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In your recent report "Hard Hits, Hard Numbers" on head impacts in youth football, what surprised you the most?
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Youth Impact data in "Hard Hits, Hard Numbers" surprises veteran journalist Stone Phillips

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Stone Phillips' report entitled Hard Hits, Hard Numbers features a first-of-its-kind study by Virginia Tech researchers on head impacts sustained by 7- and 8-year-old football players. The program aired on PBS' NewsHour in April 2012. See related story.


Q: In your recent report "Hard Hits, Hard Numbers" on head impacts in youth football, what surprised you the most?

A: "The magnitude amazed me. I had no idea that 7 and 8-year-old football players could be exposed to head accelerations in the 80, 90, 100g range. Researchers only see a handful of hits that big during an entire college football game. Undeveloped neck and upper body muscles explain some of this-- creating a bobble-head doll effect.
The other findings that have surprised me is the overall number of hits to the head that players sustain over the course of a season-- about a thousand each year for the average college player, five hundred for high school players and, as the Virginia Tech study found, about a hundred for youth players.
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The vast majority of these hits are low magnitude, but serious questions are now being raised about whether the cumulative effect of so many sub-concussive hits might be as harmful to the brain as a few concussions."
- Stone Phillips, award-winning television broadcast journalist and former co-anchor NBC News "Dateline"
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Stone Phillips is an award-winninhttps://ision anchor and broadcast journalist who co-anchored NBC News' Dateline for 15 years. Before joining NBC News in 1992, Phillips spent twelve years with ABC News where he served as a correspondent for World News Tonight and later for 20/20. He covered the 1982 conflict in Beirut, drug trafficking and corruption in South and Central America, and reported from India following Indira Gandhi’s assassination. His interviews include President George H.W. Bush, Al Gore, Jr., Russian President Boris Yeltsin, and an exclusive with Panamanian President Manuel Noriega.

Phillips, graduated with honors from Yale University. A philosophy major and starting quarterback on Yale's 1976 Ivy League Champion football team, he received Yale’s F. Gordon Brown Award for Outstanding Academic and Athletic Leadership in his junior year.

Visit Stone Phillips Reports for more information.
Related: Stone Phillips' "Hard hits, Hard Numbers," on PBS -- SportsConcussions.org 04/04/2012
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