Steve McMichael’s Family Claims Stage 3 CTE—No Proof Yet Revealed

Steve McMichael’s family claims he had stage 3 CTE, but with no proof released, is this a genuine diagnosis or a controversial move against the NFL?

Steve McMichael’s Alleged Stage 3 CTE: A Question of Proof or a Cheap Shot at the NFL?

Steve McMichael was a warrior in the trenches—a brutal force on the 1985 Chicago Bears defense that terrorized offenses across the league. But now, nearly a year after his death from ALS complications, his family’s claim that he suffered from stage 3 Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) is raising eyebrows—and rightfully so. Where’s the hard evidence? This sudden posthumous CTE announcement feels less like a medical truth and more like a desperation play, muddying the waters around a legend whose final battle was already well documented.

  • NFL Career: 1979-1991, cornerstone of the Bears’ legendary ’85 Super Bowl team.
  • Date of Death: April 23, 2025, from ALS-related complications.
  • ALS Diagnosis: Publicly known since 2021, overshadowed any talk of brain trauma.
  • CTE Claim: Announced by family in April 2026—no autopsy report, no neuropathologist names, no medical documents released.
  • NFL Response: Noncommittal, no official statement confirming or denying the claim.

This Smells Like Opportunism, Not Accountability

CTE is a brutal, career-ending reality for too many former NFL players, and the league’s history with brain injuries is a stain it’s still trying to scrub out. But you don’t slap a stage 3 CTE diagnosis on a player posthumously without ironclad proof—especially when that player’s documented medical battle was with ALS, a completely different neurological disease.

Why rush to rebrand McMichael’s death as a CTE case without a shred of public evidence? Is this an attempt to reignite media outrage or pile on legal pressure against the NFL? The timing and lack of transparency make it look like a headline grab, plain and simple. The internet’s forensic digging has turned up zero credible proof. McMichael’s ALS fight was public, brutal, and well-documented. There were no whispers of CTE until now. This isn’t accountability—it’s exploitation.

Salary Cap and Legal Fallout: What This Means for the NFL’s Bottom Line

  • CTE’s Financial Fallout: Past lawsuits linked to CTE have cost the NFL billions and forced teams to restructure contracts and insurance policies.
  • Impact on Player Contracts: A confirmed stage 3 CTE diagnosis posthumously can influence future settlement funds and player health benefits.
  • McMichael’s Playing Style: His aggressive, trench-dominating style fits the profile of players at risk, but ALS remains the confirmed diagnosis—no official CTE diagnosis has been made public.
  • League’s Player Safety Protocols: Despite progress, sub-concussive hits and long-term neurological care remain unresolved challenges.

If McMichael’s case is to be a turning point, it needs transparency. Without it, this “announcement” is just noise, a distraction from the real work the NFL must do on player safety and neurological health.

The Bigger Picture: Separating Fact from Fiction in the NFL’s Brain Injury Crisis

CTE is real. It’s devastating. The NFL’s prior silence and slow response cost lives and livelihoods. But conflating ALS with CTE without clear evidence does nothing but confuse the public and dilute accountability. These are two distinct neurological monsters, each demanding its own attention and resources.

Steve McMichael’s legacy should be defined by his ferocious presence on the field and his courageous fight off it—not by a dubious, unverified medical claim that conveniently surfaces after his passing. The league owes its players and their families hard truths, not headline-chasing speculation.

“Steve was a warrior on the field, but the game took a heavy toll on his brain,” McMichael’s family said. But what brain toll? Without evidence, it’s just words. – Tank “The Trench” Williams

CTE will continue to haunt football’s trenches, but McMichael’s case demands facts—not fiction. The NFL can’t fix what it won’t admit with full clarity. Until then, every new “revelation” without proof is a step backward in the fight for player safety.

So here’s the hard question: when will the NFL and media stop using legends like Steve McMichael as pawns in this ongoing brain injury war? Because until that day comes, player safety remains a broken promise, and the trenches will keep claiming lives in silence.

Photo: Photo by Jeramey Jannene from Milwaukee, WI, United States of America on Openverse (wikimedia) (https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=12792485)


Source: Google News

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Tank 'The Trench' Williams

Hard-hitting NFL and College Football analyst.