Gary Ablett Sr takes Supreme Court action against the AFL

Gary Ablett Sr takes Supreme Court action against the AFL

Football icon Gary Ablett Sr is suing the AFL and his former golf equipment, Geelong and Hawthorn.

The Cats legend has taken motion by the Supreme Court claiming the league and his former groups failed to guard him from the intense mind harm he now suffers.

The 61-year-old final month opened up on the current prognosis and the private hell he continues to undergo on account of the mind accidents suffered throughout his 248-game profession.

The man popularly known as “God” by Geelong supporters revealed he was concussed “8-10 times” earlier than his retirement in 1996.

Ablett’s lawyer Michel Margalit has now informed Nine Newspapers his accidents are “clearly as a result of physical trauma caused by concussion”.

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Margalit says Ablett is unable to work and can’t pay for his medical payments due to his “degenerative condition”.

“One of the biggest challenges for Gary is he very much is left without the means and ability to fund the care he now requires, given his condition,” Margalit stated.

“This is really why he’s been forced, in a sense, to bring the claim; to be able to afford both the medical expenses and medical care he requires … and those costs will only continue to increase.

“He really struggles on a daily basis, and it is very typical symptomatology you see from players, or athletes, who suffer these concussion-related injuries around the world.

“There is everything from memory loss to being unable to work and many other symptoms.”

Ablett’s authorized workforce will reportedly argue it was “reasonably foreseeable” for the AFL, Hawks and Cats that he was “vulnerable to the injury of concussion caused by head strikes while playing AFL football”.

Ablett informed the Herald Sun in March his situation has deteriorated on account of the mind harm and he now has migraines, insomnia, blurred imaginative and prescient, vital reminiscence loss, nervousness, fatigue and extreme despair.

His fears concerning the situation of his mind have been confirmed when he underwent an MEG scan in November.

He says the scan confirmed vital structural and practical mind harm

“I began getting headaches and pressure in the top of my skull around 2010, initially a few days a week,” Ablett snr informed the Herald Sun.

“It then led to depression, anxiety and extreme fatigue. Under the advice of doctors, I then had numerous scans to try and find the cause of headaches and skull pressure.

“From 2015 onwards, and almost every day, there were signs that things had changed, then about 12 months ago I started getting symptoms that alarmed me to the point where I contacted Peter Jess), whom I’m aware has been a concussion advocate for a number of past players.”

Ablett stated he now sees a psychiatrist each month and is on treatment to handle his complications and temper.

His revelations come after he was knocked again by the Australian Football League Players Association when requesting to have a few of his medical bills coated.

He says he didn’t hear again from the AFLPA after informing the affiliation he has ben unable to work in current months.

His case is one other potential authorized grenade the AFL is juggling.

The AFL was rocked earlier this yr when a number of class motion lawsuits have been filed towards the league with former footballers searching for compensation for mind accidents they suffered throughout their careers.

Former Western Bulldogs premiership star Liam Picken was among the many former gamers to have taken motion towards the AFL by the Supreme Court of Victoria. His go well with can be searching for compensation from his former membership and membership docs over concussions he suffered by his profession.

Source: www.news.com.au