Return-to-Play Protocol for Football Players
Football carries the highest concussion risk of any sport. Because contact is continuous and unavoidable, return-to-play decisions require careful progression and medical clearance before a player returns to full contact practice.
Why football is higher-risk
Football players experience more subconcussive impacts (sub-injury hits) than athletes in other sports, and the collision-based nature of play means vulnerable positions (linemen, running backs, defensive backs) face repeated head contact. This cumulative exposure increases both acute concussion risk and long-term repetitive impact concerns.
Immediate return to full-contact practice after concussion is never safe. Even asymptomatic players remain neurologically vulnerable during the critical recovery window.
The six-stage return-to-play protocol for football
The internationally endorsed graduated RTP protocol applies to football players, with attention to the sport's specific demands:
- Symptom-limited activity. Rest, light walking, non-impact exercise. No helmet or equipment. Minimum 24 hours symptom-free.
- Light aerobic exercise. Stationary bike, running at <70% max heart rate. Still no helmet, no ball contact. Another 24 hours asymptomatic.
- Sport-specific drills. Helmet on, light footwork, catching drills, route running without contact. Running plays only. No tackling, no blocking. 24 hours without symptom recurrence.
- Non-contact practice drills. Full practice intensity (running, catching, route running, footwork), helmets and pads on, but no live tackling or blocking. Medical staff present. 24 hours symptom-free before moving forward.
- Full-contact practice. After medical clearance, unrestricted full-contact practice. Coaches assess position-specific readiness (linemen reintroduced to blocking, etc.).
- Return to game competition. Medical clearance required. Begin with reduced snaps and workload if possible; increase to full role as tolerance improves.
Key principles for football players
- 24-hour minimum between stages. Most football players need 7–14 days total; some take longer.
- Symptom-gated progression. Any symptom recurrence (headache, dizziness, confusion, sensitivity to light) resets the clock to the last symptom-free level.
- Medical clearance before Stage 5. Not a coach, parent, or trainer decision — a qualified clinician (physician, PA, NP with concussion training, or athletic trainer working under physician oversight) must authorize full-contact practice.
- Position-specific readiness. Linemen must tolerate blocking contact; defensive backs must be cleared for high-speed collision. This may require an extra day or two of drill work.
- Younger players go slower. High school and youth football players recover more slowly than college and pro athletes. Never rush their timeline.
Football concussion assessment and clearance
Need expert evaluation for return-to-play clearance? Dr. Patel provides comprehensive concussion assessment, position-specific readiness evaluation, and medical clearance for individual players and teams.
Common mistakes in football RTP
- Skipping stages. "He looks fine, put him back in." Asymptomatic does not equal recovered.
- Returning to full contact too early. Players cleared for non-contact drills are not cleared for full-contact practice until medical sign-off.
- Ignoring position-specific demands. A safety might tolerate aerobic exercise but not be ready for the blocking and collision demands of a lineman's role.
- Restarting contact without rest. If a player shows symptoms during Stage 4, you go back to Stage 2 or 3 — not all the way to the beginning, but you lose progress.
- Playing through persistent symptoms. If a player has lingering symptoms (headache, brain fog, fatigue) after 14 days, refer to a specialist before advancing the protocol.
What "ready to play" really means
Medical clearance for return to competition means:
- No symptoms at rest
- No symptoms during progressively intense activity
- Normal cognitive function (no confusion, memory loss, or concentration problems)
- Physician sign-off that the risk of a second injury during continued play is acceptably low
- Understanding by athlete, parents, and coaching staff that a second concussion during incomplete recovery is dangerous
Schedule a concussion evaluation
For individual athlete evaluations: Book through Neura Health. For team-based sideline support: Discuss a team neurologist partnership with Dr. Patel.
Return-to-Play Protocols by Sport
The fundamental return-to-play protocol is the same across sports, but each sport has unique demands and position-specific considerations. Explore protocols for other sports:
References & further reading
- Patricios JS, et al. Consensus statement on concussion in sport: the 6th International Conference on Concussion in Sport — Amsterdam 2022. bjsm.bmj.com
- American Medical Society for Sports Medicine. Return to Play Guidelines for Concussion in Athletes. amssm.org
- CDC HEADS UP - Football. cdc.gov/heads-up