Retired Black players say NFL brain-injury payouts show bias
Thousands of retired Black professional football players, their families and supporters are demanding an end to the controversial use of โrace-normingโ to determine which players are eligible for payouts in the NFLโs $1 billion settlement of brain injury claims, a system experts say is discriminatory.
Judge tosses suit over 'race-norming' in NFL dementia tests
A federal judge on Monday, March 8, 2021, dismissed a lawsuit that challenged race-norming in dementia tests for retired NFL players, a practice that some say makes it harder for Black athletes to show injury and qualify for awards. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic, File)PHILADELPHIA โ A federal judge on Monday dismissed a lawsuit that challenged โrace-normingโ in dementia tests for retired NFL players, a practice that some say makes it harder for Black athletes to qualify for awards that average more than $500,000. The judge instead ordered the NFL and the lead lawyer in the overall $1 billion settlement to resolve the issue through mediation. That process would appear to exclude the Black players who sued. He wants race-norming banned in NFL testing going forward, and cases reviewed if it was used in the past.
Lawyers: NFL concussion awards discriminate against Blacks
Lawyers for ex-players Henry and Najeh Davenport said their clients were denied awards based on a discriminatory testing regime" that weighs sociological factors including race. Both men would have qualified for awards had race not been considered, they said. The dementia claims have proven especially contentious three-quarters of them have been denied, often after challenges from the NFL. Lawyers for ex-players Kevin Henry and Najeh Davenport said their clients were denied awards based on a discriminatory testing regime" that weighs demographic factors including race. Both men would have qualified for awards had race not been considered, they said.