Wests Tigers furious over attack on Liam Fulton

@innsaneink said:
It seems even Wests Tigers have missed Gids kneeing Rowdy in the back…might as well mention that while youre at it Grant.

yep, i saw this plain as day when it happened, but just nothing came of it at all!

i also particularly noticed Houston (was he number 17?) in a number of incidents.

cant believe nothing happened to fa'alogo. i know things should be dealt with objectively, but that very hit has seen people (on here at least) begin to say "enough is enough" re fulton getting concussed, so it could be considered a big factor in costing a guy his career, yet he gets no punishment.

by the way, the knights miner jerseys looked crap:

![](http://coalfacemagazine.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Knights-e1398314045443.jpg)

![](http://img2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20131106083047/lego/images/thumb/4/47/Cmf_emmet.jpg/448px-Cmf_emmet.jpg)
 
@turnstyle said:
by the way, the knights miner jerseys looked crap:

The way the lower half of the jersey blends into the shorts reminds of the way my mum used to dress me when I was a kid, pulling my shorts up around my neck
 
Turnstyle quote: "by the way, the knights miner jerseys looked crap"
Preparing them for next years employment.
 
So the possible outcome out of this incident is that Fulton may have to retire and David Fa'alogo (a renowned hothead and dirty player) gets off scot-free? What a joke!
 
@southerntiger said:
It was quite a thuggish performance fron Newcastle yesterday.

Surprising because they actually have a decent squad through 1-17\. They should have won more than 2 games this year.

Play football Wayne.

Mullen's long kicking game was excellent yesterday.

_Posted using RoarFEED V.4_

I was thinking the same thing when watching the game - there was at least 3occasions where players went in to tackled players with their knees ( accidental? Maybe.). A lot of high shots and swinging arms - all in all I thought it was a pretty grubby performance.
 
Wests Tigers forward Liam Fulton has been reluctantly stood down from Friday's NRL game against South Sydney after suffering his fourth concussion this season in Sunday's win over Newcastle.

The decision to stand Fulton down from Friday night's clash was made on Tuesday following discussions with coach Mick Potter and the Wests Tigers' chief medical officer.

Potter said it was a concern that Fulton had already suffered four concussions in the first half of the season and the club was treating the situation very seriously.

"Liam understands the importance of following medical procedure with an injury such as this and we look forward to welcoming him back onto the field when he's cleared to play again," he said.

However, the Tigers and Fulton were far from impressed that Newcastle forward David Fa'alogo escaped charge from the match review committee for a stray elbow in the tackle.

On Monday, Fulton went as far to say that he shouldn't miss any matches if Fa'alogo didn't.

"If Fa'alogo isn't having any weeks out, I'm not having any weeks out. And the NRL can't step in and do anything because they said there's nothing in it and gave him no suspension," Fulton told AAP on Monday.

Earlier this season, the NRL fined the Tigers $20,000 with $10,000 suspended for breaching the league's rules in letting Fulton play on despite showing concussion signs in a round-five clash with Manly.

On the latest incident, Fulton said he was left dazed but had full memory from the game.
 
Well it's good news if he wasn't actually concussed although I have to say it doesn't really put him in the clear. Still, that's for a doctor to say, and you'd have to have faith in a doc to make the right call as you do in boxing/mma.

I myself have suffered quite a few concussions few quite a concussions myself and no lasting effects no I see.

Seriously though, I have in my time and I know it takes less to knock me out than it would someone who hadn't been concussed as many times. Even just sparring I have been dazed when I really shouldn't have.
 
Appologies if this has been posted before. A good read though
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http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11264856
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By Steve Deane

5:00 AM Saturday May 31, 2014

Shontayne Hape played international league for the Kiwis and international rugby for England - until repeated head injuries ended his career and threatened his future health.

Growing up playing league in New Zealand, everyone got knocked out at some point. Everyone got concussed. I can't think of a single guy I played with who didn't. You just got up and played on. We were told to be Warriors. It's the nature of the sport. Harden up. That was the mentality. I was brought up with that.

I reckon I'd have been concussed 20 times by the time my professional league career with the Warriors, Bradford and the Kiwis ended with a switch to English rugby. That was nothing compared to what was to come.

After playing for England at the rugby union world cup in 2011 I joined London Irish for the 2011/12 season.

Halfway into the season against Gloucester I copped a knee to the head and was knocked out. I told the club's medical staff I'd copped a head knock, but didn't admit the full extent of it, that I'd blacked out. The next week against Harlequins I copped another knock. It was a pure accident. Our lock Nick Kennedy kneed me in the temple and it put me straight to sleep. Concussion on concussion. That was the big one for me, the worst I've ever felt.
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The following day I was to undertake some head questionnaire tests relating to how I was feeling and my symptoms, and the results were shocking - some of the worst they'd ever seen. They stood me down for eight weeks, which was the protocol.

I've always loved music. DJ-ing is my hobby and I have my own turntables and gear at home. But the effects of the concussion meant I couldn't bear to listen to music. The sound was too much. Sunlight was a problem too. I had to stay in a blacked-out room for days. I'd bike to training and by the time I'd get there my head would be throbbing and I'd have to go home to rest. My tolerance for my three young kids was zero. I was always angry around them, couldn't even last a minute without getting cross and losing my cool.

My relationship with my wife Liana suffered. She was left to manage the three children and household on her own, while I tried to get my head right.

By the time my stand-down was over there was only three or four games left in the season, so there was no point in coming back. That meant I'd had a four-month break by the time I arrived in the south of France to play for Montpellier in the French Top 14 competition.

WHEN I came down here everything was cool. I felt fresh and had been cleared to play. I felt like my concussion problems were behind me. I was actually more worried about the state of my knees.

In England it is a standard procedure for all players to perform a computerised pre-season head test. There are a few different versions of the test used around the world, but they are all basically the same thing. They take about 10 minutes sitting at a computer. The test establishes a baseline score that you'll have to match later in the season if you cop a head knock. The problem with the test is that players can manipulate it by under-performing so that later if you have a head knock and you have to beat it you normally can. In my league days the boys all beat the test and everyone kept on playing.

In the back of your mind you are aware of the dangers, but you are paid to get out there and play and you want to play. You never think anything bad is going to happen to you. So you just do it.

Some clubs don't even bother with the computerised test. You evaluate yourself through a questionnaire. When I got knocked out the first time at Montpellier I just said 'oh nah I'm fine'. They ask if you were dizzy, feeling fatigued, in a daze, headaches, etc, on a scale of 0-10\. If your total score was too high you'd be stood down.

That first French concussion came in my fifth game, against Toulon. I clashed heads with someone in a ruck. I felt terrible, but decided to bite the bullet. When you come to a new club and you are an international player you are supposed to impress. I was on the biggest contract of my career, so there was a load of pressure to deliver. You don't want to let anybody down. You have to be out there playing.

I played the next week and got knocked out again. A prop was running past me and accidently kneed me in the head as I off-loaded a ball. It was just slight tap but it got me in the wrong place. This time I was really worried. They rested me for a week. That's the French rest. Normally you'd have two-four weeks of doing nothing. In France it was 'okay we'll rest you for a week and you'll be fine'.

There was constant pressure from the coaches. Most coaches don't care about what happens later on in your life. It is about the here and now. Everyone wants success. They just think 'if we pay you this you are going to do this'.

Players are just pieces of meat. When the meat gets too old and past its use-by date, the club just buys some more. You get meat that's bruised or damaged, the club goes and buys some more.

I sat out for a week but I wasn't right. I was back to having constant migraines. I was pretty much in a daze. Things had got so bad I couldn't even remember my PIN number. My card got swallowed up twice. My memory was shot.

Dosing up on smelling salts, Panadol, high caffeine sports drinks and any medical drugs like that to try and stop the dizziness, fatigue and migraines was the only way I could get through trainings and matches.

I went through the next four or five months like that. Pretty much a zombie.

LOOKING BACK I could have prevented a lot of the pain I caused myself by telling the doctors much earlier how I really felt. But I wasn't thinking straight. You are under constant pressure from all angles - coaches, team mates, fans - and you don't want to let them down. I also wanted to play on to achieve my bonuses, especially when you know your career is coming to an end.

Somehow I got through 11 games but by then I was falling apart. I would try not to get involved in rucks because I was terrified of getting knocked out again. My performances were terrible and eventually I was dropped. It was the first time I'd ever been happy about it. I was just happy I was going to give my head a rest.

I had three weeks of no games and I thought that would sort me out. But heading into my comeback match I was knocked out at training. It wasn't even a head clash. One of the boys just ran a decoy line and bumped into me and I was knocked out. When you are getting knocked out and no one is even touching your head you realise things have got pretty bad.

But I still didn't tell anyone. I played the match and got knocked out in the first tackle. I tackled a guy and I was out. Asleep.

I'd been telling the docs on the field that it was my shoulder, I had a stinger, or I was just a little dazed. But after the game I knew I had to do something. I phoned my mum and my agent. They said I had to put my health first. At a team meeting our coach Fabien Galthie, a former French halfback, grilled me for lying in the ruck and giving a penalty away. I didn't want to admit that I was lying there was because I had been knocked out. It was humiliating. Galthie was blowing me up in front of my team mates and I just held my tongue.

Afterwards he came to me to talk about my performance. I was like "I'm over it, I have to come clean". I told him the reason I had given away the penalty and my performances had been below par was because I was knocked out and suffering from concussions. He couldn't believe it.

The club sent me to the Montpellier Hospital for scans. Sitting in a dark room with electrodes attached to my head looking a big blue screen, I felt like a patient in a psychiatric hospital.

I was told to count in my head while doctors monitored my brain function. I did tests for memory and vision. They show me seven or eight pictures of, say, a tree, couch, bird or a bike. When they turned the page and asked me what I'd just seen I could only remember one or two things. The specialist showed me on chart the average score for someone with a normal brain. My score was just above someone with learning difficulties.The specialist explained that my brain was so traumatised, had swollen so big that even just getting a tap to the body would knock me out.

He referred to me to another top specialist in Paris but he was very clear - I had to retire immediately.

Back at the club I broke down in tears telling Galthie.

Everyone dreams of going out on the right note, winning a final and going out with everything intact. I had been told I couldn't do what I'd been doing all my life. I was gutted. The club was shocked.

But even then they tried to overrule the medical advice. They said they'd rest me for a couple of months and see if I could recover.

I knew I was being told it was over but I'd heard of guys taking six-month sabbaticals and coming back. I got in touch with Michael Lipman, the former Bath captain, who had been forced to retire by multiple concussions. He said he'd experienced exactly the same stuff that was going on with me, and advised me to listen to the specialists and stop playing.
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But you just think "this is my living, this is what I do". I'd had three reconstructions and barely any cartilage left, so I always thought I'd retire because of my knee. The docs tell you "we can fix that, we can get a new knee, we can fix that shoulder". But with your head, you only get one head.

I knew that, but I still couldn't accept it was over.

I was thinking I'd rest for a year and then make come back. That's why I never told anyone I was retired.

To go with the denial, I went into depression. I was lucky I had some great support around me, from my wife, family and the players association in England.

The RPA and my good mate Nigel Vagana and Paul Heptonstall of NRL Welfare & Education team are putting some great things in place to help players transition to the next stage of their lives, but it's still incredibly tough dealing with the fact you are washed up in your early 30s.

In January I finally accepted it was all over. I'd read about a young club player in Auckland who died after suffering a head knock in a game. My fourth child was on its way. I was 33\. Was playing for one more year really worth risking my life?

I've suffered depression, constant migraines and memory loss. I can see now the improvements I've made. I've completed an online brain training course and have started studying for a BA (Hons) Degree in Leadership and Management.

TRYING TO learn again is a challenge. I can remember things that happened a long time ago but things that happened yesterday, names, numbers and stuff, I constantly forget.

Growing up I used to wonder what was wrong with my granddad when he couldn't remember things. I'm not a granddad, I'm in my 30s. I've got the concentration span of a little kid. My oldest son can sit at the table and do stuff for hours. When I do my university assignments I struggle. Half an hour and that's me.

I am in a much better place now that I'm not getting beaten up every week. But I do worry about Alzheimer's and dementia. The doctors can't tell me what is going to happen to me in 10 years time. Research has shown that's when it catches up with you.

I'm not telling my story because I want sympathy. I'm telling it because this is an issue people, particularly young players, need to know about. More people need to speak out about it, tell the truth if they are suffering. Most players won't, though, for fear of being thought of as soft or because of the financial pressures.

Rugby and league have come a long way in dealing with concussion but there is still a lot further to go.

Recently I watched a quarterfinal between Toulouse and Racing Metro. Florian Fritz got knocked out, blood pissing out everywhere. He was totally in Lala Land. He came off and a medic came out of the tunnel and told him to get back on. He did but he was in no [fit] state. I see stuff like that all the time. It's what I used to do.

Fans used to see that sort of thing and go "Wow, he's tough". We need to change that mentality.

Young players don't fully understand the risks of playing on with concussion. The most dangerous thing with concussion is that it's an injury you can't see. That makes it easy to ignore - something that happens far too often.

_Posted using RoarFEED V.4_
 
Appologies if this has been posted before. A good read though
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http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11264856
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By Steve Deane

5:00 AM Saturday May 31, 2014

Shontayne Hape played international league for the Kiwis and international rugby for England - until repeated head injuries ended his career and threatened his future health.

Growing up playing league in New Zealand, everyone got knocked out at some point. Everyone got concussed. I can't think of a single guy I played with who didn't. You just got up and played on. We were told to be Warriors. It's the nature of the sport. Harden up. That was the mentality. I was brought up with that.

I reckon I'd have been concussed 20 times by the time my professional league career with the Warriors, Bradford and the Kiwis ended with a switch to English rugby. That was nothing compared to what was to come.

After playing for England at the rugby union world cup in 2011 I joined London Irish for the 2011/12 season.

Halfway into the season against Gloucester I copped a knee to the head and was knocked out. I told the club's medical staff I'd copped a head knock, but didn't admit the full extent of it, that I'd blacked out. The next week against Harlequins I copped another knock. It was a pure accident. Our lock Nick Kennedy kneed me in the temple and it put me straight to sleep. Concussion on concussion. That was the big one for me, the worst I've ever felt.
\
\
The following day I was to undertake some head questionnaire tests relating to how I was feeling and my symptoms, and the results were shocking - some of the worst they'd ever seen. They stood me down for eight weeks, which was the protocol.

I've always loved music. DJ-ing is my hobby and I have my own turntables and gear at home. But the effects of the concussion meant I couldn't bear to listen to music. The sound was too much. Sunlight was a problem too. I had to stay in a blacked-out room for days. I'd bike to training and by the time I'd get there my head would be throbbing and I'd have to go home to rest. My tolerance for my three young kids was zero. I was always angry around them, couldn't even last a minute without getting cross and losing my cool.

My relationship with my wife Liana suffered. She was left to manage the three children and household on her own, while I tried to get my head right.

By the time my stand-down was over there was only three or four games left in the season, so there was no point in coming back. That meant I'd had a four-month break by the time I arrived in the south of France to play for Montpellier in the French Top 14 competition.

WHEN I came down here everything was cool. I felt fresh and had been cleared to play. I felt like my concussion problems were behind me. I was actually more worried about the state of my knees.

In England it is a standard procedure for all players to perform a computerised pre-season head test. There are a few different versions of the test used around the world, but they are all basically the same thing. They take about 10 minutes sitting at a computer. The test establishes a baseline score that you'll have to match later in the season if you cop a head knock. The problem with the test is that players can manipulate it by under-performing so that later if you have a head knock and you have to beat it you normally can. In my league days the boys all beat the test and everyone kept on playing.

In the back of your mind you are aware of the dangers, but you are paid to get out there and play and you want to play. You never think anything bad is going to happen to you. So you just do it.

Some clubs don't even bother with the computerised test. You evaluate yourself through a questionnaire. When I got knocked out the first time at Montpellier I just said 'oh nah I'm fine'. They ask if you were dizzy, feeling fatigued, in a daze, headaches, etc, on a scale of 0-10\. If your total score was too high you'd be stood down.

That first French concussion came in my fifth game, against Toulon. I clashed heads with someone in a ruck. I felt terrible, but decided to bite the bullet. When you come to a new club and you are an international player you are supposed to impress. I was on the biggest contract of my career, so there was a load of pressure to deliver. You don't want to let anybody down. You have to be out there playing.

I played the next week and got knocked out again. A prop was running past me and accidently kneed me in the head as I off-loaded a ball. It was just slight tap but it got me in the wrong place. This time I was really worried. They rested me for a week. That's the French rest. Normally you'd have two-four weeks of doing nothing. In France it was 'okay we'll rest you for a week and you'll be fine'.

There was constant pressure from the coaches. Most coaches don't care about what happens later on in your life. It is about the here and now. Everyone wants success. They just think 'if we pay you this you are going to do this'.

Players are just pieces of meat. When the meat gets too old and past its use-by date, the club just buys some more. You get meat that's bruised or damaged, the club goes and buys some more.

I sat out for a week but I wasn't right. I was back to having constant migraines. I was pretty much in a daze. Things had got so bad I couldn't even remember my PIN number. My card got swallowed up twice. My memory was shot.

Dosing up on smelling salts, Panadol, high caffeine sports drinks and any medical drugs like that to try and stop the dizziness, fatigue and migraines was the only way I could get through trainings and matches.

I went through the next four or five months like that. Pretty much a zombie.

LOOKING BACK I could have prevented a lot of the pain I caused myself by telling the doctors much earlier how I really felt. But I wasn't thinking straight. You are under constant pressure from all angles - coaches, team mates, fans - and you don't want to let them down. I also wanted to play on to achieve my bonuses, especially when you know your career is coming to an end.

Somehow I got through 11 games but by then I was falling apart. I would try not to get involved in rucks because I was terrified of getting knocked out again. My performances were terrible and eventually I was dropped. It was the first time I'd ever been happy about it. I was just happy I was going to give my head a rest.

I had three weeks of no games and I thought that would sort me out. But heading into my comeback match I was knocked out at training. It wasn't even a head clash. One of the boys just ran a decoy line and bumped into me and I was knocked out. When you are getting knocked out and no one is even touching your head you realise things have got pretty bad.

But I still didn't tell anyone. I played the match and got knocked out in the first tackle. I tackled a guy and I was out. Asleep.

I'd been telling the docs on the field that it was my shoulder, I had a stinger, or I was just a little dazed. But after the game I knew I had to do something. I phoned my mum and my agent. They said I had to put my health first. At a team meeting our coach Fabien Galthie, a former French halfback, grilled me for lying in the ruck and giving a penalty away. I didn't want to admit that I was lying there was because I had been knocked out. It was humiliating. Galthie was blowing me up in front of my team mates and I just held my tongue.

Afterwards he came to me to talk about my performance. I was like "I'm over it, I have to come clean". I told him the reason I had given away the penalty and my performances had been below par was because I was knocked out and suffering from concussions. He couldn't believe it.

The club sent me to the Montpellier Hospital for scans. Sitting in a dark room with electrodes attached to my head looking a big blue screen, I felt like a patient in a psychiatric hospital.

I was told to count in my head while doctors monitored my brain function. I did tests for memory and vision. They show me seven or eight pictures of, say, a tree, couch, bird or a bike. When they turned the page and asked me what I'd just seen I could only remember one or two things. The specialist showed me on chart the average score for someone with a normal brain. My score was just above someone with learning difficulties.The specialist explained that my brain was so traumatised, had swollen so big that even just getting a tap to the body would knock me out.

He referred to me to another top specialist in Paris but he was very clear - I had to retire immediately.

Back at the club I broke down in tears telling Galthie.

Everyone dreams of going out on the right note, winning a final and going out with everything intact. I had been told I couldn't do what I'd been doing all my life. I was gutted. The club was shocked.

But even then they tried to overrule the medical advice. They said they'd rest me for a couple of months and see if I could recover.

I knew I was being told it was over but I'd heard of guys taking six-month sabbaticals and coming back. I got in touch with Michael Lipman, the former Bath captain, who had been forced to retire by multiple concussions. He said he'd experienced exactly the same stuff that was going on with me, and advised me to listen to the specialists and stop playing.
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\
But you just think "this is my living, this is what I do". I'd had three reconstructions and barely any cartilage left, so I always thought I'd retire because of my knee. The docs tell you "we can fix that, we can get a new knee, we can fix that shoulder". But with your head, you only get one head.

I knew that, but I still couldn't accept it was over.

I was thinking I'd rest for a year and then make come back. That's why I never told anyone I was retired.

To go with the denial, I went into depression. I was lucky I had some great support around me, from my wife, family and the players association in England.

The RPA and my good mate Nigel Vagana and Paul Heptonstall of NRL Welfare & Education team are putting some great things in place to help players transition to the next stage of their lives, but it's still incredibly tough dealing with the fact you are washed up in your early 30s.

In January I finally accepted it was all over. I'd read about a young club player in Auckland who died after suffering a head knock in a game. My fourth child was on its way. I was 33\. Was playing for one more year really worth risking my life?

I've suffered depression, constant migraines and memory loss. I can see now the improvements I've made. I've completed an online brain training course and have started studying for a BA (Hons) Degree in Leadership and Management.

TRYING TO learn again is a challenge. I can remember things that happened a long time ago but things that happened yesterday, names, numbers and stuff, I constantly forget.

Growing up I used to wonder what was wrong with my granddad when he couldn't remember things. I'm not a granddad, I'm in my 30s. I've got the concentration span of a little kid. My oldest son can sit at the table and do stuff for hours. When I do my university assignments I struggle. Half an hour and that's me.

I am in a much better place now that I'm not getting beaten up every week. But I do worry about Alzheimer's and dementia. The doctors can't tell me what is going to happen to me in 10 years time. Research has shown that's when it catches up with you.

I'm not telling my story because I want sympathy. I'm telling it because this is an issue people, particularly young players, need to know about. More people need to speak out about it, tell the truth if they are suffering. Most players won't, though, for fear of being thought of as soft or because of the financial pressures.

Rugby and league have come a long way in dealing with concussion but there is still a lot further to go.

Recently I watched a quarterfinal between Toulouse and Racing Metro. Florian Fritz got knocked out, blood pissing out everywhere. He was totally in Lala Land. He came off and a medic came out of the tunnel and told him to get back on. He did but he was in no [fit] state. I see stuff like that all the time. It's what I used to do.

Fans used to see that sort of thing and go "Wow, he's tough". We need to change that mentality.

Young players don't fully understand the risks of playing on with concussion. The most dangerous thing with concussion is that it's an injury you can't see. That makes it easy to ignore - something that happens far too often.

_Posted using RoarFEED V.4_
 
Well it hadn't been mentioned until the first time you did the third!

Here's another article from today's Telecrap about how Fulton may soon be forced to retire:

LIAM Fulton admits his career could be cut short after a fourth concussion ruled him out of Friday night’s blockbuster against South Sydney.
>
Fulton failed to train with the Wests Tigers on Tuesday, and coach Mick Potter decided to not consider him for selection after he consulted the club’s medicos.
>
The popular back-rower was concussed in a tackle by Newcastle prop David Fa’alogo during Sunday’s 23-20 victory.
>
Tigers’ chief executive Grant Mayer was so upset by the tackle and mindful of Fulton’s history of head knocks this season he phoned the NRL to complain about Fa’alogo.
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Fulton told The Daily Telegraph on Tuesday night he felt fine, but was not about to second-guess the experts.
>
He remained hopeful of a return to the paddock in the coming weeks, but was also mindful another concussion could spell the end to his career.
>
Fulton is contracted to the Tigers until the end of 2016.
>
“It’s obviously crossed my mind, my wife (Stacey) is upset, and every man and his dog asks me about the head knocks,” Fulton said.
>
“For me personally I’m trying not to think about it it’s not something I want to think about.
>
“I had a chat with Todd Payten today and he was a bit concerned. He’s our assistant coach, but he’s also a mate, and he told me if these concussions keep happening, this could be the end. I thought to myself, `oh shit’, and it made me think twice.
>
“All I can do is rest. I feel like I want to play, I feel fine when I’m at home, and it’s hard when you arrive at training and feel OK.
>
“At the end of the day I have to listen to the doctors. You have to listen to them, sometimes you don’t agree with them, but we have to do what they say.”
>
Fulton said the only concussion that knocked him around was the season opener against St George Illawarra, when he was stretchered off.
>
“But I remember where I parked, I had this shitty spot in ‘P1’, so my memory isn’t that bad,” Fulton quipped.
>
Mayer said of Fulton’s head knocks: “We’re committed to ensuring he has the best treatment possible and if he was to suffer another similar injury he may have to look at an extended period on the sideline.”
>
Fulton will be missing from a Tigers’ side who are also without Aaron Woods and Robbie Farah because of Origin. Chris Lawrence, Chris Lawrence and Tim Simona also didn’t train on Tuesday, but the club expects them to start.
>
Meanwhile, Tigers’ star No. 1 James Tedesco revealed he rushed his decision to join Canberra, and the phone call to coach Ricky Stuart, letting him know he would be backing out of his deal, was “very hard”.

Really he needs to bes rested for AT LEAST 2 MONTHS!! No other sport in the world would allow a player to keep playing after being concussed 4 times in 13 weeks!!!!

Most sports rest a players for 2-3 weeks after the first concussion, and if it happens again they rest him for a few months. In ice hockey if you get more than 4-5 concussions in your entire career your career is in jeopardy. This has happened in the space of 3-4 months!

The links between concussions and brain damage/illness in later life continues to be illustrated across a number of sports. You look at former league players, boxers or ice hockey players. They may have felt fine for the next 5-10 years after the injuries but as they get older it often seems to kick in and dementia and a variety of other illnesses occur with much greater frequencies.

Fulton simply cannot play for the next couple of months at a minimum!!!
 
Liam will be assessed by an NRL appointed specialist in the near future and could see more time out of the game
 
@Balmain Boy said:
Fulton simply cannot play for the next couple of months at a minimum!!!

I agree. Liam's been my favourite for years, and I'd hate to see him forced out before his time. I'd also hate for everyone's favourite smartarse to be mentally retarded for the rest of his life. It's just not worth it.

Instead of bitching to the league about one particular hit, the Tigers would better off asking for cap relief to find a replacement. I don't think we could, in good faith, select Liam Fulton again this year.
 
Wests Tigers back-rower Liam Fulton is set to sit out at least a month of NRL action as his short to medium term rugby league future is assessed following a series of concussions.

Fulton suffered his fourth concussion in just six games this season in the Tigers' round 13 win over Newcastle on Sunday.

The 29-year-old has been stood down from Friday's round 14 match against South Sydney.

He will be put through a series of tests from external medical personnel in an attempt to ascertain what could be causing the repeated concussions and when it could be safe to return to the field.

Given the focus this season on player welfare, Tigers coach Mick Potter said Fulton's wellbeing is the club's primary concern.

"He is feeling fine, he doesn't think he has any symptoms but everyone is concerned for him as we should be and we want him to be right for footy," Potter said at training on Thursday.

"Our CEO (Grant Mayer) has raised his future with me but standing him down (for the rest of the season) isn't going to come under consideration until we have talked to the experts on which is the best way forward.

"Because it is in its infancy as to how things are proceeding with head knocks, no one really knows, because there hasn't been any evidence in the past for people to say this is what we need to do.

"We will take a very conservative way of looking at things and we have to be advised by the people that know better than us.

Stand-in skipper Braith Anasta said Fulton's Tigers teammates were worried about his future.

"The whole team is concerned about Liam and how he is health-wise," Anasta said.

"We don't know what is causing it or if it is going to keep happening.

"It is a bit of an unknown at the moment and we are just supporting Liam and hoping that things do get better and he gets through this tough period.

"'Fults' is a larrikin. He plays it down a bit, he is a tough bugger too, he wants to play, he is not happy about it.

"He also knows he has a wife and a daughter at home and he has to look after them and his own welfare, so he is taking it very seriously."
 
I was saying this in another thread, but its getting to the point where he needs to do something else with his life. He might be fine now, but give him another 15-20 yrs and he could really start feeling the affects. Not just physically but mentally as well. Chris Benoit is a perfect example of that, a guy who took one too many concussions. Fulton is a long way off that, but its been proven that they can lead to psychosis and dementia.
 
@GNR4LIFE said:
I was saying this in another thread, but its getting to the point where he needs to do something else with his life. He might be fine now, but give him another 15-20 yrs and he could really start feeling the affects. Not just physically but mentally as well. Chris Benoit is a perfect example of that, a guy who took one too many concussions. Fulton is a long way off that, but its been proven that they can lead to psychosis and dementia.

Can't really argue with that. While Benoit is the extreme of the situation, I'm more concerned for his quality of life after he finishes in RL and affecting his ability to earn a living after he has left the game. Not to mention most kinds of brain disease/injury are not solely suffered by those who have them, but also the families of the affected people.
 
I'm only taking a stab in the dark , but the story done earlier this year where players who had retired were tested to check their brain functions were done In Melbourne

Would it be safe to assume they are doing the same tests for Liam ??
 

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