In a revealing interview with the New York Times, Hall of Fame running back Eric Dickerson touched on a myriad of topics, including the need for improved health benefits for former NFL players.
āLet me tell you something,ā he began. āThe NFL is another no-good entity. I bet if you talked to 100 players, I bet you 85 to 90 of them are gonna say they hate the NFL. I just think thatās sad. I heard the other day from two guys. Whatās ironic about it is these are white guys. They say the same thing that we Black guys say: They just want you to go somewhere and die. They donāt want to help you, they donāt give a damn about you.ā
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He continued, āWhen we came up in the league, we had no health care. I was able to pay for my health careāstill am paying for my health care. But think about guys who canāt pay. I know one guy, Drew Hill. He passed away because he didnāt have enough money to pay for his high blood pressure medication.ā
The all-time single-season rushing yards leader then went on to discuss CTE (Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy), the brain degeneration condition that is caused by repeated blows to the head, and how he believes he suffers from the disease.
āI know I do, some form of it,ā he said. āNot advanced yet. But sometimes I have a short fuse and sometimes I donāt. Something small, like a guy blows a horn at me, and man, my insides go ballistic. I mean, Iāll go crazy. Like, crazy crazy.
āWe guys talk about that, how you have that short fuse. Thatās the football, the aggressiveness. Iāll get real aggressive. I donāt like that. I donāt like to act like that. Because once I start, I canāt stop. Iām gonna say, itās almost embarrassing, itās uncontrollable. Itās almost like The Incredible Hulk. I cannot control myself. I donāt care if the Pope was here, Iām going to curse and go ballistic. And I donāt like to act like that.ā
The rest of the interview is equally as interesting, with the four-time NFL rushing yards leader discussing his reluctance to allow his 9-year-old son to play tackle football, how the damage his body incurred on the field still causes him to struggle with sleep, and his thoughts on the likelihood of his single-season rushing record being broken by Derrick Henry.
You can read the interview in its entirety here.
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