Skip to main content

The Curse of the Super Bowl Chargers


Are the 1994 AFC Champion San Diego Chargers a cursed team, or just a reflection of a growing trend toward chronic disease and early death in America?

Led by running back Natrone Means and linebacker Junior Seau, the 1994 Chargers won the AFC West with a record of 11 wins and 5 losses, and beat the Miami Dolphins and Pittsburgh Steelers to reach the Super Bowl.  The 53 players on the active roster averaged 26 years of age.

According to 1995 life expectancy tables, a 26 year old male could expect to live to the age 75.

But when 42 year old Lew Bush – a linebacker on that Super Bowl team – died on December 9, 2011, he was the 7th member of the team to die more than 30 years prematurely.

Source:  ESPN Official 2011 Roster Information
There is talk that these 1994 Chargers are cursed.  The first player to die, linebacker David Griggs, was 28 when his car slid off an expressway ramp in Ft. Lauderdale and crashed into a pole in June, 1995.   The second, running back Rodney Culver, died in a plane crash in 1996.  He was 26.

Young people most often die of injuries.  So those two deaths, while untimely and tragic, didn’t make anyone think “curse.”

The third one did. In 1998, linebacker Doug Miller, also just 28, died when he was struck twice by lightning while on a camping vacation.

For the next decade, “curse” talk faded as the surviving 50 players went about their lives and careers.

Then, in 2008, two more Chargers died.  Center Curtis Whitley was 39 when he died of a reported drug overdose, and defensive lineman Chris Mims was 38 when he died of heart failure.  Mims – a relatively svelt 288 pounds for a six foot, five inch lineman in 1994 – was reported to weigh 456 pounds when he died.

Defensive lineman Shaun Lee was the sixth to die, on March 1st of last year.  He was 44 when he lost a battle with pneumonia.  He was reported to weigh over 300 pounds and suffer from diabetes at the time of his death.

And when Lew Bush died of a heart attack in December, these seven men together had lost 280 years from their expected life spans when they played in their Super Bowl – the equivalent of nearly four full lifetimes. 

Are the untimely deaths of these young men a curse or a reflection of what causes premature death in America?

According to the NFL Players Association, the average life expectancy for an NFL football player is under 60 years.  Traumatic football injuries, such as concussions, are blamed for this.  They are a factor, but the common conditions of life in America today – including obesity, chronic disease, and non-football injuries – have been the “curse” of the Chargers.

Even if all 46 remaining members of the team now live to their normal life expectancy, the team as a whole will still have lost 5.3 years of life per player to premature death. 

NFL football players don’t have a life expectancy that is approximately 20 years less than the norm just because they played football. 

Like many other young people in our society, their lives are being claimed before their time by the cardiovascular diseases, behavioral illnesses, and other chronic conditions that result from poor diets, stress, and unhealthy habits.

This problem is real, and isn’t going to go away on its own.

The average weight of the 44 linemen, excluding tight ends, on the 2011-2012 AFC Champion New England Patriots and the 2011-2012 NFC Champion New York Giants is 306 pounds.  They are a year older than the 1994 Chargers were.  But they also weigh an average of 17 pounds more than the twenty Chargers who played the same positions in 1994.

To what do they have to look forward as they age?  If you believe the NFL Players Association, they will be walking advertisements for premature death.

They are not the only ones. 

According to AHRQ data, 60% of all Americans have at least one chronic condition, 38% have two or more, and 16% have at least three.  In this one way, we are all just like the Chargers.

Like most Americans, I enjoy watching the Super Bowl and celebrating this unique American holiday.  But we should embrace not just the game, but the light it can shed on the real curse that affects us all.  That is the curse of both men and women dying young for reasons we could have, and should have, prevented.

Update:  When Junior Seau died on May 2, 2012, he became the eighth member of the 1994 Chargers to die before the age of 45.  His death was an apparent suicide. There is widespread speculation as to whether the suicide was brain trauma related.  Suicide is also commonly linked to mental illness - another significant cause of premature death in America, known to reduce life expectancy by over 25 years.

If you have questions or suggestions about this column, or would like to receive an email notifying you when new Our Health Policy Matters columns are published, email gionfriddopaul@gmail.com.

Comments

  1. What a great article... very good read.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I just wanted to let you know how ridiculous the plot/graph in this article is. First of all, it's nearly impossible to read accurately. Secondly, there is not a third dimension to the data, so why is the graph in 3-D? And finally, by starting the y-axis at 280 pounds instead of 0 it effectively looks like the 2011 Patriots and Chargers offensive lines had an average weight three-times that of the 1994 Chargers.

    Just a ridiculous lack of professionalism.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sorry you had so much trouble with the chart scale, Zack, but it looks like you eventually figured it out. Hopefully, most people will understand the chart's relationship to the column. The Chargers are dying young for many of the same reasons many other people die young today (including complications from obesity). The fact that today's players are starting off significantly heavier (something that would not have been clear, given space constraints, if the chart scale began at zero) may put them at even greater risk of dying young in the future, whether or not the football head injury problem is solved.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

For the Health of Our Community, Can We Plan More in Advance?

Mayor Florsheim has proposed a budget with a 2.7 mill increase for the coming fiscal year. This will mean an increase in taxes of approximately $500 per year for a home with a market value (not an assessed value) of $250,000, with larger increases for many homes in our city. While I appreciate the time and effort that went into his budget calculation, like many people I don’t believe that this is a sustainable increase on top of the increases of the past few years. What I appreciate even more is that the Mayor has invited members of the public to work together to offer their own perspective and suggestions to the City Council. In the past few weeks, I have offered several short-term suggestions, including a job freeze, a search for an alternative health insurance provider, and greater advocacy at the state level for fairer PILOT funding for Middletown. As an example, the Mayor’s budget proposes $77,800 for a Grantwriter versus zero from the Finance Department. Maybe we wait on that? ...

Veterans and Mental Illness

On a sultry June morning in our national’s capital last Friday, I visited the Vietnam Veterans Memorial .   Scores of people moved silently along the Wall, viewing the names of the men and women who died in that war.   Some stopped and took pictures.   One group of men about my age surrounded one name for a photo.   Two young women posed in front of another, perhaps a grandfather or great uncle they never got to meet. It is always an incredibly moving experience to visit the Wall.   It treats each of the people it memorializes with respect. There is no rank among those honored.   Officer or enlisted, rich or poor, each is given equal space and weight. It is a form of acknowledgement and respect for which many veterans still fight. Brave Vietnam veterans returned from Southeast Asia to educate our nation about the effects of war and violence. I didn’t know anything about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder when I entered the Connecticut Legislature in the...

Kamala Harris's Very Good Medicare Home Health Care Plan

My wife Pam and I bought private long term care insurance about twenty years ago. It’s a pretty good deal. For about $100 per month, we will someday – when we need it – be eligible for up to $200 a day toward either home health care or nursing home care. Add it up – it could save us hundreds of thousands of dollars as we age. I’ve been a big supporter of long-term care insurance since I was a Connecticut State Legislator in the 1980s. But to be honest, it’s never quite gotten the traction it should have. One of the reasons is that when people are young and healthy, they aren’t thinking about what their long-term care needs might be thirty or forty years down the road. But that’s when premiums would be most affordable. The bigger problem is that it’s really hard for insurers to predict the costs of long-term care that far in advance, too. The costs of care often far exceed those that are estimated way in advance. As a result, the policies that Pam and I have aren’t even offered anymore...