Concussion conversation shifts with times in hockey
With seasons beginning in every hockey league from the professional to the peewee ranks, the Saskatchewan government is drawing attention to concussions with Concussion Awareness Day on Wednesday, September 29. More than any other injury, the conversation around concussions and understanding of them has changed dramatically in recent years.
Where before a suck-it-up attitude prevailed in the sport, players are being told more and more to look after the health of their brain. Coaches, meanwhile, are being told more and more to make sure kids aren’t rushing back to game action when they’re not ready.
“I remember when I was in junior, you’d get an injury, shake it off and get back out there,” said Prince Albert Raiders Head Coach Marc Habscheid. “Now, it’s totally different and thank god it is. Things have evolved in concussions.”
Habscheid’s junior career began in 1979 and his professional career carried into the mid-90s. The shift in attitude toward concussions has been gradual, and didn’t really take off until he was behind the bench as a coach.