APNewsBreak: Illinois youth tackle football ban dead for now

State Rep. Carol Sente, D-Vernon Hills, the sponsor of a proposal to ban Illinois children younger than 12 from playing tackle football speaks to The Associated Press Wednesday, April 18, 2018, in Springfield, Ill. Sente said the measure lacks the votes to pass this session. She said she will focus on educating people about the dangers of “repeated … hits to the youth brain.” (AP Photo/John O’Connor)

In this March 1, 2018, file photo, Chris Borland, a former NFL linebacker and Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year for the University of Wisconsin, testifies before a Illinois House Mental Health Committee hearing in Springfield, Ill., on House Bill 4341, which would ban tackle football for kids under 12 years of age. Borland was illustrating how repetitive sub-concussive hits that begin when children play impact sports can be as dangerous as a single hit that results in a concussion. Democratic state Rep. Carol Sente, third from right, the sponsor of the proposal told The Associated Press Wednesday, April 18, 2018, the measure lacks the votes to pass this session. (Rich Saal//The State Journal-Register via AP, File)

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — The sponsor of a proposal to ban Illinois children younger than 12 from playing tackle football told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the measure aimed at delaying the effects of helmet-banging head trauma lacks the votes to pass this session.

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