An American Tragedy: Story of Mike Webster, Pro Hall of Famer & CTE

26.jpg
Image Credit


I was so touched by the story of Mike Webster, a former Pittsburgh Steelers & Kansas City Chiefs football player, who was the first NFL player to be diagnosed with Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy. He has since become a symbol for head injuries in the NFL which has sparked an ongoing debate over player safety.


Mike Webster was in the Pro Bowl nine times and is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, class of 1997. Because of his toughness he was nicknamed ”Iron Mike” Webster. Mike anchored the Steelers’ offensive line and is considered to be one of the best centers in NFL history.


27.jpg
Image Credit


In Reader’s Digest (https://www.rd.com/health/conditions/mike-webster-brain-injury) 2003, there was an article called, “Before ‘Concussion’: An Inside Glimpse of NFL Player Mike Webster’s Utterly Tragic Final Days” by Meryl Gordon which I would like to recap this very touching and tragic story about the horrible effects of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy. It is an important story to tell because this disease needs to be exposed to everyone who engages in sports & who are parents of children who are in youth sports.


39.jpg
Image Credit


The following is a summary of the story of Mike Webster written by Meryl Gordon: This story was written in March 2003 and published in the ”Reader’s Digest.” It is a sad story about Webster’s shattered life after his football career was over. He played for the Steelers for 15 seasons and 220 games which is the most played in Steelers’ history. On September 24, 2002, Mike Webster died of a heart attack at age 50 in a Pittsburg Hospital.


34.jpg
Image Credit


According to this story, Mike grew up on a potato farm in Wisconsin. He was the second of six children and when he was 10, his parents divorced. A year later he and his mother & siblings barely escaped an inferno which burned down his home. Mike lived with his father when he was in high school and it was there that he entered wrestling and then football. He later went to the University of Wisconsin on a football scholarship. Because of his smaller size, he overcompensated for it by becoming the hardest working player who played through his pain.


32.jpg
Image Credit


The article recalled a time when he showed up at the game on crutches because of a torn cartilage in his knee but played anyway. He later had surgery for the torn cartilage. “But play after play, year after year, Webster slammed into much bigger players, their helmets crashing into him like battering rams, their forearms pounding his head. And the beating left its own legacy.” Despite all these injuries, Webster never officially was treated for a concussion. He was known as never complaining about anything.


31.jpg
Image Credit


After his last season in football, Webster moved his wife and family back to his wife’s hometown of Lodi, Wisconsin. That is when he changed, according to his wife, Pamela. He evidently seemed disoriented and started to behave strangely. Pamela stated that her husband had always handled the finances but soon discovered that he wasn’t opening the mail, paying bills or filing taxes. Pamela was quoted as saying, “I didn’t realize he had a brain injury. I just thought he was angry at me all the time.”


28.jpg
Image Credit


When Mike had retired, he had several million dollars in assets but due to poor investments that went bad, they lost their house to foreclosure. Mike’s behavior got increasingly more bizarre and his wife tried to put up with it but in 1992 they separated. Pamela reluctantly divorced Mike after years of living apart. Mike eventually drifted back to Pittsburg and soon his former colleagues began hearing disturbing stories about him. No one knew what was wrong with him. Mike himself was puzzled about why he couldn’t hold onto a job.


33.jpg
Image Credit


Eventually having no place to go, a fan of his, Sunny Jani took him in. This was hard for Jani because he kept getting called after midnight from Mike asking to be bailed out, or that he was lost. He was examined by a lot of different doctors in the mid-1990s and finally one said he appeared to be brain-damaged.


29.jpg
Image Credit


By the time Webster entered the Hall of Fame in July 1997, he had become a recluse. He was also suffering from herniated discs and hand injuries and was angry and impoverished. Two of his sons, who occasionally lived with their father, saw him suffer so much. Some nights their father would shake so much from his condition, that he bought a police Taser gun to zap himself to calm his nerves. This would happen 10 to 20 times to relax.


The article went on to say that Webster’s physician prescribed him Ritalin to control his mood swings but in 1999, soon after his doctor moved away, he was arrested for forging Ritalin prescriptions. He gave an emotional news conference apologizing and was given probation. That same year his lawyer finally won Webster a $115,000 yearly disability payment from the NFL. The sad thing is that this payout ended with his death. Now his two youngest children receive $1500 a month each.


41.jpg
Image Credit


The last year of Mike’s life was sad. His divorce became final, his health worsened and his finances collapsed again. Most of the money from annuities and disability payments went to alimony and child support but the IRS garnished almost all of his income for unpaid taxes. He and his son Garrett were ousted from their apartment for unpaid rent and Jani, his old fan, helped pay for another place. There was no money for furniture so Mike and his son slept on the floor. He couldn’t even afford to pay for medicine so he began to shake so badly that he couldn’t drive his son to school.


35.jpg
Image Credit


On a Friday night Mike went to his son’s football game but by the weekend he felt ghastly and woke up on a Sunday with purple lips and a ghostly white color. He refused to go to the hospital because he didn’t have insurance but later that night he let Jani drive him to the hospital where he was diagnosed as having had a heart attack. Mike went into a coma and passed away on Tuesday.


37.jpg
Image Credit

Mike Webster's Autopsy Brain Sample


So this is a recap of the "Reader’s Digest" article. It went on to tell of other things but I wanted to present the gist of how a football hero, a Hall of Famer went from the top of the world only to be fallen by CTE. It is a very sad tale of what head trauma can do to a strong professional athlete. There are other stories like Junior Seau, who played for the San Diego Chargers and who committed suicide because of CTE. Many other lives have also ended in tragedy.


38.jpg
Image Credit


My mission for writing in Steemiteducation is to provide learning posts to help provide various educational information to anyone who will read them. This was a very special one I presented, because we all need to learn from these tragedies, about life and the values we take from it. This tragedy serves to remind us that we all need to take care of our health and help to foster more research to find ways to address these debilitating conditions.


This is a very sad story I hope we can learn a little something from about life. I hope you will continue this journey with me. Thank-you for reading my article on An American Tragedy: The Story of Mike Webster, Pro Hall of Famer If you would like to follow me, please check HERE



These are my previous articles. if you are interested in reading it:

Neuroplasticity: Hope For People With Anxiety?
@cabbagepatch/neuroplasticity-hope-for-people-with-anxiety

Neuroplasticity: How to deal with Anxiety Disorders Like Panic Attacks
@cabbagepatch/neuroplasticity-how-to-deal-with-anxiety-disorders-like-panic-attacks

Neuroplasticity: Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT)
@cabbagepatch/neuroplasticity-cognitive-behavior-therapy-cbt

Neuroplasticity: Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy
@cabbagepatch/neuroplasticity-mindfulness-based-cognitive-therapy

Neuroplasticity: Self-Directed Neuroplasticity Exercises
@cabbagepatch/neuroplasticity-self-directed-neuroplasticity-exercises

Neuroplasticity: Music & Music Therapy
@cabbagepatch/neuroplasticity-music-and-music-therapy

Neuroplasticity: Meditation and Anxiety
@cabbagepatch/neuroplasticity-meditation-and-anxiety

Neuroplasticity: Brainwave Entrainment
@cabbagepatch/neuroplasticity-brainwave-entrainment

Anxiety and CBD: An Introduction to Cannabinoid
@cabbagepatch/anxiety-and-cbd-an-introduction-to-cannabinoid

Childhood Injuries: Concussions
@cabbagepatch/childhood-injuries-concussions

Childhood Injuries: Post Concussion Syndrome & Recovery & Safety Measures To Prevent Concussions
@cabbagepatch/childhood-injuries-post-concussion-syndrome-and-recovery-and-safety-measures-to-prevent-concussions

Youth Sports: The Benefits of Youth Sports & Increase Incidents of Concussions
@cabbagepatch/youth-sports-the-benefits-of-youth-sports-and-increase-incidents-of-concussions

Are You Ready For Some Football? - The Continuing Saga of Concussion & Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy in Former NFL Players & Other Concussion Victims



H2
H3
H4
3 columns
2 columns
1 column
23 Comments