Jury: NCAA not to blame in ex-USC football player Matthew Gee's death

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Jury: NCAA not to blame in ex-USC football player Matthew Gee's death
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A Los Angeles jury has rejected a lawsuit seeking $55 million by the widow of a former USC football player who said the NCAA failed to protect him from repeated head trauma that led to his death.

LOS ANGELES – In a verdict that could affect countless claims by athletes who sue sports organizations for head injuries, a Los Angeles jury on Tuesday rejected a lawsuit seeking $55 million by the widow of a former USC football player who said the NCAA failed to protect him from repeated head trauma that led to his death.

Judge Terry Green told jurors in Los Angeles Superior Court they “made history” in the first case of its kind. Gabe Feldman, a sports law professor at Tulane University, said proving Gee died specifically from invisible injuries suffered at USC – and not something that occurred before or after his college career – was always going to be a challenge, especially when he had so many other health problems.

“We feel deep sympathy for the Gee family right off the bat,” said NCAA attorney Will Stute. “But we feel like this verdict is a vindication of the position we’ve taken in all these cases, which is the science and medicine in Matthew Gee’s circumstance did not support causation.” The NCAA said the case hinged on what it knew at the time Gee played, from 1988-92, and not about CTE, which was first discovered in the brain of a deceased NFL player in 2005.

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