In a powerful new PSA, Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre is urging parents not to let children under 14 play tackle football to reduce the risk of developing chronic traumatic encephalopathy, the progressive and fatal brain disease referred to as CTE.


What You Need To Know

  • Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre urged parents in a new PSA not to let children under 14 play tackle football to reduce the risk of developing CTE

  • Favre unveiled the new PSA alongside the Concussion Legacy Foundation, an organization "which aims to “support athletes, Veterans, and all affected by concussions and CTE"

  • The former Green Bay Packers great told NBC’s “Today” that he is experiencing memory loss, though he is not sure if he has CTE

  • The PSA comes on the heels of the release of a new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) comparing youth tackle and flag football, which said that tackle athletes were 15 times more likely to have a head impact during a practice or game

“Having kids play before high school is just not worth the risk,” the three-time NFL MVP and Super Bowl champion said in a statement. “CTE is a terrible disease, and we need to do everything we can to prevent it for the next generation of football players.”

Favre unveiled the new PSA alongside the Concussion Legacy Foundation, an organization co-founded by former WWE wrestler Chris Nowinski which aims to “support athletes, Veterans, and all affected by concussions and CTE; achieve smarter sports and safer athletes through education and innovation; and to End CTE through prevention and research.”

“A football player’s odds of developing CTE may be most determined by their parents, specifically what age the child is allowed to start playing tackle football,” Nowinski said in a statement. “It’s time to accept that CTE is not just a risk for professional and college football players, but also for high school players, and the best way to prevent CTE among football players is to delay the introduction of tackle football."

The former Green Bay Packers great told NBC’s “Today” that he is experiencing memory loss, though he is not sure if he has CTE.

"I don't know what normal feels like. Do I have CTE? I really don't know," Favre said. “Concussions are a very, very serious thing and we're just scraping the surface of how severe they are.”

“[There is] no telling how many concussions I've had, and what are the repercussions of that, there's no answer,” Favre told “Today." 

“I wasn't the best student, but I still can remember certain things that you would go, 'Why would you even remember that?’” the former New York Jets quarterback asked. “But I can't remember someone that I played six years with in Green Bay ... but the face looks familiar. Those type of issues that make me wonder."

The PSA comes on the heels of the release of a new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) comparing youth tackle and flag football, which said that tackle athletes were 15 times more likely to have a head impact during a practice or game.

Favre told "Today" that he hasn't encouraged his grandsons to play football.

"If they choose to play I will support them, but I 'm not going to encourage them in any way to play. That surprises a lot of people, but I'm just fearful of what concussions can do," he said. "And it only takes one. Maybe I have had a thousand ... It's just too risky. I'm not going to encourage them to play until there's a treatment."

"The best way to avoid concussions is not to play at all, and of course that's not going to happen," he added.