THE FAMILY OF Fulham legend and ex-Ireland international Jimmy Conway believe the former starโs dementia is directly linked with his career as a footballer.
In an interview with The Oregonian newspaper, the retired playerโs wife Noeleen said she was โ100% certainโ that her husbandโs decline was caused by heading the ball over the course of over 300 games with Fulham.
Doctors assessing the 70-year-old, who is now based in Portland, Oregon, also feel the illness is related to his former profession, according to US media reports.
โSometimes I look at his eyes and itโs like someone has pulled the shades down,โ Noeleen Conway told the paper. โAnd I think thatโs the hardest part. Weโve been married for 45 years. We worked together. We were in each otherโs pockets 24/7. And he just went away. I suspect it began in his 50s. The declines were there. They are so subtle. Iโd notice some things but you kind of brush them off. And then something else pops up.โ
Conway, who came through the youth system at Stella Marris and started his career at senior level with Bohemians, has been hospitalised with dementia since 2013 and is unable to communicate as a result.
The former midfielder ended his career at Portland Timbers while also having a brief loan spell at Sligo Rovers in addition to scoring three goals in 20 appearances for Ireland between 1966 and 1977.
Part of the Fulham team that were runners-up in the 1975 FA Cup, he is also credited with playing a substantial role in the rise of soccerโs popularity in Oregon, coaching there between 1980 and 2009.
The interview comes days after the family of ex-England international Nobby Stiles spoke to The Independent about a similar illness, which the World Cup winner is suffering from.
Dawn Astle โ whose father, the ex-West Brom footballer Jeff Astle, died from degenerative brain disease at the age of 59 in 2002 โ is due to meet today with chief executive of the Professional Footballersโ Association, Gordon Taylor.
The interview is part of a BBC documentary exploring the possible links between heading the heavy footballs that were customary during the era when Astle and Conway starred.
โWe believe there are many people who have suffered like my dad who we do not know about,โ Astleโs daughter said. โPeople think โOh, these people are in their 70s. They are old.โ But dad was 54. Others have also suffered, years before the usual onset of this kind of illness.โ
The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!
Thatโs a heartbreaking story for players of that era. I wonder is the percentage actually higher than whatโs been reported so far.
Chris Sutton was speaking on 5live over the weekend on how his father has dementia and he use to be a footballer..Chris said he remembers his father heading medicine balls in training Such terrible news for families to get
Sad for JImmy and his family.
A great player remembered by an older generation!