While sports teams, leagues, conferences, colleges, and even coaches and other staff have been put in the hot seat over concussion-gate, the well known helmet maker Riddell is being brought into the fray by college and high school football players. While the NFL players’ lawsuit against the helmet maker started in the middle of last year and has gone nowhere yet, a class-action was filed last month against the same helmet maker on behalf of former high school and college players.
The new lawsuit contains many of the same allegations as the NFL players’ suit regarding the helmet company’s safety claims, as well as allegations that the manufacturer failed to warn players about the dangers of repeated concussions, which their helmets could not prevent. It is alleged that Riddell was aware that its marketing and advertising were misleading, and that they misrepresented the safety of their helmets.
Riddell was the official helmet of the NFL for nearly 25 years, from 1989 to 2014. During that time, Riddell is alleged to have made claims about how their helmets protect against concussions, despite not having actual scientific evidence to back up those claims. How this is even possible is baffling. But given the recent allegations, maybe it shouldn’t be seeing as how the newest class action complaint alleges that the manufacturer published and funded a scientific study that asserted that their helmets were safer than those made by competitors.
However, while liability may seem certain against Riddell after the recent concussion settlements, in 2014, the manufacturer escaped liability after a high school football player suffered a brain injury while wearing a Riddell helmet. The Los Angeles court found the helmet maker was not responsible for the injury caused by a helmet on helmet hit.
Related Resources:
- NCAA and Big 12 Sued for College Football Concussions (FindLaw’s Tarnished Twenty)
- Supreme Court Declines to Hear Appeal of $1B NFL Concussion Settlement (FindLaw’s Tarnished Twenty)
- NCAA Facing 43 Concussion Lawsuits (FindLaw’s Tarnished Twenty)
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