Monday's health and safety news from the world of football:
- The Boston Globe looked at the evidence that coaching NFL football is no health club, talking to former NFL coach Herm Edwards about the rigors of the job after Denver's John Fox and Houston's Gary Kubiak fell ill.
- Former Pittsburgh Steelers coach Bill Cowher talked on CBS Sports about the stress in coaching (video).
- The Star Tribune wrote about University of Minnesota coach Jerry Kill, who returned to the sideline from seizures Saturday.
- Fox Sports reported that former Miami Dolphins wide receiver Mark Duper became the ninth player to be diagnosed with signs of CTE by UCLA researchers.
- The Beaver County Times talked to Pittsburgh Steelers players, who said surviving a concussion is still a badge of honor.
- A report by The Dallas Morning News found that some Texas schools fail to offer catastrophic care for athletes.
- The Kalamazoo Gazette reported that low football numbers have posed a challenge for some Kalamazoo-area high schools
- WTOP-FM looked at a head injury study being conducted by University of Virginia researchers.
- The (Albany, N.Y.) Times Union published a staff editorial that said more attention needs to be paid to concussions.
- The Canadian Press reported on how concussion research in Canada is focusing on the country's soldiers.
-- Bill Bradley, contributing editor