a scientist, says, "There are
people getting hit here.
If we speak up now, we may be able to, if not save lives,
at least prevent the damage that we are seeing
on Ann McKee's table."
>> NARRATOR: Nowinski decided to take on the NFL in a very public
way: at their biggest event, the 2009 Super Bowl.
>> ♪ All right, what a night it's finally here.
♪ Super Bowl Sunday's kicking into high gear... ♪
>> NARRATOR: The glitz and glamour of the NFL production
machine was in full gear, developed over decades.
Highly choreographed.
>> ♪ Running and hitting with all their might... ♪
>> NARRATOR: A national event with a carefully crafted story.
>> ♪ The whole world's ready, kick that ball off the tee... ♪
>> NARRATOR: In Tampa, before the big game, Nowinski and McKee
tried to crash the festivities by holding a press conference.
>> This is the genius of Nowinski, really, I mean, right?
I mean, "We're going to present her findings.
Where do we want to announce that?"
"Oh, let's go to Tampa Bay where the Super Bowl's about to
play out, where there's 4,000 media members who are there
waiting to watch."
>> I have examined thousands of brains and
this is not a normal part of aging.
This is not something you normally see in the brain.
>> They were saying, "Football caused this, this is an issue."
I think McKee uses the word "crisis."
She says, "This is a crisis and anybody who doesn't
believe it is in denial."
>> NARRATOR: Also on the panel, Nowinski's other star,
Lisa McHale.
>> Eight months ago, I lost my best friend, my college
sweetheart and my husband of 18 years...
>> NARRATOR: Lisa McHale had decided to go public with her
husband's story.
>> I never hesitated to be public with Tom's findings
because I was so fully blown away to know that Tom could have
had the kind of injury he had to his brain and that it could have
been caused by football, and I said, "My God, of course,
this is information that I would have liked to have had."
>> NARRATOR: And after her husband's death, McHale decided
to become an advocate for Dr. McKee's research.
>> He is now the sixth confirmed case of CTE among former NFL
players.
And bearing in mind that only six former NFL players have been
examined for CTE, I find these results to be not only
incredibly significant, but profoundly disturbing.
>> NARRATOR: But that day, there were few reporters listening.
>> There were thousands of reporters across the street
and probably two dozen were willing to walk across
and learn about CTE.
>> That was the shocking part.
You know, here we were in the midst of everything and this
potentially giant story was being told, and virtually no one
was there.
>> Everyone, thank you so much for your time, and we're
available if you want to stick around.
>> NARRATOR: Nowinski's press conference was no match for the
show the NFL was putting on across town.
>> The build-up is over, and away we go in Super Bowl 43.
>> NARRATOR: Then, one of the most watched television
broadcasts in history.
A 30-second ad sold for $3 million.
>> It's all right, we're here now!
>> NARRATOR: It was the crowning event for a year in which the
NFL earned almost $8 billion.
>> Here's the run-up, and Super Bowl 43 is underway with
the flashbulbs a-poppin'.
>> The league is this massive force financially.
The Super Bowl is a spectacle.
TV is paying huge money to televise the sport.
>> He gets it away quickly and finds the tight end over the
middle, and it's Heath Miller.
>> The NFL is broadcast over five networks.
ESPN, where we work, their new contract with the NFL is worth
almost $2 billion a year.
>> And he hits Anquan Boldin!
>> So they're basically paying around $120 million per game.
That's like the budget of a Harry Potter movie every week,
week in, week out.
>> And the Pittsburgh Steelers become the first franchise
in history to win six Super Bowls.
>> Ladies and gentlemen, here to present the Vince Lombardi
Trophy, the commissioner of the National Football League, Roger
Goodell.
>> Well, some said that we could not top last year's Super Bowl,
but the Steelers and Cardinals did that tonight.
>> NARRATOR: Presiding over it all, the most powerful man in
sports.
>> All the Steelers fans, congratulations on your sixth
world championship.
>> NARRATOR: He sat atop a multibillion-dollar empire that
he was determined to protect.
>> One of his mantras was to protect the shield,
the NFL shield; to protect the integrity of the game.
>> NARRATOR: But now, the league might face huge lawsuits and a
tarnished image if Dr. McKee's findings about CTE held up.
Not long after her trip to Tampa, Dr. McKee received
a phone call.
>> I was called by Ira Casson.
And I remember thinking, "Why is Ira Casson calling me?"
>> She's intimidated from the start, because she knew enough
about Ira Casson, she said, to know that he wasn't
necessarily a friend.
>> And he wanted me to come to the NFL office
and present the data.
>> NARRATOR: That May, McKee and Nowinski arrived
at NFL headquarters.
>> We head on up to a very, very fancy conference room, nice wood
paneling, jerseys and trophies in the glass, and it was
probably 15 members of the committee.
>> And one of the first things McKee notices is that there's
only one other woman in the room, and it's not a doctor,
it's a lawyer.
>> A lawyer is not there to offer medical advice, and a
lawyer is not there to offer competitive athletic advice,
either.
A lawyer is there to figure out what the league needs to do
to defend itself against a storm that may or may not come
but the league has to be ready to fight.
>> I'm up against a lot of doubters.
I'm up against people who don't think that any of this
holds any water.
So fine, I'm just going to show them what I have.
And they kept interrupting.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Ira Casson and others on the committee
expressed their skepticism that playing football
was the cause of CTE.
>> Very, very quickly, she got serious pushback from Ira Casson
and the rest of the committee.
>> NARRATOR: Indianapolis Colt team physician Dr. Henry Feuer
was one of the NFL doctors at the meeting.
>> I just have a problem.
Ann McKee, she cannot tell me where it's starting.
We don't know the cause and effect.
We don't know that right now.
We don't know the incidence.
>> NARRATOR: The committee members believed Dr. McKee
could not answer two important questions.
Causation: Did football cause CTE?
And prevalence: How many players had it?
>> She was seeing only those that were in trouble, and we
know that there are thousands roaming around that are not
having problems.
So I think that's where we may have had an issue.
>> I think we're very early in the evolutionary understanding
of CTE.
A certain percentage of the individuals diagnosed with this
have had steroid abuse, alcohol abuse, other substances abuses.
We don't know the concussion history in many of these.
And there may be other confounding factors in terms
of the genetics that we simply don't understand.
>> They were convinced it was wrong, and I felt that they were
in a very serious state of denial.
>> I remember at one point one of the NFL doctors asking,
"Couldn't you be misdiagnosing this?
These all look like they could be frontal temporal dementia."
And Ann said, "Well, actually, I was on the NIH committee
that defined how you diagnose that disease, so no, they're
definitely different diseases."
Like, she had the experience and they didn't.
>> NARRATOR: And according to Dr. McKee, there was something
else-- something familiar about the way the NFL committee was
acting.
>> I don't want to get into the sexism too much, but sexism
plays a big role when you're a doctor of my age who's come up
in the ranks with a lot of male doctors.
Sexism is part of my life.
And getting in that room with a bunch of males who
already thought they knew all the answers, more sexism.
I mean, you know, it was like, "Oh, the girl talked.
Now we can get back into some serious business."
>> I don't know why she feels that way.
I thought that she presented herself, as I recall--
and it's been several years-- that there was something
in her manner.
And I think she's a brilliant woman.
She's done a great job.
There was just something about the way she said it, and not
that everybody was looking down, it was just, um...
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Feuer insists Dr. McKee is mistaken
about how she was treated.
>> If we, for some reason, came across as being disrespectful,
then I would say that everybody else we interviewed over the 15
years must have felt the same way.
That's all I can say about that.
And I feel strongly about that, too.
We would listen, and "Thank you," and that's it.
Whether she wanted us to start yap...
You know, I don't know where she's coming from on that.
>> NARRATOR: The meeting had changed nothing.
Just a few blocks from NFL headquarters, the commissioner
had another problem.
In a Midtown Manhattan restaurant, an internal NFL
research document was leaked to a reporter.
>> Documents were passed to me at Smith and Wollensky's
in Manhattan, in an envelope-- I mean, it was great,
it was very Deep Throat-- by somebody who shall
remain nameless.
But he literally slid it across the table in an envelope.
>> NARRATOR: It was a scientific study of former players
commissioned by the National Football League itself.
>> At the bottom of page 32, there it was: Dementia.
And they had asked players, or their representatives,
their wives, "Have you been diagnosed by a physician as
having Alzheimer's, dementia, or any other memory-related
disease?"
>> What it showed was that former NFL players seem to have
memory-related disorders at a much, much higher rate than
people in the regular community.
And here was a study that the NFL supported, and it came out
not looking too good for the NFL.
>> It was the people who the league hired to find out the
answers to these questions giving them the answers.
And that's what they were.
And so, you knew that this was going to be big.
>> NARRATOR: The study went to the heart of the prevalence
question.
In this case, it showed the prevalence of brain disorders
was far higher among football players than the NFL
anticipated.
>> So now Schwarz calls up the NFL to get a response, and what
he gets from Greg Aiello, the league spokesman,
is more denials.
They're now denying their own study.
>> NARRATOR: Aiello insisted the study's design was flawed, but
now the NFL's concussion crisis was again national news.
>> And so it's becoming almost impossible for the NFL
to ignore it.
>> NARRATOR: At the same time, another force was also causing
trouble for the NFL and the commissioner: the wives and
widows of players with CTE.
>> I don't think anyone else but the wives, sisters, mothers,
daughters and Ann McKee could have forced this issue
into American consciousness.
>> NARRATOR: Eleanor Perfetto was one of them.
Her husband, Ralph Wenzel, had played for the Pittsburgh
Steelers.
>> As the disease progressed, he went from being ill but fairly
functional to getting to the point where he could no longer,
you know, dress or feed himself.
And in the last year and a half to two years before he died,
he couldn't even walk anymore.
>> NARRATOR: She'd spent years trying to get help from the NFL
and its players association.
Then Perfetto took matters into her own hands.
She showed up uninvited to a league meeting about caring
for retired players.
>> There's going to be a meeting that the commissioner is holding
with former players.
And her husband, suffering from dementia, obviously can't be
represented there by anybody but her.
And she's told she's not allowed to enter the room.
>> NARRATOR: It was the commissioner himself who kept
Perfetto out.
>> And I said, "I'd like to attend this meeting."
And he said, "No, you can't attend.
It's only for players.
It's not for anyone else."
And I said, "But my husband is a player who is severely
disabled, and he can't be here right now."
>> NARRATOR: Nevertheless, the commissioner said no.
>> The issue is head injuries among players and if those
injuries can lead...
>> NARRATOR: As the concussion story received more attention,
the coverage helped spark interest in the nation's
capital.
>> Congress considers concussions in the NFL...
>> Congress is getting into the game.
They're looking into the long-term...
>> Good morning, the committee will come to order.
>> Congress is looking into the long-term impact of
concussions...
>> Congress saw it as a way to put the NFL's concussion
policies on trial, in the court of public opinion.
>> NARRATOR: The commissioner arrived like a celebrity, the
star attraction at the hearing and the focus of all the
cameras.
>> Goodell is asked point-blank if he stands by the idea that
concussions don't hurt pro football players.
And he can't answer.
>> You're obviously seeing a lot of data and a lot of information
that our committees and others have presented with respect to
the linkage, and the medical experts should be the one to be
able to continue that debate.
>> I just asked you a simple question.
What's the answer?
>> The answer is, the medical experts would know better than
I would with respect to that.
>> His consistent response to questions was, "I'm not a
scientist, and any questions about the long-term effects of
concussion or head trauma in NFL players are better addressed to
scientists."
>> NARRATOR: One at a time, committee members
went after Goodell.
>> We have heard from the NFL time and time again.
You are always studying, you are always trying,
you are hopeful.
I want to know, what are you doing now?
>> The NFL sort of reminds me of the tobacco companies
pre-'90s when they kept saying, "No, there is no link between
smoking and damage to your health or ill health effects."
>> The last thing the league wanted to be dealing with in
that moment was the analogy to big tobacco.
There's nobody in America who doesn't know what that means.
That means denial.
>> You have the commissioner of the NFL who's being hauled
before Congress to answer why his own research arm has been
denying, since 1994, that football causes brain damage
when everybody from The New York Times to former
NFL players to the respected research scientists are saying,
in fact, the opposite is true.
>> Talk about NFL owners being as like tobacco executives...
>> But I think it's seen as being plausible...
>> The NFL, similar to what the tobacco industry engaged in...
>> NARRATOR: Back in New York, with the pressure mounting,
the commissioner decided to make some dramatic changes.
>> The NFL changes its playbook.
New rules for treating athletes with concussions...
>> NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell wants all teams
to adhere to a new policy for head injuries...
>> They'd just been hauled before Congress and the
commissioner was embarrassed by Linda Sanchez, they'd been
compared to big tobacco, and they were trying to fight back.
>> NARRATOR: The commissioner initiated a series of new rules
designed to protect players from concussions.
>> It was quite obvious what they were doing.
They were in the middle of a major damage control operation.
>> From now on, teams should consider a concussion
a game-ending injury...
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Casson was out.
>> Dr. Casson resigned from the NFL's concussion committee...
>> NARRATOR: And a new concussion committee would be
formed, led by two prominent neurosurgeons.
>> The NFL is committed to medical and scientific
research...
>> NARRATOR: And there was one other surprise.
>> I read on the wire that the NFL had given a million dollars
to Boston University.
I was like, "What?"
And so I called up Chris, like, "What the hell is going on?"
He didn't know what was going on.
He was like, "What are you talking about?"
>> The answer was, "I don't know what are you talking about, this
doesn't sound right at all."
>> A CBS reporter wanted to know what I thought of the gift of a
million dollars.
That was the first I heard of it.
I was, like, floored.
>> NARRATOR: And Goodell offered Dr. McKee something she needed
even more than money: brains.
>> They get a letter from the league that says,
"You guys are now the NFL's 'preferred' brain bank"
and that the league will help with efforts to direct families
to donate the brains of former players to Boston so that they
will be studied for CTE.
>> The National Football League says it will encourage current
and former players to donate...
>> NARRATOR: As the story of the deal broke...
>> The NFL is donating one million dollars...
>> NARRATOR: ...the NFL's spokesman Greg Aiello received a
call from reporter Alan Schwarz.
>> While we were talking, he said, "It's clear that
there are long-term consequences to concussions in NFL players."
Now, that kind of statement don't make news if anybody
else says it.
But this time, it was the league saying it.
>> Schwarz stops.
He knows that the NFL has not only been denying this for
years, that they've never come close to uttering anything even
remotely close to this.
>> And I said, "Greg, you realize that's the first time
that anyone associated with the league has made that
connection."
And I remember he was a little...
I don't... what's the adjective?
Annoyed.
He was annoyed.
>> The Times now suddenly has a huge story that the NFL has
acknowledged a link between brain damage and football.
And sure enough, stripped across the top of the Times'
sports section the next day is that very story.
>> NARRATOR: At Dr. McKee's research lab, thanks to the
NFL's endorsement, the brain bank business was booming.
>> There were NFL players out there that were talking to their
wives and saying, "I think this might be something.
I'm experiencing some problems and I'm thinking I should donate
my brain to this work."
>> NARRATOR: By 2010, Dr. McKee had looked at the brains
of 20 NFL players.
She had found CTE in 19 of them.
It was during that time that a brain arrived that would
dramatically raise the stakes.
>> Owen Thomas to me was a critical case.
Here we have a 21-year-old who was a hard-hitting lineman
from the age of nine on.
>> And then, seemingly out of nowhere, he decided to take
his own life.
Never been diagnosed with a concussion, never
had a problem in the world.
>> NARRATOR: Owen Thomas had hanged himself in his off-campus
apartment.
Chris Nowinski secured his brain for Dr. McKee.
Without any history of diagnosed concussions, it seemed unlikely
he had CTE.
>> I was fully prepared to see nothing.
I remember late at night looking at the brain and
thinking, "Just going to knock this one off."
And it just floored me.
I just couldn't believe what I was seeing.
>> NARRATOR: Such an advanced case of CTE had never been found
in such a young person.
>> In, like, 20 spots in his frontal lobe.
He's 21.
He's so young.
That changes the game to me.
>> Wrapped up and brought down by Owen Thomas.
>> NARRATOR: Because he'd never had a diagnosed concussion,
Dr. McKee suspected Thomas might have gotten CTE from the
everyday sub-concussive hits that are an inherent part
of the game.
>> Another nice play by Owen Thomas.
>> Those sub-concussive hits, those hits that don't even rise
to the level of what we call a concussion, or symptoms,
just playing the game can be dangerous.
>> The rock is home.
A crucial matchup...
>> McKee is saying, "Look, this is very much an issue at the
core of the game, of offensive lineman and defensive linemen
pounding the crud out of each other on every single play,
on every single down and every single practice, and there's no
getting around that."
>> NARRATOR: It was a controversial theory that raised
fundamental questions about the way the game was played.
>> The human body was not created or built to play
football.
When you have force against force, you're going to have
injuries.
And I'm not talking about the knees and, you know,
all of that stuff is a given.
But from a neurological standpoint, you're going to
have some brain trauma.
>> NARRATOR: Harry Carson has been studying the matter
since he retired 25 years ago.
>> You know, most people are keyed in on the big hit.
But the little mini-concussions are just as dangerous because
you might be sustaining six to ten, maybe a dozen of these
hits during the course of a game.
And if you're going up against top-flight players who are able
to perfect those skills of hitting you upside the head
or getting hit with a elbow, it's one of those things that
at some point you're going to pay for it down the line.
>> I really worry about my lineman brothers.
I really worry for my running back brothers.
I mean, that's the truth.
You talk about a nefarious injury, one that you never feel
until it's too late.
So when I look back over 30 years associated with football,
that's the thing that is most alarming to me.
>> The way the game is played, I don't see how you can eliminate
all of those routine hits that linemen make every play.
How do you eliminate them and have the game still be football?
>> NARRATOR: Back in the lab, McKee had seen another
surprising case.
>> We had been able to get the brain of an 18-year-old who had
died 10 days after suffering his fourth concussion playing high
school sports.
>> NARRATOR: It was the brain of 18-year-old Eric Pelly,
a high school senior, a straight-A student.
He'd played multiple sports.
His dream was to play for the Steelers.
>> No one, I think, would have thought that you were going to
find chronic traumatic encephalopathy in a high school
athlete.
>> I was shocked to find that, in the brain of this
18-year-old, there were little tiny spots, little tiny areas in
the frontal lobe that looked just like this disease.
>> You have an 18-year-old with chronic traumatic
encephalopathy.
That just shouldn't happen.
>> I had an 18-year-old at that time.
You know that that brain is supposed to be pristine.
The fact that it was there and he was only playing high school-
level sports, I mean, I think that's a cause for concern.
>> NARRATOR: For Dr. McKee and others, it raised the obvious
question: how safe is it for children to play football?
>> What time is it?
>> Game time!
>> All dogs now!
>> (barking) >> From a physical risk
standpoint, you know what you are doing when you sign your kid
up, that he could hurt his knee, okay.
But what you should know now is your child could develop
a brain injury as a result of playing football.
It's not just on the pro level, it's on every level of
football.
The question is, do you want it to be your child?
>> NARRATOR: For Dr. McKee's colleague, Dr. Cantu,
the controversial answer was that no one under 14
should play tackle football.
>> With what we know about the youth brain compared with the
adult brain, that it's more easily disrupted than the adult
brain, the youth brain is lighter in weight, so it has
less inertia to put it in motion, so you tap a youth head
and its brain moves much quicker than an adult brain
that's heavier and therefore has more inertia.
So I think we should be treating youths differently.
>> NARRATOR: And for the BU advocate Chris Nowinski,
it was a danger the NFL helped to create.
>> As long as the NFL dismissed this, that meant that parents
were signing their kids up to go play football, believing that
there was no risk.
And that wasn't fair to those kids, or those parents.
But especially those kids.
>> Let's give him a big round of applause...
He's rough, he's tough!
>> NARRATOR: Dr. McKee, who had grown up loving football,
has struggled with her feelings about the sport.
>> I don't feel that I am in a position to make a proclamation
for everyone else.
>> If you had children who are eight, ten, 12,
would they play football?
>> Eight, ten, 12?
No, they would not.
>> Why?
>> Because the way football is being played currently that I've
seen, it's dangerous.
It's dangerous and it could impact their long-term
mental health.
You only get one brain.
The thing you want your kids to do most of all
is succeed in life and be everything they can be.
And if there's anything that may infringe on that, that may limit
that, I don't want my kids doing it.
>> NARRATOR: McKee's warnings about the danger of the game
have made her the subject of sharp criticism.
>> She's a lightning rod because people see her as the
woman out to destroy football as we know it.
Probably the most hurtful charge that's been leveled
against her is that she's crossed a line from scientist
to activist.
>> NARRATOR: A number of prominent scientists believe
she has overstated the dangers of playing football.
>> There's a kind of polarization in that the BU
group are clearly the advocates for CTE research.
But it's not the only issue.
There are other issues that we've got to look at.
"How common is this?
How many brain traumas do you need to get this?
Is this something that everybody will get if they
have enough brain trauma?
Or is it the result of steroid or drug abuse in a small number
of NFL players?"
We don't know.
These are questions, not statements of fact.
>> NARRATOR: Some researchers say Dr. McKee has examined
only a limited sample of players and too few brains to justify
her conclusions.
>> There has been a sense of fear that's been put into
parents, that "Maybe I shouldn't let my kids play sports."
Having said that, I still think it's something that we need
to be concerned about.
We just need more information on it in terms of what exactly
is the incidence and the risk.
Nobody knows that at this point in time.
It's still being debated, depends on who you listen to.
>> Those that have been conducting the autopsies are
working with what they have to work with.
I think that we need to learn more about these former
athletes, learn more about them during their living years
so that we can better understand what their neuro-cognitive
function is like, what their emotional status is like.
We just have to be careful not to say that this causes
that and be able to connect those dots without having
more prospective analysis.
>> I'm not surprised that people don't believe me.
They haven't done this work.
They haven't looked at brain after brain after brain.
I just feel that I guess the more cases we get,
the more we persevere, the more they hear, eventually
they'll change their mind.
>> NARRATOR: Still, McKee and her colleagues at BU
acknowledge there are limits to her research.
>> Not everyone who hits their head gets this disease,
and so a critical question is why does one person get it
and another person doesn't?
There must be really important variables: genetics, things
about the type of exposure to brain trauma people get.
We need to figure those things out.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. McKee admits she's seeing only a small
sample.
>> I think to be truthful, even a selection bias in an autopsy
sample, even if the family of an individual who is affected is
much more likely to donate their brain than a person who had no
symptoms whatsoever, given that, we have still been just
ridiculously successful in getting examples of this
disease.
>> NARRATOR: Dr. McKee has now examined the brains of 46 former
NFL players.
45 had CTE.
>> We have an enormously high hit rate.
I mean, that would be extraordinary with any other
disease, to be able to pull in that many cases just that were
suspected.
So I think the incidence and prevalence have to be a lot
higher than people realize.
>> NARRATOR: To her, it may be the beginnings of an epidemic.
>> I think it's going to be a shockingly high percentage.
I'm really wondering where this stops.
I'm really wondering on some level if every single football
player doesn't have this.
>> NARRATOR: And then, another death.
>> An apparent suicide by a powerful athlete.
>> A beloved NFL star apparently took his own life today...
>> Linebacker Junior Seau died today in an apparent suicide...
>> The untimely death of Junior Seau is provoking questions...
>> NARRATOR: As the news broke, the question emerged:
Did CTE play a part in Junior Seau's death?
>> Here comes Seau, and he's sacked!
>> NARRATOR: He had used his body and his head for 20 years
in the NFL.
Number 55 was a hard-hitting linebacker.
Pain and injury were his specialty.
He even bragged about it once on an NFL film.
>> A perfect hit is when you're faced up, coming one-on-one,
and you hear him go, "Uh."
(player groaning) Just a little, "Uh."
>> NARRATOR: He talked about the price he was willing to pay.
>> You have to sacrifice your body, you have to sacrifice
years down the line.
When we are 50, 40 years old, we probably won't be able
to walk.
That's the sacrifice that we take to play this game.
>> NARRATOR: And it had paid off.
Seau made millions.
He was a philanthropist, beloved in his community.
But then, a familiar story: his life fell apart.
>> Junior Seau was arrested for domestic violence in Oceanside,
California, early on Monday...
>> Seau accused of hitting his 25-year-old girlfriend...
>> Junior Seau drove his SUV right off a cliff
in California...
>> Former pro football star has apparently fallen on hard
times...
>> NARRATOR: At 43, his business empire had imploded.
He'd lost millions of dollars gambling.
He wasted everything.
>> We didn't know why he was detached or forgetting, or why
he would bark at us for nothing.
We didn't know.
>> The past two years had been the roughest.
And for a couple of months at a time, I wouldn't hear from him
at all.
And that would scare me.
>> We got really close, and I feel like it's turning around,
okay, he wants to be part of my life.
And then all of a sudden, I wouldn't hear from him.
>> He is truly a legend, and he will be with us forever...
>> NARRATOR: Seau was one of the most popular players and out of
the league for only two years.
His brain became the most sought-after ever.
>> You've got a half dozen prominent researchers
immediately began to mobilize to try to get their hands
on this brain tissue.
>> I can understand where certain groups are saying,
"Wow, this guy has played for 20 years.
This would be a perfect candidate for us to study
and see if he had it."
>> I spent time making calls.
We had a lot of mutual friends.
I spoke to people at his foundation and just said,
"We would, like every other case, we would like to review
this case if you want."
>> NARRATOR: At the same time, far from the action,
another researcher had received word of Seau's death.
>> So when Junior Seau died, just like every other case,
people called me.
I don't follow football, so I said, "Who is Junior Seau?"
They said, "Oh, you don't..."
just like Mike Webster, "You don't know Junior Seau?"
I'm like, "How do I?"
He said, "Oh, he's even bigger than Mike Webster."
They said, "Oh, he just died.
He committed suicide."
>> NARRATOR: Dr. Omalu had been looking for a chance to get back
in the game in a big way.
He telephoned Seau's son Tyler to get consent to take his
father's brain.
>> We did everything.
Spoke to the son.
He gave us verbal consent.
And the medical examiner requested that I come down--
they've never had such a big case before, I'm an expert
in this field-- to help him.
>> He gets the first flight out the next morning.
When he arrives at the medical examiner's office, he's telling
people that he has the verbal consent from Tyler Seau
to harvest the brain.
>> NARRATOR: And it was Omalu who actually removed Seau's
brain.
>> I assisted at the autopsy.
I took out the brain, processed the brain.
>> Just as they're finishing up the autopsy, the chaplain comes
walking into the room and he says, literally, "Houston,
we have a problem," and that problem is that he had just
gotten off the phone with Tyler Seau and, according to Tyler,
the NFL informed him that Omalu's research is bad
and that his ethics are bad.
That he's essentially unethical.
>> People started saying things about Omalu, kind of telling me
the kind of character that he has, and I got a long
email about it.
But at that point, I was just kind of, "I don't want to hear
all these things."
>> The next thing, he said he doesn't want me touching
his father's brain.
>> At that point, there's nothing else to do except leave.
I mean, he just walks out of the room and he takes his
empty brain briefcase, and gets back on the plane and
he goes back to San Francisco without having any success.
>> So I was very demoralized.
I remember that day I was...
People didn't notice when I got into the cab, I was crying.
I mean, "What have I done?"
>> NARRATOR: Junior Seau's brain was sent to the National
Institutes of Health, the NIH.
>> The NFL very directly worked not only to get the brain to
NIH, but in this case, to keep it away from Omalu's group or
McKee's group by speaking badly about them.
>> NARRATOR: NFL doctors say the decision was made purely
in the interest of science.
>> Getting it in the hands of good science is the goal there.
So yes, I think that was probably what was driving the
suggestion, that let's have NIH get involved.
>> NARRATOR: The final diagnosis in Seau's case was national
news.
>> ABC News and ESPN have learned exclusively Seau's brain
showed visible signs of CTE, chronic traumatic
encephalopathy.
>> NARRATOR: In the months following Seau's death,
the NFL went on the offensive.
The commissioner helped to promote a youth football
safety initiative, the Heads Up Program.
The league donated $30 million to the NIH to study sports
injuries including joint disease, chronic pain and CTE.
>> We recently committed $30 million to the National
Institutes of Health...
>> Good PR is one part of the NFL strategy, but the other
piece of it is that the NFL wants to come off as being
very forward-looking.
The NFL wants to keep pushing these questions into the future,
keep the discoveries going, make it seem like these
questions that still need to be resolved are things that the
League is working with doctors and researchers on.
>> NARRATOR: It was a message the commissioner himself
delivered, granting a rare TV news interview the morning of
the Super Bowl.
>>> I'm going to ask you this question because some widows of
some NFL players have asked me to ask you: do you now
acknowledge that there is a link between the game and these
concussions that people have been getting, some of these
brain injuries?
>> Well, Bob, that's why we're investing in the research, so
that we can answer the question, what is the link?
What causes some of the injuries that our players
are still dealing with?
And we take those issues very seriously.
>> Though the league previously through Greg Aiello acknowledged
a link, there is no more acknowledging a link exists.
There's, "The science is still emerging and we're really going
to try and do long-term studies on this, and we're going
to figure out whether there's a link."
>> We're going to let the medical individuals make those
points.
We are going to give them the money, advance that science.
In the meantime, we have to do everything we can to advance
the game and make sure it's safe.
>> He said, almost identically to what he had said before
Congress back in 2009, which was, "We're going to let the
medical people decide that."
>> NARRATOR: Almost two decades after the NFL founded its first
scientific committee to research the issue, the league
continues to insist the evidence of a link between
CTE and football is unclear.
>> It sure looks like it was just a relentless and endless
delaying action.
Year after year after year, at crisis after crisis
after crisis, the Concussions Committee and its members
assured the public that the league was looking into this.
The league actually never got around to looking at it
in any kind of valid way.
We're talking in the year 2013.
This committee was founded in 1994.
Maybe there should be better evidence by now.
>> NARRATOR: As the concussion crisis deepened, the
commissioner faced yet another challenge: a lawsuit brought by
more than 4,500 retired players.
>> The threat to the NFL from this litigation was existential.
The threat was that the league was going to have to pay out
in the billions with a "B," not millions with an "M."
>> NARRATOR: About one-third of NFL veterans, including some
of the biggest former stars, claimed the NFL had
fraudulently concealed the danger to their brains.
>> The main allegations here are... it's very simple.
There was a very severe hazard that was present in professional
football, and it was a little secret.
The NFL knew it, but the players certainly didn't know
it.
>> NARRATOR: On the other side, the NFL's lawyers.
>> Representing the National Football League will be Paul
Clement, who will be flanked by Anastasia Danias, she's from the
National Football League, and also Beth Wilkinson from Paul
Weiss...
>> NARRATOR: They insisted the league had done nothing wrong.
>> Let's be clear.
We strongly deny those allegations that we withheld
any information or misled the players.
And if we have to defend this suit, as Paul was alluding to,
we will do that and be able to make those factual allegations.
But we absolutely deny those allegations.
>> NARRATOR: But away from the cameras, the two sides were
engaged in tense court-ordered negotiations.
>> The players, initially, they were requesting around
$2 billion or a little more than $2 billion, and what
we've been told is the NFL was offering virtually nothing--
they were offering "peanuts," as one person said.
>> NARRATOR: The players believed they had significant
leverage-- a threat to the NFL.
>> The threat was that the doctors and trainers,
neuropsychologists, maybe owners, maybe commissioners and
ex-commissioners, were going to have to testify under oath
as to what they knew and when.
>> Historic settlement today, with the NFL...
>> NARRATOR: Then, with football season about to begin,
a surprise settlement.
>> ...settlement between the National Football League and
thousands of its former players...
>> NARRATOR: The league agreed to pay $765 million to resolve
the lawsuit.
>> It appears as if it ties it up quite nicely.
The two sides figured out that that was fair, and they were
okay with it.
And so the image of the situation to most fans is that
the NFL got taken to task for the concussion problem, okay?
>> There is a proposed settlement in a huge concussion
lawsuit...
>> NARRATOR: But the settlement left one big question
unanswered.
>> There's no admission whatsoever of guilt by the
league.
The league makes it very clear they're not admitting any
guilt, that there's no acknowledgment of any causation
between football and the possibility of long-term brain
damage.
And that was a prominent part of the settlement.
>> I don't think we needed a trial to know that the NFL
conducted a lot of shoddy research.
And it wasn't hypothetical.
It wasn't a supposition.
What the trial would have done was bring out that evidence.
You didn't need the trial to know that there was something
wrong there, but the details of how they went about it, that's
what's going to stay locked away.
>> NARRATOR: One week later, the commissioner made the league's
position clear.
>> There was no admission of guilt, there was no recognition
that anything was caused by football.
>> NARRATOR: The league would not have to answer those tough
questions about what they knew and when they knew it.
>> We've reached an agreement here that resolves these
issues, and we'll move forward from there.
>> I think everyone now has a better sense of what damage you
can get from playing football.
And I think the NFL has given everybody 765 million reasons
why you don't want to play football.
>> Erenberg touchdown!
Touchdown, Pittsburgh Steelers!
>> Listen to this crowd, they're on fire!
>> NARRATOR: For now, the future of the league and the game
of football seem secure.
>> Franco Harris is now to the 30, big pileup.
>> NARRATOR: But fundamental questions remain about how the
game will be played and who will play it.
>> It's still wild and woolly and I love 'em that way.
>> You love 'em wild and woolly and you're seeing it now.
>> You've got the most popular sport in America basically
on notice.
You've got the very real question being asked of whether
the nature of playing the sport exposes you to brain damage
and lots of science that suggests that it can.
>> An awesome, physical team were the Steelers today.
>> And that raises all sorts of questions for guys who are
playing in the league, guys who played in the league,
moms, kids, all of us who love football.
It's pretty scary.
It's a big deal.
>> And the future opponents are going to have some trouble.
(crowd cheering)