Soccer players are five times more likely than the general public to get dementia.

Soccer player dementia
[Dementia of soccer player]

Soccer players are five times more likely than the general public to get dementia.

Goalkeepers are safer since the molars' primary weapon is their hands.

This is the finding of a research headed by Professor Willie Stewart of the University of Glasgow.

The hidden problem, Stewart maintains in The Guardian, must be addressed.

"The butt endangers your health." Stewart wrote on the ball.

Stewart questions if it is even necessary to put the ball on in football. Football appears to be the only sport in which players compete on-site.

Because of decades of widespread exposure to brain injury in the United States, neurosurgeons have long advocated that European football players wear helmets.

Doctors have been mocked in the past, but not for long.

The publication THE GUARDIAN published a list of England's most famous players who died of dementia.

The list is extensive. Approximately half of the 1966 World Championship team has died or developed dementia.

Bobby Charlton and Nobby Stiles are both on the disabled list, while Bobby's brother Jack passed away in the spring from dementia.

The latest sad news came from Germany, where Gerd Müller, the world's all-time leading scorer, died last Sunday at the age of 75 in a nursing facility after suffering from dementia for five years.

Müller appeared in 607 games for FC Bayern Munich, scoring 566 goals. He scored 68 goals in 62 games for the A national team.

In the main game, THE BOMBER (nickname) was very deadly.

There's also no reason to travel because many of my childhood friends have died of dementia.

The most vulnerable athletes are defenders and elite players with the hardest minds.

In the rain, the half-pound leather ball morphed into a hefty leather ball.

If a leather bag was pressed thousands of times without affecting the brain, the skull would be formed of steel.

Leather balls were last used at the 1982 World Cup in Spain, but according to a Stewart research, modern balls are no safer than the old ones.

One of my playmates is not at danger of developing dementia. Hakan Mauri Paavilainen of Valkeakoski fooled his opponents to the point of frenzy, but only scored one goal in a series match. The ball landed on the player's forehead by mistake.

Nokia's Dr. Nokso believes I have a dart brain. The brain attaches to the skull with shock absorbers like a dart, while a typical person's brain flutters in fluid.

I'd add my name next to the article, but I can't find it. I have to inquire of a familiar-looking lady who appears to live with us, but I don't recall her name.

For the purpose of consistency, I refer to her as dear.
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