Did gridiron collisions slam into Randy Casey's life?

Sue Casey suspects husband's decline linked to head injuries he suffered while playing football.

Even if you are an ardent sports fan, you've likely never heard the name.

Randy Casey was a pretty good two-way lineman at George Fox College (now university) in the late 1960s, a 6-6, 260-pound behemoth from Portland who earned All-District honors as a college junior in 1967.

After graduating from the Newberg school, he played three preseason games with the Dallas Cowboys before getting injured. His stint with the Cowboys was short, but important to him as evidenced by a framed display of mementos, including a local newspaper clipping about the signing and Randy's NFL contract, that his wife, Sue, keeps.

His football days over, Casey settled into a long career driving a tanker for Mobil Oil while living in Milwaukie. He died in 2014 from the effects of a brain hemorrhage after a fall at home. He was 66.

Sue Casey suspects her husband's brain was damaged before the fall. Randy told her he thought he suffered eight to 10 concussions during his time playing football, which started during his senior year at Grant High School.

Studies of brain trauma and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in sports indicate her hunch could be true.

Much attention has been given to the autopsies and postmortem tests that confirmed NFL players such as Junior Seau, John Mackey, Mike Webster, Dave Duerson, Bubba Smith and Ken Stabler had brains that showed clear signs of CTE at the end of their lives.

But the same is true for some players who didn't advance beyond the college level and, to a lesser extent, those who didn't play past high school ball. Although their stories typically don't make headlines, they — and their families — are left wondering about how all those collisions on the gridiron impacted the rest of their lives.

'I know something's wrong'

It's the violent encounters in the open field that tend to make football highlight reels. But research shows that the players who man the line positions, as Randy Casey did, have cranial contact on nearly every play. Casey, whose size dwarfed most of those around him in his era, welcomed that part of the game.

"He said he was a very mean guy on the football field," says Sue Casey, who married Randy after his college days and never saw him on the gridiron. "He wanted to kill people. Nobody wanted to play against him in practice."

She says he told her that when he got "dinged" from blows at George Fox, coaches or medical staffers treated him with smelling salts. "'Then I'd just go back in and play,'" she recalls him saying.

Sue Casey says Randy also developed epilepsy at about age 21, but had only one seizure during their marriage. While there is a clear link between brain injuries and seizures, Canadian researchers earlier this year found that people with concussions were not more likely to develop epilepsy.

Regardless of the cause, Sue Casey says that over the course of their marriage, her husband's behavior changed. He exhibited cognitive issues that worried his wife. In the latter years, she says, "Randy wasn't the same person I married. It was gradual. He was depressed. At one time he told me, 'I know something is wrong, but I don't know what it is.'"

Randy's mother and her three sisters all suffered from Alzheimer's disease; he thought he was getting it, too.

"The symptoms were similar," Sue says, "but I started doing research and I saw the articles about CTE and I thought, 'That's it.'"

Sue says at about age 55, Randy had a CAT scan done because of the epilepsy. "It showed his brain was starting to atrophy," she says.

Mood swings

Through most of his adult life, Randy had been a "happy-go-lucky guy," Sue says.

"Toward the end, he was depressed. He got quieter and quieter. I never knew who I was coming home to — Jekyll or Hyde. His mood could change at the turn of a dime. He got to be very suspicious — I would say paranoid. I felt like I was the enemy. He would get really upset if you didn't agree with him.

"I'd bring it up about how he had changed or something I noticed, and he humiliated me in front of our kids to the point where you never said anything. You were too afraid of what would happen."

At one point, she says, Randy became suicidal. Two or three years before his death, he revealed his thoughts to Sue. The Caseys had a swimming pool at their home.

"I was going to go to the edge (of the pool) and shoot myself there," Randy told his wife. "That way there wouldn't be a mess."

Randy weighed the potential impact on their three children — sons Jeff and George and daughter Laurie — and chose not to take his life.

"Randy was a determined and strong-minded man," Sue says. "If he made up his mind not to do something, he didn't do it. He didn't really talk about suicide much after that. But it had been building up to it."

Sue compares her husband's mental deterioration with the swing of a pendulum that was losing steam.

"It would go out and come back, but it wouldn't go all the way to where the change had started," she says. "A little more would be gone each time it came back."

A hint, but no proof

The year before Randy died, he had heart surgery and was put on a blood thinner. The following year, he tripped and fell in the Caseys' living room and hit his head, causing a brain bleed that resulted in his death.

Pathologists examined Randy's brain but said it was badly damaged from all the blood.

"There was a blood clot the size of a fist in the middle of the brain," Sue says. "I authorized the hospital to send the pathology report and the slides to Boston University. (Experts there) said his brain was too far gone to give a definite diagnosis. From all of the symptoms and the way he acted, they said they thought he had CTE, but they couldn't say conclusively what it was because of not being able to test the tissue."

It could be that Randy's brain was under the effects of dementia, or Alzheimer's, toward the end of his life. Perhaps epilepsy had something to do with his cognitive issues.

Sue's suspicions, though, are that her husband did have CTE, and it affected his behavior. In a sad way, she is heartened by that belief.

"It has helped me a great deal to learn more about CTE," she says. "After reading all the reports about the football players and the things the families have said about them, I thought, 'Well, that's Randy.'

"I can go back and look at the progression of the disease and know it had nothing to do with me. It was the disease, not something I or anybody else has done. It has given me a lot of comfort to realize it wasn't Randy there in the latter years."

There is increasing concern about former athletes dealing with the effects of brain trauma. The Caseys' story shows there are repercussions for family members, as well.

"Randy was the love of my life," Sue Casey says. "I loved him with my whole being. But at the end, I didn't like him. It's hard to explain or understand, unless you lived it."

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