If you have a degenerative brain disease I'm not sure that matters.
There's an argument that boxing is some way ahead of a lot of other sports when it comes to safety. I'm. Not sure how strong that argument is, but footballers still self assess themselves for concussion together with a physio hired by the same employer, and we've all seen riders who barely know where they are after a crash helped back on a bike by a soigneur.
Mine isn't an argument in favour of rugby (inherently injurious from the necessity of high-impact bodily contact), or football (headers should be outlawed, given what we know).
Cycling would go with all the other risky sports (mountaineering, wing suiting, skiing etc) where minor errors can have very serious & fatal consequences.
Mine isn't an argument in favour of rugby (inherently injurious from the necessity of high-impact bodily contact), or football (headers should be outlawed, given what we know).
Cycling would go with all the other risky sports (mountaineering, wing suiting, skiing etc) where minor errors can have very serious & fatal consequences.
I can help with evidence of skin lost from hip or elbow.
Or, as a British Cycling coach said to me: If you haven't got the scars you haven't been trying hard enough.
I can help with evidence of skin lost from hip or elbow.
Or, as a British Cycling coach said to me: If you haven't got the scars you haven't been trying hard enough.
I remember being told that you’re not trying hard enough if you’ve not suffered a broken collarbone. I guess that I eventually became a “proper” cyclist a few years later. Yet to see the benefits. 😉
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