Metatarsals and magic sponges: English football and the development of sports medicine (original) (raw)

Mixing Business with Leisure? The Football Club Doctor, Sports Medicine and the Voluntary Tradition

The football club doctor has traditionally been a role fulfilled by a local general practitioner on a casual basis over a long period. Since the 1990s, due to football’s accelerated commercialization, a number of clubs have appointed full-time doctors with specialist sports medicine knowledge. This article explores the origins and development of this role in its wider social context since the late nineteenth century and argues that initially club doctors were part of a voluntary tradition. In addition, the development of the role has reflected the nature of sports medicine in Britain and more particularly football, as well as highlighting the changing demands and pressures of the job in light of growing commercial demands.

The rise and fall of the magic sponge: Medicine and the transformation of the football trainer

Social History of Medicine, 23 (2), pp. 261-279. , 2010

"Sports medicine has been largely neglected by historians. This article examines the devel- opment of the role of the football trainer from 1885 to 1992, placing it in the wider context of the shifting relationship between orthodox and unorthodox medicine. It is underpinned by two interde- pendent arguments. First, it can be argued that the origins of football trainers can be traced to unorthodox alternative medicine; their role developed largely outside a regulatory framework imposed by the medical profession despite attempts to marginalise irregular healers and practitioners of alternative medicine. Secondly, it is claimed that the treatments, practices and working conditions of trainers were shaped by the sub-culture of professional football, and were an amalgam of the uneven adoption of contemporary biomedical principles and scientific developments, especially in physiotherapy, and the persistence of traditional methods. "

Medicine, Sport and the Body: A Historical Perspective - Chapter 2: This Sporting Life

In 1897 American college football was experiencing one of the earliest of its episodic crises due to a growing death toll of players. The whole issue was sensationalized in the newspapers as part of a circulation war. On 14 November one page of the New York Journal and Advertiser gave graphic details, including illustrations of the injuries -a broken backbone; concussion to the brain; and a fractured skull -sustained during games by three players who had died.

Towards a Discernable History of Sports Medicine

Canadian Bulletin of Medical History/Bulletin …, 2011

Abstract. Elite sport and the structures that support it such as sports medicine are increasingly at the forefront of public consciousness, especially when the Olympic Games come to town, or soccer players, their bodies fine-tuned by an ever growing array of ...

Medicine, Sport and the Body: A Historical Perspective - Chapter 3: Sports Medicine: Pioneers and Specialization

Sport mattered to doctors more than just in a medical sense. When he was Dean of St. Mary's medical school, Lord Moran (Charles Wilson) was well known for recruiting sportsmen. It was claimed that in the middle of interviews with prospective medical students Moran would bend down below his desk and retrieve a rugby ball, which he then threw at the interviewee. If the interviewee caught the ball he was admitted; if he threw it back he earned a scholarship. For Moran, who had been decorated as a medical officer in World War One and served as Churchill's doctor, sport taught character and made for good doctors.

Where biomedicalisation and magic meet: Therapeutic innovations of elite sports injury in British professional football and cycling

Social science & medicine (1982), 2017

Injury is a conspicuous feature of the practice and public spectacle of contemporary elite sports. The paper argues that the 'biomedicalisation' thesis (medico-industrial nexus, techno-scientific drivers, medical optimisation, biologisation, the rise of evidence and health surveillance) goes some way to capturing the use in elite sports injury of some highly specialised mainstream therapies and some highly maverick biological therapies, which are described. Nevertheless, these main strands of biomedicalisation do not capture the full range of these phenomena in the contexts of sports medicine and athletes' practices in accessing innovative, controversial therapies. Drawing on multi-method qualitative research on top-level professional football and cycling in the UK, 2014-2016, we argue that concepts of 'magic' and faith-based healing, mediated by notions of networking behaviour and referral systems, furnish a fuller explanation. We touch on the concept of 'me...