Emotional Mark Gastineau wants NFL 'to treat people right'

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Former New York Jets defensive end Mark Gastineau, who revealed last year that he's battling serious brain issues, broke down sobbing during a radio interview Thursday night in which he begged NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to help ailing former players.


"I want the NFL to treat people right," Gastineau told host Pete McCarthy during an interview on WOR radio. "I want to hold you to your promise, Roger Goodell. You said, 'Anything I need!' ... I want the players to be treated right."


Gastineau, 61, who entered the league in 1979, said he has known Goodell since the early 1980s, when Goodell was a public relations intern with the Jets. Gastineau referred to him as "my ball boy." They developed a friendship, according to Gastineau, who said he spoke with Goodell more than a year ago at a game.


"The commissioner told me, he said, 'Listen, Mark, you know what? You need anything, let me know.' He was my ball boy. I treated him great. He told me. Hey, Roger Goodell, treat people right."


Gastineau, accompanied by his wife and lawyer for the interview, said he's a plaintiff in the concussion suit against the NFL but has yet to receive any money. He said he presented his medical case to the league, and it was rejected.


A year ago, Gastineau, one of the NFL's most prolific pass-rushers in the 1980s, said on WOR that he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. He believes it was the result of brain trauma from 10 years in the NFL.


During Thursday night's interview, Gastineau became emotional when describing how his daily life has been impacted by his brain diseases.


"My wife, she and I used to go around and do yard work," Gastineau said. "But you know what? She does everything now for me.


"It's not good, it's not good," he continued, crying. "When I'm laying in bed until three, four, or five [in the afternoon], it's not good. There will be days I get up and I'm good. ... My wife will tell you, she helps me get out of bed ... and she'll help me remember names."


A member of the Jets' celebrated "New York Sack Exchange" line, Gastineau was one of the league's biggest stars in the 1980s. He retired abruptly in 1988 and became a professional boxer. He had 17 fights.


"I used to think I was all that -- I did. But you know what? I was nothing. You know why? Because of what happened to me, and I'll tell you this much:


"The NFL is wrong. The NFL is wrong. They're wrong. I'm not telling them to give me zillions of dollars. I don't want zillions of dollars. I want to be treated with respect."


The NFL didn't immediately respond for comment.
 

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The college & pro leagues will chew you up & spit you out after their done using your talents up & making billions off the athletes......most football players know what they're getting into now a days, but they didn't know back when Mark played.

And these leagues have the audacity to ask for an integrity tax on sports betting.......the leagues wanna screw over as many people as they can.

Mark is right, the NFL, & IMO, NCAA should take care of these athletes.

What about college players that don't make it to the NFL? They may have damage to their brains & bodies but the NCAA could care less......they make billions, the players don't get paid, & life goes on.
 

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^^
I agree but athletes should also take care of themselves. No one is forcing them to play, the signed up and worked to get where they are at on their own free will. We always see guys who "want to play" even though they are injured or concuss. They are responsible for their own well being as well. There are many physical labor jobs that come with ailing problems after retirement. If players are broke after retirement then they have a spending problems.

Average income in America is only a fraction of what they make: https://www.usatoday.com/story/mone...4/average-american-household-income/93002252/
In one season they can easily surpass an income that will take normal citizens 20+ years working full time to earn.
 

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The players know the risk now. How many are quitting because of the risk of head injuries.
 

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The players know the risk now. How many are quitting because of the risk of head injuries.

Not many, very very few actually, and it's not head injuries they seem to be concerned about

Barry Sanders, Rob Smith & Megatron?

Maybe Gronk?

People still smoke and do dangerous drugs too, and they're not getting paid big bucks to do such either

I have empathy for Mark and others with any illness, but I just don't see people leaving the game.

At the end of the day, given the choice of being a football player or a bouncer, what do you think they're going to choose?
 

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I have sympathy for the fact that some athletes get physically or mentally destroyed by their sport but I find it impossible to believe that the players had no concept or have no concept of the risks involved. I realize they are athletes, which puts them in the bottom 1% as a subset when it comes to intelligence but they play the sport for years, so even with their lack of cognitive ability, I would think they understand the risks.

In the case of Gastineau, it wasn't just football. He tried boxing and was bad at it. He was involved in fixing his fights. His fight fixer was eventually murdered or killed in self defense depending on your point of view, by one of his opponents. As a gambler, and human being, it is hard to have any respect for Gastineau.
 

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