CFL Alumni Association partners with brain exercise and assessment company
When Bob Bronk began experiencing brief memory lapses six years ago, he wondered if they were due to getting older or the concussions he suffered playing football.
The former Toronto Argonauts running back figures he was “knocked out cold three or four times” in games and there were other occasions “when I had a concussion.” The 58-year-old Winnipeg native, a member of the Argos’ 1983 Grey Cup-winning team, recollects first being concussed at age 15.
“It was like the cartoon when you see stars flying around,” said Bronk, the CEO of the Ontario Construction Secretariat. “I was fortunate, though, when I had concussions or was knocked out I didn’t have any headaches or dizziness. I don’t even remember having to take an aspirin.
“I always prided myself on being mentally sharp but I remember having to fix something in the bathroom and going to the basement to get a tool and after getting there wondering, ‘What tool did I come here for?’ Thankfully there’s no evidence of any post-concussion symptoms whatsoever . . . but I’m still working full-time and would like to for a long time. You want to stay mentally sharp just for the sake of being mentally sharp.”