MLB Moves to Protect Player Safety By Banning Home Plate Collisions

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Legally Reviewed by
Allan Siegel

Updated 6 months ago

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Three of the firm’s partners — including the co-founders of the Brain Injury Association of Metropolitan Washington, DC — discuss TBI litigation, the firm’s preferred attorney status with the Brain Injury Association of America, and the DC Athletic Concussion Protection Act, which attorney Joseph Cammarata drafted into law.

Ira Sherman (00:01): Your brain is like the yolk in an egg, so when you shake the egg, you don’t have to crack it. You just go like that, and the yolk is affected. I was on the board of Directors of the Brain Injury Association of America. I was treasurer of the Brain Injury Association of America. Mr. Camara and I started the DC chapter, the Affiliate of the Brain Injury Association of America, which didn’t exist. We are the preferred lawyers of the Brain Injury Association in the Washington DC Metropolitan area. And what I mean by that is, is that the Brain Injury Association of America designates individual attorneys that they recognize as being experienced in handling cases involving traumatic brain injury to determine if they have a case and make sure that it’s handled properly.

Allan Siegel (00:54): You get hurt in sports and you get sent right back into the game, or you knocked your head and you get back up and you go about your day. Nobody really thought much about those injuries a long time ago, but we did. We understood the seriousness of those types of injuries and how sometimes you could have serious ongoing effects from what is even a mild traumatic brain injury or what is often referred to as a concussion.

Joseph Cammarata (01:21): I co-founded the Brain Injury Association of Washington, DC. I drafted legislation which became law in the District of Columbia to protect youth athletes from concussion. Concussion is a brain injury, a traumatic brain injury that can cause significant harm, cognitive deficits, emotional disturbances, vision problems, hearing problems. And so it’s important to be able to do the investigation, but do the legwork that’s necessary to put together the case to establish that there has been harm, but it’s invisible, right? You can’t see it, but the impact is real. And so it’s our job to bring to life the impact and show that this is real as a result of some trauma.

Aside from providing injured athletes and their families with the compensation they deserve, concussion lawsuits have sparked an increased awareness about the need for protecting players and their future well-being. After the NFL lawsuit was settled earlier this year, more athletes have stepped forward to hold leagues responsible for failures to address risks associated with traumatic brain injuries, including players from the NCAA and the NHL. Now, in a preventative and controversial move, Major League Baseball (MLB) is considering a ban on home plate collisions.

The proposed ban was announced on Wednesday, December 11, and is now being sorted out by the league. Although details must be finalized by owners’ and players’ union votes, the MLB has the ability to initiate the ban on its own for the 2015 season if it is voted down. The main debate, however, is what the ban will mean to players, owners, the league, and fans.While many may not consider baseball a contact sport, collisions can and do happen frequently. Throughout the years, several home plate collisions have resulted in serious injuries for both runners and catchers, many of which were season or career ending. According to league statistics, two out of nine concussions in baseball resulted from collisions. In the field, a lack of communication may cause a collision. On the base path, however, runners are prohibited from making contact with defensive players – except at home plate.

The league considers the ban necessary in order to reduce risks of preventable injuries. Sandy Alderson, chairman of the MLB Rules Committee, also commented on the emerging issue of concussions in professional and amateur sports as a motivating factor behind the rule change. Although banning home plate concussions may protect owners’ “investments” and shield them from some liability in the future, the main point is that the ban can better protect players by preventing injuries that are entirely preventable. When these injuries are as severe and unpredictable as brain injuries – which can have life-long consequences – the need for prevention is essential.

As with most change, this is one that is not readily accepted by all. The home plate collision ban is, however, a responsible and preventative move to protect players’ safety. At Chaikin, Sherman, Cammarata & Siegel, P.C., our Washington, DC personal injury attorneys have spent years advocating on behalf of injured clients, including injured athletes and brain injury victims. We will continue to keep you informed about the home plate collision ban and other personal injury news in sports.

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The brain injury attorneys at Chaikin, Sherman, Cammarata & Siegel, P.C. — including Senior Partner Joseph Cammarata, who co-founded the Brain Injury Association of D.C. and authored the District of Columbia Athletic Concussion Protection Act of 2011 — represent clients across Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia in concussion claims, blunt force trauma cases, and matters involving the causes of traumatic brain injury, with experience guiding families through TBI treatment decisions and long-term recovery.

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