Utleyâs Injury Serves as a Scary Reminder : Pro football: After Detroit Lionâs broken neck results in paralysis, Chargers who have felt the sensation of âstingersâ count their blessings.
SAN DIEGO â Safety Stanley Richard has the reputation of being a fearless, hard hitter, but Wednesday he stood shaken in front of his Charger locker, and admitted, âIâm scared.â
Richard went down hard Sunday with a neck injury, and the pain, he said, has moved now âdeep down his spine.â
Detroit offensive lineman Mike Utley and Cleveland wide receiver Danny Peebles also suffered serious neck injuries Sunday, and their condition has attracted national attention.
Peebles was hospitalized, but he is expected to recover. Utley remains paralyzed from the chest down.
âI thank God Iâm able to walk today; they both went down to the ground and were paralyzed,â Richard said. âI took the full blow in the neck and what was stopping the same thing from happening to me? My right side went numb. If you canât feel part of your body, but itâs there, and youâre looking at it, thatâs scary.
âI just have so many questions, and I donât have the answers.â
The Chargers listed Richard on their injury report Wednesday for Sundayâs game in New York with the Jets as âprobableâ with a âshoulderâ injury. They expect him to play.
Professional football players routinely suffer âstingersâ or âburnersâ after stretching or pinching the nerves that run from their necks to their shoulders. âTry placing your arm in a fire and thatâs how it feels,â Charger H-back Steve Hendrickson said.
Players are taught beginning in Pop Warner football to keep their heads up when tackling, but the breakneck pace of the pro game doesnât always allow for form-perfect contact.
âYou might get 20 or 30 stingers in a season, especially if you go through a full training camp,â Charger nose tackle Joe Phillips said. âYour neck takes such abuse; itâs a collision sport.â
Richard, however, had never felt the shooting pain of a burner or stinger before Sunday. He had also never heard of Utley.
âI love the game and all that, but Iâd like to know more about my situation before going into contact again,â he said. âThe first couple of days the pain was in my shoulder, but now itâs down my spine.
âYou could be paralyzed for life. . . . I think Iâm going to talk to the trainer and see if I can get X-rayed. The pain is down my spine, and seeing those other guys go down, reading about it in the papers . . . Iâm concerned.â
Former Charger linebacker Chuck Faucette heard about Utleyâs misfortune while watching Monday Night Football. âFirst thing I thought of was, âWow, I guess Iâm lucky.â â
Itâs been more than three years since Faucette suffered a broken neck while playing for the Chargers, and until now, he has considered himself to be âone of the most unlucky men to have ever walked the face of the earth.
âIâm still not over it,â he said. âItâs still hard for me to watch the Chargers play.â
Faucette is walking, however, and working as linebacker coach for Hamilton in the Canadian Football League.
âUtley, from what Iâve read, broke his sixth cervical vertebra, and it touched his spinal cord,â Faucette said. âI broke my C-1 vertebra; if my break had touched the spinal cord, I would have been dead.
âMost C-1 injuries occur in car accidents; sometimes they call it, âthe hangmanâs break.â You get hung, you break the C-1 and die. My C-1 broke completely in half; it was amazing, it must have been the perfect shot to the head to make it split like that. My neck muscles were so strong, though, and they locked up and kept the C-1 from touching the spinal cord. They kept me from dying.â
Faucette was no different from any other player in the Charger locker room. He lifted weights, he worked hard to make himself into a starting linebacker, and he dived into piles to stop the opposition.
âIâve watched the play over and over again,â he said. âItâs like any other play. Iâm trying to dive low to tackle Eric Dickerson, thereâs a pile and Joe Phillips falls on me. To this day I still canât understand how I broke my neck. I had probably hit somebody just like that 100 times. I know Iâve hit people harder and nothing happened.â
Phillips has read every story about Utley. Like so many other big, powerful men in the Charger locker room, he has been reminded of his own vulnerability.
âWe think weâre not going to take those hellacious collisions as linemen,â Phillips said. âOur necks are like 21 and 22 inches and we figure theyâre going to absorb the shock. We think of full-speed collisions between 220-pound defensive backs and 180-pound wide receivers with pencil necks.
âYou figure those are the people that are going to sustain serious injuries. Evidently, thatâs not true.â
Utley, a 6-foot-6, 279-pound guard, was blocking Ram defensive tackle David Rocker when he stumbled and took a nose dive. Rocker, who had leaped into the air to try and knock down a pass, landed on Utleyâs head.
âItâs frightening and my sympathy goes out to the kid,â Phillips said. âAnybody who has gotten to this level has had stingers in their neck. You know what that feeling is, but this? Heâs got to be scared out of his mind.
âI think anyone who chooses not to think about something like this is ridiculous. Thatâs why there are injury policies. Honestly, thatâs why I have a degree of concern for (Gary) Plummer with the neck trouble heâs had. Heâs got a family that depends on him.â
Plummerâs family was sleeping in the early hours Monday, but Plummer was still pumped up from Sundayâs 24-21 victory over New Orleans. He was watching television, and he saw Utley being carried from the field on a stretcher.
âYouâre sitting there by yourself and it kind of sets you back,â Plummer said, âand makes you reflect on the importance of the game.â
The game is Plummerâs livelihood. He loves to play the game, works harder than most, and now his career is coming to an end.
âTo me, itâs like with my mom when I first started to play football,â he said. âItâs just one of those things, youâre going to get hurt. Thatâs the name of the game. . . . I realize later in life Iâm going to have arthritis in my neck.
âBut I want to get the most out of it. This is the way I feed my family. Iâm hoping to play two more years after this, and if I can do that, then my family will be basically set for life.â
Plummer, however, has been bothered by a sore neck since training camp, and this past week itâs become more painful. He could move his neck to the left Wednesday for the first time since Sunday, but still, there was pain.
He underwent tests in August, and doctors pronounced his neck structurally sound, but then Plummer, who has been the teamâs leading tackler for the past three years, continues to run into people on a weekly basis.
âI just lead with my head,â he said. âIâm not the biggest guy out there. Something has to give. . . . I donât even think I could count all the stingers--maybe 50, 60.
âI bought a neck machine five years ago and my neck is 20 1/2 inches. Iâve built my pads up. I do what I can, but things happen.â
The Chargers require each player to lift weights twice a week during the season, and they begin with neck exercises.
âThe first thing we tell our players when they come in as rookies,â said John Dunn, the teamâs strength and conditioning coach, âis if you are going to learn one thing, strengthen your neck. Itâs something weâre always preaching: âPull a pec and you can still play; hurt your neck and youâll be sipping soup in a wheelchair.â
âUsing Plummer as an example, no one can probably do more than he has done to prepare himself. Yet he still has a problem. You canât prevent it, but you can minimize the problem. If he didnât train as hard, heâd probably be out six to eight weeks.â
The first man on the field to administer to an injured player is Charger trainer Keoki Kamau. In 1987, while working for the Redskins, he rushed to an injured David Jones, and discovered the center was paralyzed from his neck on down.
âLuckily it was only a spinal cord contusion and everything went well in the ambulance on the way to the hospital,â Kamau said. âBut he retired from football the following week.
âI expect neck injuries, but not like that (to Utley). Injuries are part of this game. Everybody on this football team is going to get hurt. The number one killer, however, is poor technique. You put your head down, and your spine is in its weakest position.â
âIâm thankful every time Iâm able to walk off the field,â linebacker Billy Ray Smith said.
New England wide receiver Darryl Stingley was unable to walk off the field after being hit by Jack Tatum in 1978, and he remains paralyzed from the neck down. San Francisco safety Jeff Fuller suffered a spinal injury that left him with only partial use of his right arm in 1989.
Charger offensive linemen Gary Kowalski and John Clay prematurely ended their careers after suffering serious neck injuries. Faucette was the teamâs leading tackler in 1988 when his career came to an abrupt halt.
âItâs one of those one-in-a-million things,â Faucette said. âAnd it happened to me.â
Utley is 25; he was 32 games into his promising professional career when he became the next one-in-the-million victim.
âThe way it happened, it could happen to anybody,â said guard Mark May, who wears double-padded shoulder pads with a collar bar. âItâs just like the ignorance of believing that you can play forever and youâre not going to get hurt. It happens, and when it does, everybody has to take a step back, knock on wood and realize how fortunate they really are.â