|
CHICAGO (AP) _ Da Coach has another wrinkle to his game plan to help
retired players.
Doctors in Arizona and Pennsylvania announced on Tuesday that they
are donating medical care to those in need through the Gridiron
Greats Assistance Fund.
"The game today is not what it is today because of the people
today,'' said Mike Ditka, the group's most vocal member. "It's what
it is today because of things that have happened over a period of
years. A lot of people have persevered and suffered and played and
made things happen.''
Ditka, the Hall of Fame player who later coached the Bears to a
Super Bowl championship, has criticized the players' union for
ignoring the medical needs of former players with serious injuries
who can't afford to pay for their care. Gridiron Greats has raised
more than $1 million since it was formed a year ago.
Now, it has doctors at the Surgical Specialty Hospital of Arizona in
Phoenix and the OAA Orthopedic Specialists in Allentown, Pa.,
providing free treatment to former players who qualify, while the
organization covers travel and helps with other expenses.
"The biggest scandal in football today is not Spygate,'' said Dr.
Terry Simpson of the Surgical Specialty Hospital.
Allentown-based Dr. Robert Palumbo hopes to get former players "into
the pipeline'' for treatment.
"We're here to help,'' he said. "There's nobody that we're going to
say no to if they're a surgical candidate.''
Ditka and other former players say the NFL Players Association
refuses to award disability benefits or is slow to provide them,
meaning some go without the medical care they need.
The Gridiron Greats' process will be faster, said Jennifer Smith,
the group's executive director.
"We don't have to go through levels of red tape,'' said Smith,
estimating that players will know within three weeks whether they
have qualified.
The union and the league have defended their system.
Ditka, former teammate Gale Sayers and recently retired Kansas City
Chiefs offensive lineman Kyle Turley were joined Tuesday by several
former players who have football-related medical issues and can't
afford treatment: Andy Livingston (Bears), Mercury Morris (Dolphins),
J.D. Hill (Lions and Bills) and Brian DeMarco (Jaguars and Bengals).
"Oftentimes in our lives, we walk around and we turn a blind eye to
things,'' DeMarco said. "We see the homeless guy in the street ...
(and) we kind of just walk on by.''
At 36, he walks with a cane and is unable to get in and out of a
chair without assistance because of a spinal injury. Mounting bills
have left him and his family homeless three times.
Morris lashed out at the league and union: "They sit out there as if
they're actually doing something when they're really doing nothing.
... Maybe, just maybe, we need to start litigation and try to find a
way to make these people do what they (need) to do.''
Congress has taken up the issue, releasing a 144-page report last
month that encouraged the league and union to change benefits
programs and fund independent research on the toll the game takes on
players.
The NFL Alliance _ a recently formed group that includes
commissioner Roger Goodell, NFLPA executive director Gene Upshaw, and
representatives of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and NFL Alumni
Association _ streamlined some processes in February. It also doubled
the "total and permanent'' disability for retired players to $40,000
a year from $20,000 a year.
"How do you get to it? What's the process?'' Ditka asked. "How do
you get to the money? I'm only asking because I don't know. You can
put $10,000 in the closet, it's going to stay in the closet.
"I'm not being critical,'' he continued. "I think it's a great thing
if it's legitimate and they put it up there and it's going to be used
to help people. Fine. I'm all for it. This is not about us; this is
about helping people. Whoever helps them _ they help them, we help
them, somebody else helps them _ it's all good.''
|