Health and safety to be considered in all future playing rule changes

The Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports urged sport and playing rules committees to carefully consider the safety consequences of proposed playing rules

Posted on 6/17/14 8:57 AM

Many playing rule changes have the potential to impact student-athlete health and safety, even if they’re proposed for entirely different reasons. At a June 5-7 meeting in Salt Lake City, the Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports called for playing rules and sport committees to evaluate the health and safety implications of every rule change and to involve the competitive safeguards committee and Sport Science Institute whenever such potential exists.

Occasionally, rules are changed primarily to address a health and safety risk. More often, though, a rule is changed in order to ensure fairness or to adapt to changes in playing styles or equipment in a given sport. Though those rules aren’t changed to address a health and safety concern, the committee noted that they can still have a health and safety impact.

A prime example is a recent proposal from the Men’s and Women’s Ice Hockey Committee that would require schools to add 10-inch pegs to their rinks that goals would rest upon in order to keep them more firmly anchored in place. The committee wanted to add the pegs so that goalies can’t intentionally bump the goal off of its spot in order to stop play and negate an offensive threat. The committee’s discussion took place amid the context of competitive fairness, but there are potential health and safety implications of the goal being more difficult to move – players careening into a goal sitting on those pegs could, potentially, be at greater risk.  

So the competitive safeguards committee emerged from its meeting with a statement calling for all discussions of playing rule changes to include an evaluation of health and safety implications, even if the rule change, such as the hockey recommendation, wasn’t proposed for reasons related to health and safety. The committee asked that the NCAA Sport Science Institute and playing rules staffs develop a collaborative formal review process and report their progress at the committee’s December meeting.

“We are working with the Playing Rules Oversight Panel to improve the communication strategies between the panel, rules committees and the competitive safeguards committee,” said committee chair and Harvard head athletic trainer Brant Berkstresser. “This would also include medical safeguards committee communication with a rules committee about a current rule we may be studying from a health and safety standpoint.”

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