Tom DeLeone

DeLeone was considered too small to play offensive line in the NFL, was discarded by three teams in his first two seasons, and lost his first wife to cancer in his second year as a Brown. Despite facing a mountain of adversity, DeLeone pressed on to become a two-time Pro Bowler and a member of the Browns Hall of Fame.

Born in Ravenna, Ohio, in 1950, DeLeone graduated from Theodore Roosevelt High School in Kent, Ohio in 1968. He attended Ohio State University and was coached by the legendary Woody Hayes. His play and leadership earned him Buckeyes team MVP honors his senior season.

“He was just a great teammate. If you were going to get in a fight, you wanted Tom on your side,” said fellow Browns lineman Doug Dieken.

Drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in 1972, DeLeone was later traded to the Atlanta Falcons and traded again to the Houston Oilers. The Oilers cut him before the Browns signed him in the middle of the 1974 season. He quickly became the Browns’ starting center, a position he’d hold for the better part of a decade.

“He had all the linemen’s backs, and if anything would go wrong, he was the first one to be there to take care of them. He was the ultimate teammate,” said former Browns teammate Cleo Miller.

DeLeone’s performance and personality cemented his role as a leader on the Browns’ famed “Kardiac Kids” playoff teams in the early 1980’s. He was also a dedicated member of his community, serving as a volunteer for his neighborhood Medina Police’s special unit.

After retiring from football in 1984, DeLeone started a career as a criminal investigator with the US Department of Treasury. He dealt with a variety of fraud, drugs, and anti-terrorism cases, including serving on the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah.

He retired after 23 years of service at age 57, the mandatory age to retire. DeLeone quickly found retirement boring, so he filled his days substitute teaching and coaching high school football in Park City, Utah.

In 2011, while driving home with his son, DeLeone suddenly became completely disoriented and didn’t know where he was. Doctors later found a large tumor on his brain and diagnosed him with Stage 4 brain cancer. His surgeon told him his attitude would dictate his prognosis.

Anvil Head was up for the challenge.

“I ride my bike 25 miles a few days each week. I’m not giving in to this,” said DeLeone in 2011.

His relentless spirit followed him to his post-football career and all the way through his battle with cancer.

“Nothing scared him. Even when he told me about the cancer, I could hear it in his voice. No feeling sorry for himself. He’s just determined,” said Dieken.

After fighting cancer for nearly five years, DeLeone passed away on May 22, 2016 in Park City at age 65. Before his death, DeLeone asked for his brain and spinal column to be studied at the Boston University CTE Center. Researchers later diagnosed him with Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE).

Often, CTE is mistakenly connected to the number of diagnosed concussions an athlete suffered in their career. The DeLeone family hopes Tom’s CTE diagnosis will inform parents about the risk of repetitive nonconcussive impacts causing CTE. DeLeone spent decades playing as an interior lineman and was exposed to countless hits to the head over his life in football, likely contributing to his CTE.

He will forever be known as a loving father and husband, a dedicated teammate, and an upstanding citizen.

 

Taylor Dever

Taylor had a beautiful way about him. His large stature was shadowed only by his giving heart. He was always there to support, to listen, and to lend a helping hand. He was quick-witted and his sense of humor was infectious. His knowledge, wisdom and insights were admirable and made most people stop and contemplate what they just heard. His smile could brighten any day. He truly cared for his family, friends, and everyone he encountered. The best stories about Taylor come from times spent with his loved ones.

Taylor was raised in Nevada City, California, a small town about 90 minutes west of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Foothills. He loved and appreciated his community and was grateful for the support he received in return.

Taylor’s time at Nevada Union High School gave him the opportunity to develop lasting friendships. Prior to his freshman year at NUHS, Taylor had never played tackle football. He became a student of the game, both on and off the field and always strived to learn and improve. Taylor had great natural athletic ability and he excelled at everything he tried including soccer, basketball, and baseball. But football ultimately rose to the top. Nevada Union had a successful athletic program full of people who supported Taylor’s growing football career.

Taylor’s success on the field led to him being blessed with the choice of over 16 Division I scholarship offers. He ended up accepting a full athletic scholarship to the University of Notre Dame. He chose Notre Dame based on the quality of education, integrity of teammates and staff, the opportunity to contribute to a storied program, and to accomplish a lifelong dream! After graduation from NUHS in 2007, he was off to South Bend, Indiana, to accomplish his next goal.

At Notre Dame, Taylor played on the offensive line, starting at tackle his last two years, and was named game day captain twice in his senior season. Taylor watched the game with a different eye, reviewing and analyzing every play. He enjoyed the camaraderie of the team working together as one unit. His college coach once noted in a press conference, “Taylor would play if not one fan showed up for the game.”

Taylor valued the bonds he created with both teammates and students at school. It didn’t matter where you were from or where you were going; he appreciated each interaction and nurtured relationships with those around him. He also showed his appreciation and compassion for others by reaching out to the local community. He participated in Notre Dame’s community outreach programs and even took the time to visit many of the organizations on his own. Taylor made many less fortunate kids’ days by giving them a hug, some words of encouragement, or a T-shirt signed by the team.

Taylor graduated in 2011 with his proudest accomplishment and the reason he chose Notre Dame: a bachelor’s degree in Marketing from the Mendoza College of Business. Upon completion of a fifth year of football in the following fall, he considered his prospects for the NFL.

After a brief stint with the Dallas Cowboys, Taylor retired from football. He then embarked on a career in sales and marketing in the tech industry. With a Notre Dame business degree under his belt and enthusiasm to embark on a new chapter in life, Taylor took advantage of the opportunities in the Bay Area and relocated to San Francisco in 2012.

Following his move, Taylor began showing signs that something was different. We started noticing gradual changes in his personality, behaviors, and his decision-making. At first, the symptoms were hard to gauge. He was living in another city and his considerate and positive spirit never wanted to bring anyone down. But by early 2017, it became clear Taylor was not himself. Over the next few months, there was a significant change in his lifestyle and his relationships. He moved back home to Nevada City that summer.

By then, Taylor’s depression, anxiety, paranoia, and short-term memory loss were prevalent. He was unable to keep a job, manage normal tasks, and maintain relationships. He turned to substances to help ease his pain, adding another layer of complexity to what he was going through. Our family tapped every resource we could to help get Taylor a diagnosis to explain the clear changes taking place. After numerous visits with various physicians and mental health professionals, scans, and MRIs, we struggled to find answers.

Not having any documented concussions during his playing time, it was difficult to make sense of the changes taking place. Over time, Taylor became suspicious his football career was a factor. He believed he was suffering from the symptoms of CTE and stated he wanted to donate his brain if the day ever came since right now, CTE can only be diagnosed post-mortem. Taylor intended to contribute to CTE research to help others in the future.

Taylor passed away in December 2020 at the age of 31 due to an accidental drug interaction. His death was the end of a years-long struggle with what we now know as stage 2 (of 4) Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE), caused by brain trauma from repetitive hits to the head. With the clinical diagnosis from researchers at the UNITE Brain Bank, we finally found some relief. The diagnosis explained so much of his behavior, but also raised more questions of why he developed the disease and how it turned his life upside down.

Taylor wanted to change the world. He was destined to make an impact. We are carrying on his mission with the formation of Taylor’s Tree, a nonprofit foundation aiming to provide awareness and support for mental health and suspected CTE.

Our first project with Taylor’s Tree is to support the Concussion Legacy Foundation in their efforts to raise awareness and End CTE through prevention and research. We ask you to please consider giving to CLF in Taylor’s memory.

We love and miss Taylor every day!

Salvatore DiMucci

 

I never thought I’d be sitting at home reliving my late husband’s life through a box of newspaper clippings with two babies to look after. But there I was, less than a year after Sal’s death, thumbing through the mementos he kept boxed up. I used to think of the boxes as kind of a nuisance, taking up space. I didn’t understand why he’d kept so many. But then I came across his football boxes. There was a box of letters from college recruiters, a box of team photos and clippings of old articles from his college and high school playing days that showed him in the limelight as a star running back. It looked like an amazing time in his life filled with close friends, football scouts, and college scholarships. Those were his glory days.

I also never thought I’d hear a police officer pounding on my door. “Your husband has been in an accident, I need to take you to the hospital,” he told me. I sat alone in the hospital room for hours waiting for family and friends to join me, numb to what was happening and waiting to hear about my husband’s condition or if he was even alive. Part of me knew that he wasn’t. In the eight years that I’d known Sal he was never the type to drink and drive, but the toxicology report later confirmed that Sal was over the legal limit. Sal was driving home from dinner when he struck a tree and was thrown from the car; his two acquaintances walked away with minor injuries. I couldn’t make sense of the accident, or his risky behavior. I still can’t. Not completely.

Sal was strong and intelligent. He played two years of football at Wisconsin before retiring because he blew out both knees. For him to continue playing, his life would have revolved around cortisone injections and pain killers. He just didn’t want to start down that path to play football. Sal didn’t want his football career to destroy his body, so he walked away. He knew enough about his joints to decide football wasn’t worth destroying them, but he had no idea what football could do to his brain.

I met Sal in 2008, when he was 27. I was in medical school and he was contemplating sitting for the LSAT and applying for law school. As our relationship continued, he started to tell me that he felt like something was wrong with his brain. He would also say he felt like he was going to die young. I heard him, but I didn’t really listen until much later. I just thought he felt that way because he’d lost his own father to a heart attack when he was only sixteen. And neither of us knew enough about brain injuries, let alone chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), to understand what might be going on with him.

We dated off and on until we finished professional school, and he was still functioning at a high level. High enough to finish law school and to work in an important role at his family business. When we married in 2013 and had a baby on the way, Sal became more serious than ever about his suspicion that he had brain damage. Sal told me something was wrong with his memory and concentration, and I could see that he was struggling with his moods and behavior. He read everything that he could get his hands on about brain trauma associated with football, but he had come to rely on ADHD medication to concentrate. He hated that he had to take Adderall to accomplish simple tasks, but by that point he needed it get anything done.

Sal’s symptoms gradually got worse. His moods swung high and low, almost like bi-polar disorder. He struggled more with substance abuse issues as time went on. I couldn’t understand the changes, or why one minute he would be normal and then the next he’d be depressed and getting wasted, seemingly without reason. “I think better,” I remember hearing him explain. In the moment, while I was trying to raise a baby, manage a household, and deal with this man who would be fine sometimes and then completely off at other times, I was not able to process all the changes. But in hindsight, his words make more sense. Sal knew his brain was damaged, and he was trying to cope.

One night in April of 2015, Sal and I had been working on our estate planning and he’d taken Adderall to finalize our plan. He continued working after I went to sleep, and I vividly remember Sal bursting into the room at two or three in the morning. “Lisa! – Leese – I want my brain donated to the Boston University CTE Center for research.” He practically yelled it. I wasn’t thrilled to be woken up that early in the morning, and he was disappointed by my response. He wanted and needed me to know. I didn’t fully understand why it meant so much to him.

Six months later, Sal and I went to see the film Concussion. That’s when things got real. Before that point I was starting to truly believe that something was wrong, but the movie drove it home. Sal was sobbing as we got into the car afterward and I felt like I got punched in the stomach. My mind raced. I’d seen the mothers and wives in the movie. What was my future going to look like with this man? If this is already what it’s like today, what is it going to look like ten or twenty years from now? What are our children going to see? Is it going to be like the scene in the movie where Justin Strzelczyk is screaming and raging at his family and terrifying his children? Is he going to be sitting there emotionally detached from life? Could this become my life?

Six months after that, I was picking out Sal’s casket in a funeral home. I was five months pregnant with an almost 2-year-old at home. I was numb, and struggling to process everything that was happening as I went through the motions. “Yes, those flowers are fine – yes, 3:00 PM for the wake – yes…wait…No. No. Where is Sal’s body? Hold on. No, I can’t pick out a casket. What’s happening? He wants his brain donated, I’m not doing anything until I know that his brain is going to be donated.” I wasn’t going to plan a funeral until I knew that his brain was going where it needed to go. So, I called my attorney, and the funeral director called Boston University.

I was just as devastated getting the results of Sal’s stage one CTE diagnosis as I was when I heard about his death. I thought about what else I could have done. Could I have treated him differently? Could I have helped him manage his symptoms? Sometimes those thoughts return. Now, I think more about what I can do to help people recognize this disease in their loved ones so that they can find ways to treat the symptoms while they’re still alive. And I feel like I need to do something to help people understand that what happened to Sal’s brain could happen to their child’s brain.

I remember one specific moment when I was at the gym. I was sitting on the ground stretching and I heard two women behind me talking about their 10-year-olds’ summer football camp. I didn’t know who they were, but I almost lost it. I almost went up to them and shouted, “Why are your kids playing football? Don’t you know what can happen to them? Don’t you understand?” I fought the urge, deciding it wouldn’t have done any good. But in that moment I knew I had to do something more. I had to share our story with more people so that they could understand what’s at stake.

In the years before Sal’s death, he became passionate about protecting kids from head injury. He was adamant that football was the reason why he had mood swings and trouble concentrating, and he had no intention of letting our sons play. He researched and thought about investing in a company that was designing “soft” helmets to minimize impact. Sal said over and over that he used his head as a weapon, and that there was no getting around hits to the head. He’d recently found a passion for tennis, too. “If I had found a game like this sooner I wouldn’t be so messed up,” he would say, meaning he wished that he’d played tennis, paddle tennis, or some high-adrenaline sport as a kid instead of football. He fell in love with the idea of promoting non-contact sports. More than anything, Sal felt that there needs to be an option for the aggressive kid who wants to get out there and get his adrenaline pumping that doesn’t result in brain damage.

The most difficult moment of going through that football memory box was finding a photo of Sal in his football pads at eight years old. He was so young, and our sons Salvatore IV and Rocco look so much like he did. I get angry when I look at it. I’m angry at the absurdity of Sal developing a brain disease because of a glorified form of entertainment. I’m angry that there is a continuing cycle of football players who decide to enroll their young children in this sport because they don’t know any better. Sometimes I feel helpless to change it because this game is so embedded in our culture and lives.

When I drive by a football game, I see the lights, and I know that someone’s child is reliving the same glory days that my husband lived through. Then I can’t help but picture Sal a few years before he died, too depressed to get off the couch. Or having a fit because he can’t concentrate for long enough to complete a simple task. Or hyper-focused and almost crazed because he took an Adderall to knock a few things off his to-do list. I drive by and wonder, if those parents saw what football did to Sal, would they still cheer for their child to dig deep and finish the game out strong?

So many people want their child to become a star athlete, and I don’t blame them. But it’s obvious that something is wrong when that star could become a 30 or 40-year-old who is unable to function in society properly because of brain damage. Sports are meant to prepare children for their future, not endanger it. If this game is going to continue, something will have to change.

Steven Dudowitz

Jim Proebstle, author of Unintended Impact, sat down with the family of Steven Dudowitz to gain insight into his life and legacy.

Steven Dudowitz: A Tragic Story

The story begins

As an outstanding offensive tackle for Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, NY, considered to be the perennial favorite football program in New York City, Steve’s journey is different. After graduating, “the Dude” as he was called, continued playing at Geneva College (formerly Beaver College) in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. At 6 foot 1 inch and 200 pounds, Steve was not your stereotypical offensive tackle and was put on the coach’s watch list for players who were too thin. He worked his way up to the second string, only to develop knee problems, which was his undoing for playing football his sophomore year. According to Boston University’s School of Medicine Clinical Report, Steve experienced six concussions, but no one really kept track of how many times you got your bell rung back then. With today’s knowledge of the damage incurred by repetitive nonconcussive blows to the head and the lack of sideline safety protocols for concussions in the 70’s, it’s hard to estimate the extent of impairment done to the brain.

A successful career interrupted

Steve developed a thriving career in the securities industry starting in 1979 in a classic style. He started in the mailroom. For the next 37 years Steve continued to assume additional responsibilities through job promotions, company changes and various mergers. The dedication and compassion he showed to those who worked for him was unparalleled. Yet, the fairy tale story wasn’t quite what it appeared to be. Control issues presented themselves. An under the radar substance abuse and alcohol issue contributed to a substantial weight gain to over 300 pounds. The corporate move in 1999 to Switzerland was partly designed for him to get back on track, as he seemed lost and unfocused by those who knew him best. In parallel, his first marriage came to an end.

In 2001, he met Juliette. They bought a house in 2003, had their only daughter, Stephanie, in 2004 and made it official by getting married in 2009. Along with Alexia, Juliette’s daughter from a previous marriage, they began a new life—no drugs, no alcohol—yet the job stresses continued to mount. His personality started to unravel, moments of extreme irritation and anger boiled over as an apparent loss of control led to OCD mannerisms in the strangest of circumstances. Erratic behaviors continued to worsen over time with noticeable memory issues in his mid-fifties. Steve closed down and began spending hours on end in his man-cave, by himself. His participation in the marriage was stunted and initial requests to see a psychologist were categorically rejected. Everything bothered him.

Mysterious changes

In October, 2014, it seemed as if Steve’s brain just flipped. Maybe the new company merger had an impact, but judgement and fault-finding became a normal part of many discussions, almost always over trivial events. Memory issues increased. Lifelong friends were dropped for no apparent reason. Juliette was struggling to understand what was happening with Steve with the sudden increase in financial challenges, credit card irregularities, spending splurges, strange disinhibitive behaviors, depression, anxiety, divorce threats, impulsivity, and explosive rages. Everything was coming at Juliette rapid fire with no reasonable explanation—the wheels were off. He was becoming more difficult to deal with as their lives took different paths. Juliette made up her mind to stick by Steve but he was no longer himself and she just didn’t know what to do. He was making comments about being in a bad place, about not knowing what’s wrong and, in general, about feeling strange and different. It was at this time that he agreed to finally go to seek therapy. Maybe he wasn’t having a mid-life crisis. Maybe he was sick.

It was during the movie, Concussion, with Steve and their daughters, Stephanie and Alexia, that Juliette made the connection with chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and Steve’s quickly devolving circumstances. Steve responded by looking at Juliette as if she were crazy..

Taupoathy: Closure… maybe

Steven had his heart attack on 5/12/16 and died on 6/13/16 while in hospice care. Juliette decided to contact Patrick Kiernan at Boston University School of Medicine CTE Center in order to donate Steve’s brain for research. The family received a different diagnosis from what they expected, however. The Clinical Report identified a neurodegenerative diagnosis called tauopathy. Related to CTE, tauopathy is somewhat different based on the unique deposition of neurofibrillary tangles. The unique findings in Steve’s brain opens a new door for future research as other cases are discovered. It would appear that the destructive path of concussions is not limited to a single answer (CTE) that could be made into a movie. The family is entering a new and frustrating world in search of more answers to connect the dots between Steven’s life and his untimely death.

Copyright © 2017, James Proebstle

 

Ray Easterling

Born to Elmer and Vivian Easterling in Richmond, Virginia, on September 3, 1949, Ray was the second of three, athletic boys.  He grew up in what was a rural setting in Chesterfield County, roaming the creeks and fields as little boys do.  He wrote in his third grade biography that he wanted to be a professional football player after watching his cousin, Carroll Dale, on television playing for the Green Bay Packers.

In the eighth grade, Ray was 4’10” and weighed 98 pounds.  He was a wiry, little fellow!  He was the one in pickup football the quarterback always told to “go long”.  He tried out for his school’s football team, but they wouldn’t give him a uniform.  Seeing his son’s intense desire to play football, his dad took him to a private school, obtained a scholarship for him, and the rest, athletically, is history.

Nothing had ever come easy for Ray.  He was a fighter and a scrapper.  His friend, Jimmy Lewis, would say that he had to rescue Ray from his scrapes!

At Collegiate School, Ray lettered in five sports and was voted the best all-around athlete his senior year.  Then came the search for a college to give him a scholarship.  His dad took him around Virginia and North Carolina to no avail.  Finally, because his brother, Robert, was going there, he walked on at the University of Richmond.  By his sophomore year he earned a scholarship to play football for UR.

His junior year play at cornerback was outstanding.  By the time spring practice rolled around, pro scouts were in town to watch him.  But it wasn’t to be an easy road.  An injury to his knee put him in a cast for six weeks.  Rehab included running the hills in a local park with his brother, Robert.   He came back from the injury to play well his senior year at UR with numerous awards including All Southern Conference and Little All-American.  He played in the Coaches All-American game.  Coach “Bear” Bryant made a memorable impression on this college senior.  In the spring of 1972, Ray was drafted by the Atlanta Falcons in the ninth round.

 

Arriving in Atlanta was a dream-come- true for Ray.  If there wasn’t a party, Ray started one.  But by the time he was back in Richmond for the off-season he was crying himself to sleep at night.  He wondered, “if you get everything you ever wanted and still feel empty, what is life all about?”.  The summer of 1973, Ray knelt in a cow pasture in rural Virginia and trusted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior.

I share that in this context because it is the key to who Ray was when I met him.  He was passionate about sharing his faith with anyone who would listen.  He went from aimless youth to responsible, leadership on the Falcons’ team.  When he returned to Falcons’ training camp that year, a changed man, his coach, Norm Van Brocklin, told him “if you hadn’t changed, we were going to cut you”.  Ray believed that God gave him back the very thing that he had always wanted to do.

His passion for Christ led him to speak to youth groups, conferences, and retreats during the football season and all throughout the off-season.  He made himself available to anyone who was in need of answers or help.

In January of 1975, Ray returned to Richmond and the Bible study he founded with his dear friend, Earl Nance.  It was there that I met him.  I was a senior majoring in music at Westhampton College (UR).  Ray’s enigmatic personality and genuine faith were magnetic to me.  I quickly fell in love with his ready smile, gentle leadership, hunger for God and His Word and gentlemanly ways.  I was beyond excited when, even after I graduated and returned home, a dozen roses were delivered.  It was at that point that my parents knew that something more serious than just dating was going on!

Ray proposed that summer and we were married on January 3, 1976 in Richmond.  It was a fun life of speaking engagements coupled with working out in the off season; working hard to make the team and playing the games during the season.  We were newlyweds; very much in love and enjoying our life together.

In 1974, Ray started at safety for the Falcons and played through the 1979 season.  During his career, he tackled the likes of OJ Simpson, John Riggins and John Cappeletti.  His best game was against Walter Payton in October of 1977 where Ray had 20 unassisted tackles and two interceptions.  His job was quarterback of the secondary and he reveled in the task of reading the quarterback and communicating with his fellow defensive backs.  That year, the Falcons’ “Gritz Blitz” held their opponents to 129 points, an all-time record that has never been broken.

Ray gave his all on the field.  There was never a time when he considered loafing or giving less than one hundred percent.  Ray never mentioned his concussions.  It was a part of the game that no one ever saw except when a player was knocked out.  He was seriously injured during the 1978 season with a dislocated elbow.  It disabled him to the point where he had to use his head more to tackle.

During his final training camp in 1980 with the Falcons, he shared with me that he was getting stingers and seeing stars a lot. His right thumb went numb and the muscles in his arm began to atrophy.  The team trainer took notice when, after not sleeping several nights, Ray asked for a sleeping pill.  The trainer also saw the neurological damage apparent in his arm.  After a series of examinations and being told that returning to play might bring paralysis, Ray decided to retire from professional football.  He saw this as God’s merciful way of showing him that it was time to walk away.

During the 1980s Ray successfully built a financial services business.  We enjoyed prosperity to a level not experienced during football.  We had investments and a portfolio that would be the envy of most middle class Americans.  Ray attributed his success to God’s blessings.

Upon turning 40, Ray began to experience serious problems with insomnia which, in turn, led to depression.  He left the financial services business along with its excellent residual income and decided to take a new direction.  He tried to start several businesses on his own over the next 9 years.  His description of these decisions was “uncharacteristic” and “I didn’t do the due diligence I would normally have undertaken”.  I found that I was living with someone I did not recognize.  My normally disciplined husband took chances with our finances that ended in losing our house and all our savings.

Interaction with our friends gradually dwindled; he pushed away some very close friends in fits of temper.  Ill humor was a constant companion.

In and out of various professions, Ray had difficulty working with others.  It wasn’t until he brought his business home in 2007, that I noticed his inability to organize and keep track of details.  Never one to tolerate messiness, his desk was a maze of phone messages and incomplete business plans.

I was at a loss to know what had happened to my precious husband.  In December of 2010, I saw a blurb on the Internet about a former NFL player who had CTE.  It took me to the case studies Drs. McKee, Stern, Cantu and Chris Nowinski had done on former athletes who were diagnosed with CTE.  The symptoms and behavior matched Ray’s.  I was and am so grateful to them for making their findings known.

The spring of 2011, Ray was diagnosed with dementia due to the concussions he sustained in professional football.  We finally had our answer to the questions of “what” and “why.” The feelings of helplessness mounted as Ray’s symptoms worsened.  The medicines available could only promise to stave off the march of the disease temporarily.

With the conviction that his time on earth was complete and that he was “ready to meet” his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, Ray took his life on April 19, 2012.  The subsequent autopsy revealed moderately severe CTE in Ray’s brain.

I hope and pray that sharing Ray’s story has helped you understand what a devastating disease CTE is and how important the work that the Concussion Legacy Foundation and BU CTE Center are doing.  Please consider doing all that you can to help in educating your friends and promoting this research.

Most of all, to God, be the glory!  For He sustained us through a difficult time with His peace and provision.


Read more about Ray’s story in the New York Times here, and in a Christian Families Today newsletter here.