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2020 Sports Medicine and the Law 1 (2020)

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SPORTS MEDIC


and the


Safe! Jury Finds High School Baseball

Coach Not Liable In Bang-Bang Play


By Jon Hughes and Kacie Kergides,
of Montgomery McCracken Walker &
Rhoads LLP

     n April 4, 2012, something that
     has happened thousands of times
before-and thousands of times since-left
one student-athlete catastrophically injured:
a high school baseball coach instructed one
of his players to slide into third base.

S     .ding into the Facts
In April 2012, Jake Mesar was a fifteen-
year-old freshman on the junior varsity
baseball team at Bound Brook High
School in Bound Brook, NewJersey. Dur-
ing the second inning of Bound Brook's
first baseball game of the season-and
Mesar's first game of his high school


career-Mesar hit a line drive into the
outfield, scoring two runs for his team.
As Mesar began to make his way around
the bases, John Suk, Bound Brook's third
base coach, instructed Mesar to slide into
third base. Mesar slid, and in doing so,
suffered a catastrophic ankle injury. The
injury was so severe it required multiple
surgeries and a stem cell injection. Mesar
was also required to wear an external sta-
bilizing frame to keep the bones properly
aligned, and, at one point, a doctor told
Mesar that amputation would be required.
Fortunately, Mesar ultimately recovered,
but doctors recommended that he never
play baseball again.
                See SAFE! on Page 9


Mind the (Causal) Gap: Plaintiffs' Experts

Fail   To   Tie   Death To CTE, CTE To Football


By Jack K. Hagerty and Dylan F
Henry, of Montgomery McCracken
Walker & Rhoads LLP

Head-     -Head -The Case
In December 2019, a Court for the Cen-
tral District of California granted sum-
mary judgment in favor of Pop Warner
Little Scholars, Inc., ending a three-year
case brought against Pop Warner by two
mothers who claimed their sons devel-
oped Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy
(CTE) from playing Pop Warner foot-
ball.1 Paul Bright Jr. (Kimberly Archie's

1 Archie v. Pop Warner Little Scholars, Inc., No.


son) and Tyler Cornell (Jo Cornell's son)
both played Pop Warner football in their
youth, bothpassedawayin2014, andboth
were alleged to have Stage I CTE, which
was discovered in postmortem autopsies of
their brains. Bright Jr. passed away at age
24 from a motorcycle accident; Cornell
passed away at age 25 by suicide.
  The mothers filed a class-action lawsuit
in September 2016, alleging Pop Warner
failed to provide for the safety and health

   16-6603 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 27, 2019) (order
   granting summary judgment to defendants).
        See PLAINTIFFS' on Page 11


Winter 2020

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