Heading guidelines for training in the professional and adult game are set to be in place for the start of next season, the Premier League has announced.
Campaigners such as Dawn Astle and Chris Sutton have long called for a reduction in the amount of heading done in training at senior level, as a means to limit the risk to players of long-term brain injury.
A working group made up of representatives from the Football Association, the Premier League, the EFL, the Women’s Super League, the Professional Footballers’ Association and the League Managers Association is responsible for drawing up the guidelines, and a statement from the English top flight on Friday confirmed they “are expected to be implemented ahead of the 2021-22 season”.
The Premier League is to begin two studies to identify the forces involved in heading footballs
The outcome of these studies will inform guidelines for heading in training at professional and adult football levels
Find out more about the studies: https://t.co/BgSqXlfrl6 pic.twitter.com/uHtnRXjvPZ— Premier League (@premierleague) March 26, 2021
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The Premier League announced on Friday the launch of two studies to measure the impact of different types of heading.
One will involve men’s youth team and senior women’s team players at Manchester City and Liverpool wearing mouthpieces in training which relay real-time data to touchline analysts.
The outcome of the research will inform the working group’s decision-making on heading guidelines.
Guidance on the restriction of heading for under-18s football has been in place since February last year.
The mouthpiece project is being run using Sports & Wellbeing Analytics’ PROTECHT device, and will involve the Liverpool under-23s men’s team, under-18 men’s team and senior women’s team, plus Manchester City’s under-18s men’s team and senior women’s team.
Crucially, the study will also give insight into any differences between men and women in terms of heading impact, an area where there has been very little research in the past.
The second project will involve Second Spectrum, the Premier League’s tracking and analytics provider. It will compare match-tracking data from the 2019-20 season with results from the mouthguard study.