safety
Concussion protocol: what to know
10 min · beginner
Concussions are medical emergencies. Play them that way.
Every youth sport has concussion risk — not just football. Soccer, basketball, volleyball, lacrosse, wrestling, skiing. Knowing the signs could save your career or your life.
Immediate symptoms (on the field)
- Headache that gets worse
- Confusion (forgetting the play, score, opponent)
- Dizziness or loss of balance
- Nausea or vomiting
- Blurred vision or sensitivity to light
- Slurred speech
- Loss of consciousness (even brief)
If ANY of these, you're done for the day. No argument.
The 24-hour rule
Even if the symptoms seem to go away, any head impact + ANY symptom means:
- No physical activity for 24-48 hours
- See a doctor (urgent care or sports med)
- Return-to-play protocol takes 5-10+ days, step by step
Second-impact syndrome
Returning too soon while still concussed and taking another hit can cause permanent brain damage or death. This is not theoretical — it kills several high school athletes every year.
What to tell your coach
"Coach, I hit my head. I have [symptom]. I need to sit."
A good coach respects this 100%. If you have a coach who pressures you to play through a head injury — that's a coach to stay away from, and their conduct may be reportable to the state athletic association.
Your right
Every state now has a "concussion law" — coaches, parents, and athletes are required to be educated. If you feel pressured to play through a suspected concussion, you have the legal right to sit.