The danger isn’t gone just because the shock has worn off.
Chris Johnson’s announcement that he has ALS brought the issue back into view, at least for a moment. Johnson was a major star, a lightning-fast running back with a highlight reel people remember.
The Ice Bucket Challenge has resurfaced to some degree, but it hasn’t come close to the force it had in the summer of 2014, when Pete Frates helped launch it. The second wave simply doesn’t hit the same way.
Then came another grim reminder: former Dallas Cowboys defensive end Marshawn Kneeland killed himself in November 2025 at the age of 24, and we recently learned he has Stage 1 CTE. That kind of news won’t land the way the early cases did, when names like Mike Webster and Junior Seau forced the sport to confront what was happening.
That’s the part that should make people uneasy. The more familiar these stories become, the easier it is for them to slide into the background, until CTE and even ALS start to feel like just another part of football - like pylons and penalties. On Park Avenue in New York, where the NFL is headquartered, that’s probably a comfortable place to be.
I felt sick about that, so I made a small habit of my own: when the Kneeland news broke, I retweeted it with a simple message.
“Let’s not get numb to this. That’s what the NFL is counting on. https://t.co/i6zn7DzGkL”
- Paul Kuharsky (@PaulKuharskyNFL) July 7, 2026
The reaction was mixed. Some people asked the obvious question: what can we do? Others brushed it off entirely.
“Honestly why do we care? Some players get CTE.
Some are fine. Dont want it, dont play.
Dont like it, dont watch. My god.”
- Erik Shockley (@eshock06) July 7, 2026
My answer is simple: because we’re human beings who don’t want to watch other human beings suffer. And because this is a billion-dollar league that can do more to help prevent it and can do a lot more to help people after their careers.
The concern isn’t new, but the attention around it is fading. On Nov. 18, 2025, Dave Ziron of the Nation wrote about the drop-off in media coverage and quoted Chris Nowinski, the CEO and co-founder of the Concussion Legacy Foundation.
“It is frustrating that there is less media coverage and investigative reporting on CTE than there was a few years ago,” Nowinski said. “The NFL has strategically built business relationships with media organizations."
The point wasn’t that CTE matters less now. It’s that people are no longer treating it like the urgent issue it still is.
The same pattern applies to the other stories, too. Questions about whether benefits are being handed out fairly don’t get the attention they should.
The Kneeland news doesn’t stay in the spotlight long. ALS cases are rare enough that each one should hit hard, but even those can fade fast.
Maybe that’s because of strategy. Maybe it’s media economics.
Maybe it’s just public fatigue. Whatever the reason, the effect is the same: the most vulnerable generation of players will keep aging out of the conversation, while the next wave may benefit from fewer offseason hits, shorter training camps, Guardian Caps, improved helmets and rules meant to cut down dangerous contact.
None of that should make anyone comfortable. These stories aren’t less important because they’re less new. They’re just less novel.
So keep talking about it. Keep asking the questions the league doesn’t want.
Keep refusing to let this become background noise. If the cost of loving football is accepting this as normal, that’s a price worth challenging.
The league has the money. It should be putting real resources into research, prevention and long-term care, not leaning mostly on public relations.
This was frightening when people first started learning about it, and it’s frightening now. The only thing that’s really changed is how quickly we look away.
We can’t be ho-hum because we’re numb.
In Other News...
Titans Face Tough 53-Man Calls As Camp Battles Heat Up
Training camp is about to put the Titans roster math under a microscope, with rookies due July 23 and veterans following five days later. Until then, the club is working through a projected 53-man roster that mixes established names with younger pieces at nearly every position, a reminder that some spots already look settled while others are waiting for pads and live reps to sort them out.
The biggest questions are tucked into the depth chart and the back end of the roster, where a few position groups still feel fluid enough to change quickly once camp opens. Quarterback, receiver, the offensive line and several defensive spots all carry some real competition, and the Titans will have to make tough calls before cutdown day arrives. [Read more 🡒]
Titans May Have Just Found Their Next Offensive Line Cornerstone
With rookies reporting soon, the Titans are starting to look hard at the next layer of their roster-building under general manager Mike Borgonzi, and Peter Skoronski sits near the center of that conversation. The former first-round pick has improved across his first three seasons, enough to draw national recognition from ESPNs interior offensive line rankings and to put him in the conversation as one of the more important pieces on Tennessees offense.
For a team trying to stabilize its front, Skoronskis rise matters because it changes the long-term picture at guard. The Titans already have one major investment on the books in Jeffery Simmons, and with Skoronskis fifth-year option already picked up, the question is no longer whether he belongs in the plans. It is how soon Tennessee decides to lock him in for the next phase of the rebuild. [Read more 🡒]
