Is The Sport of Football Truly Dying?

Submitted by xtramelanin on

Mates,

Like a number of other Mgobloggers, I coach football.   Sign up for the football leagues up north is set to close on Friday for this upcoming season.   The numbers of kids signing up for football all over the NW part of the lower peninsula are way, way down.  In our area, in the last 5 years we have gone from fielding something like 18 teams to fielding possibly 6 this year.  That is an incredible drop in participation and if it is seen across the country does not bode well for our favorite sport.

As one who played football until late in life I think it would be a shame to see the demise of such an exceptional game.   Perhaps it is inevitable though.  Please share your experiences and insights on this topic.  I am hoping for good news from you all. 

XM

Wisconsin Wolverine

July 29th, 2015 at 10:58 AM ^

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phork

July 29th, 2015 at 9:02 AM ^

I also get into arguments all the time about helmets and how good/bad they are.  What people don't realize is that a helmet is to protect from immediate trauma, caused by things that might strike your head.  What NO helmet can prevent is your brain sloshing about.

GoBlueInNYC

July 29th, 2015 at 10:03 AM ^

I remember years ago the NYTimes had a long form piece on the history of football helmet technology and its relation to concussions. From what I remember, helmets were basically invented to prevent skull fractures and catastrophic (sometimes fatal) head injuries. They do basically nothing to prevent concussions.

The article did say some helmet manufacturers have been developing anti-concussion helmets (basically, big with lots of padding to reduce the sudden stops of the head), but that they were still too bulky and heavy.

GoBlueInNYC

July 29th, 2015 at 4:21 PM ^

It was a few years ago, so I don't totally remember the specifics (and googling "concussion helmet nytimes" did me no good). But I think the issue was that they were like non-functional. Just way too heavy and bulky to be actually wearable.

Wolverine Devotee

July 28th, 2015 at 11:14 PM ^

No. 

There are colleges around the country adding football. Quite the boom lately with DI schools like Georgia State, Mercer, UNC-Charlotte, UTSA, Old Dominion, South Alabama, Kennesaw State adding the sport.

Maybe the youth football is changing in MI which is an MI problem. All that's going to mean is that the gap between Michigan HS talent and that in OH is going to widen even more. 

Maize in Cincy

July 28th, 2015 at 11:21 PM ^

I live in northern Cincinnati, one of the biggest hs football areas in the county. Numbers are down here as well. It's getting to the point where you almost have to go to a catholic school if you want to play against decent talent. There used to be several public school powers.

Blueblood2991

July 29th, 2015 at 12:08 AM ^

You are absolutely correct WD.  High school football participation is actually increasing nationally, but declining in MI.  According to NFHS, MI participation peaked in 2007 (right at the recession) at 46,000 football players.  It has slowly declined about 1,000 participants a year.  39,000 last year, even though the number of schools offering football as a sport increased.  It's directly related to the state's population.  I would think the numbers would improve as people move back to MI.

http://www.nfhs.org/ParticipationStatics/ParticipationStatics.aspx/

turd ferguson

July 29th, 2015 at 9:12 AM ^

RAND did an interesting survey on this last year.  Basically, very high percentages (almost half) of U.S. adults say they're uncomfortable with their sons playing football and hockey.  The vast majority (~95%) is fine with their sons playing baseball, basketball, and track, with soccer (89%) slightly behind.  A disproportionate share of the concern for youth football/hockey came from college-educated parents.

zapata

July 29th, 2015 at 8:39 AM ^

I met a coach from Missouri who said the same thing was happening there, and I'm pretty sure it's a national phenomenon. Actually, these articles all say exactly that. The one from CBSSports is particularly dire, and the one from 538 posits an interesting explanation - beyond concussions, there is an economic factor that makes it possible for some to participate where others can't. But all suggest the sport is in trouble, and i wonder if those programs yu mentioned made the right choice.

http://espn.go.com/espn/otl/story/_/page/popwarner/pop-warner-youth-foo…

http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/fewer-kids-are-playing-football-but-…

http://www.cbssports.com/general/writer/gregg-doyel/24233232/decline-of…

bluewings

July 28th, 2015 at 11:15 PM ^

Numbers are down at my high school too. 15, 20 years ago everyone played frosh football. As a grade schooler I remember idolizing the local highschool varsity team. Now I think they are consolidating the frosh/JV team as one

Saturday.after…

July 28th, 2015 at 11:17 PM ^

unfortunately, yes.

 

Enrollment in youth soccer is outpacing youth football exponentially.  On one hand, this bothers me, on the other as a father, my kids aren't playing football and I am good with that.

Michigan248

July 29th, 2015 at 10:28 AM ^

Among athletes ages 5 to 14, 28 percent of percent of football players, 25 percent of baseball players, 22 percent of soccer players, 15 percent of basketball players, and 12 percent of softball players were injured while playing their respective sports4

Stopsportsinjuries.org

During a coaching clinic they had more detailed numbers from all sports even skate boarding which was actually the highest. I wish I had access to those numbers but I do not this source was just a Google search

Roc Blue in the Lou

July 29th, 2015 at 12:00 AM ^

My daughter played 5 years D1 Soccer on scholorship...her team made 2 NCAA tournament appearances, she was a team captain for 3 years and she had the time of her life.  I sat in the recovery room with her 4 times as she endured 3 ACL replacements and 1 miniscus trim...and watched her struggle through each rehab experience.  She followed her dream sport and I would do it all over again...more importantly, she would too.  Injuries happen.  Play smart, head up football, and follow your passion, young men. 

Michigan248

July 29th, 2015 at 10:23 AM ^

Among athletes ages 5 to 14, 28 percent of percent of football players, 25 percent of baseball players, 22 percent of soccer players, 15 percent of basketball players, and 12 percent of softball players were injured while playing their respective sports4

Michigan248

July 29th, 2015 at 10:26 AM ^

For youth soccer yes but woman's soccer actually has the highest number of head injuries. Adult males football is pretty neck and neck with soccer regarding head injuries, watch a soccer match you will see at least 10 players holding their head during a match with about half of them being faked.

seksdesk

July 28th, 2015 at 11:20 PM ^

I have been coaching rocket football the last several years in the GR area - in a community with a huge h.s. football tradition - and can attest to the drop in numbers. IMO it's the worry of possible issues later in life as the result of head injuries as well as kids focusing solely on one sport. The risk is one more and more parents aren't willing to take as evidence mounts regarding repeated head trauma. Numbers have plummeted! My eighth grade son recently said this will be his last year playing.

CoachBP6

July 28th, 2015 at 11:22 PM ^

It's not dying, it will only get better. The kids that are no longer playing are mostly the ones with parents that coddle them like babies all the time.

CoachBP6

July 28th, 2015 at 11:42 PM ^

I'm sure some would've been future stars. One thing about football though is that the huge popularity, coupled with all the offspring of those who have played \ and or loved the game at any level, will be more than enough to keep the game going at a high level for a long time.