Potzato: I think the fact they wear protection expose them to a different kind of harm (one they don't really feel). My point is : not wearing a helmet makes you use your head differently.
StingingVelvet: Could easily be the case as well. The contact in the open field really is different though, in general. I read a long article about it not long ago after watching some rugby in Europe and wondering about the differences. In American football for example you can do a total body slam at high speed out in the field.
In any event I guess if I am a bit tetchy it's because American football is already a stupidly violent sport with massive head trauma issues. So joking about them being pansies for wearing helmets and padding kind of rubs me the wrong way. The differences make it super dangerous even with all that protection,
to the point Americans are kind of wondering whether the sport can keep going without massive changes.
I agree with what you posted but I'm not sure about the part I bolded. Some might be wondering that. Not many people I know though. The way I see it, we already have association football/soccer (I don't get why people get so pissy about us calling it
since it was originally a British [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_%22-er%22]Oxford "-er" slang term taken from the word "association" that we still use) available, and really, association football was a code of rules for one of the many different variations of football (
football is just a word that is used for the most dominant form of the sport of playing with a ball on foot in that region, not whether or not you kick a spherical ball; in fact, many variations of football before soccer became popular had handling the ball as part of the game) that was created to be a safer way to play football. So, in my view, we already have a sport with massive changes made over 150 years ago as a safer alternative and players have a choice of what they want to play.
What kind of massive changes would the changes be anyway? Would American football just basically become association football? I'm all for getting flagrant fouls out of the game where players intentionally try to hurt other players but even that is difficult to do since the plays happen so fast and sometimes it's very hard to determine whether a player was trying to make a play on the ball or not. I'm also all for concussion and injury protocols and also for new research on helmets.
All that said, I do agree that American football is a very violent sport. A sport I wouldn't want to play professionally unless I was getting paid bookoo bucks too. In fact, I think it could be the most violent sport in the U.S., and I say that as a big fan of MMA and I follow several of the individual combat sports as well. Sure, football players aren't allowed to throw punches or kicks at each other, but they run full speed and hit/slam each other head on. The fact that they play games once a week also makes them more likely to risk further injury (the second concussion in a short time span is the more deadly one), whereas in the UFC at least, if fighters suffer a serious head blow, they have to take it easy for at least two months afterwards. Fighters usually only have a few fights a year and they can pull out of an event beforehand and try to fight in another event instead if they feel they are too injured to perform well too. It's also well known that NFL players, especially linemen, often have lower joint problems, usually in the knees.
So yeah, some changes could be okay but if they're massive, might as well just play rugby or soccer instead I think. I'm not trying to say American football is better than those sports either, they're just different.