Major League Baseball
Fog finally lifts for Roberts
Major League Baseball

Fog finally lifts for Roberts

Published Mar. 25, 2013 1:00 a.m. ET

People questioned him. People in the game, people with the Orioles, even people in the media privately wondered what the heck was wrong with Brian Roberts.

How come the second baseman was taking so long to recover from post-concussion symptoms? When was he going to play again? Did he even want to play anymore?

Roberts heard the whispers. And for 13 months as he struggled to get well, he could do nothing about them.

“It’s terrible. You don’t have a cast on. You didn’t have surgery. Even in your darkest moments sometimes, people can look at you and think you’re fine,” Roberts says.

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Roberts, 35, finally is fine now, enjoying an excellent spring with the Orioles. He made a triumphant return from post-concussion symptoms last June 12, but his comeback was interrupted three weeks later when he suffered a season-ending torn labrum in his right hip. That injury required surgery, as did a sports hernia in December.

In between the two operations – sometime last autumn, more than two years after his initial concussion and about a year-and-a-half after his second – Robert says he finally began to feel “completely normal,” no longer burdened by his concussions.

Every day, it seems, we become more knowledgeable about the impact of concussions in sports. Roberts’ case reinforces that we still have much to learn – and that it is dangerous for any of us to rush to judgment.

Baseball adopted new protocols for managing concussions before the 2011 season, including the creation of a seven-day disabled list. Justin Morneau, Jason Bay and Denard Span are among the other players who have dealt with concussions in recent years.

“I had so many people say, ‘You looked like you were looking right through me,’” Roberts says. “From the outside looking in, the brain is such a complicated thing, people just don’t understand. I don’t blame them for that. There are a lot of things in life, when you look from the outside, you don’t understand.

“But when people are questioning whether you want to play the game, that’s really hard. It’s hard enough going through it with support. It’s even worse going through it with people questioning you.”

Roberts’ wife, Diana, says that she, too, heard the whispers about Brian – and that she, too, understood the source of people’s doubts. Initially, she and Brian didn’t know much about concussions, either.

But Diana knew what she saw – her once-vibrant husband, the Orioles’ energetic leadoff man, lying on a couch in the dark for “months and months,” unable to function normally, much less play baseball.

“If you were in our home every day,” Diana says, “you definitely would not have doubted him.”

And if you were Dr. Michael “Micky” Collins, director of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Sports Concussion Program, you would have seen that the skeptics could not have been more wrong.

Collins, who began treating Roberts in the middle of the 2011 season, says that the two-time All-Star wanted to play so badly, he put too much stress on himself, adding to the difficulty of his recovery.

“I’ve never met someone who wanted to play more,” Collins says. “He went through a long, windy, arduous road.”


Roberts suffered his first concussion on Sept. 27, 2010, when he hit himself in the helmet with his bat out of frustration. He suffered his second on May 16, 2011, diving headfirst into first base to beat a throw.

At first, as the symptoms took hold, his goal was simply to get healthy.

“Most of the days, I wasn’t even sure if it was ever going to go away,” Roberts says. “Forget baseball. I wasn’t even thinking about baseball. I was just thinking about the fact that I wanted to be the person that my wife knew when she married me, the person I had been.”

As it turned out, even getting to that point was a struggle. Brian, Diana says, “was having a hard time just living everyday life.”

Baseball? If Brian could get back to a normal day-to-day existence, Diana reasoned, then he could get back to playing baseball.

Brian wasn’t so sure.

He says he thought about quitting the game on certain days – many days, in fact. But he would ask himself, would he be walking away because he had lost his desire to play? Or would he be walking away because he didn’t think he would be healthy again?

“If it had come to the point where I just didn’t have the desire to get healthy anymore, I would have shut it down,” Roberts says. “But praying about it, talking to my wife and other people I trusted, I didn’t feel like I was being called away from the game.”

Still, all concussions are different, and people react to them in different ways. Roberts’ concussion was particularly trying for a baseball player. It disrupted his vestibular system, Collins says, the system that “coordinates space, motion, movement – sensory integration.”

“For a baseball player to make it back, that system has to be perfect,” Collins says. “You have to be able to integrate a lot of information – reaction time, visual awareness, all of the things that make a baseball player at that level compete at a high level involve that system.

“Every step we took was getting that system to re-integrate. Just to get back on the field with a bunch of people moving around him, the crowd in the stadium, taking groundballs and flyballs, stepping in the box and hitting 95-mph fastballs . . . he would take these painstaking steps that would allow him to re-integrate.”

It was not a smooth or rapid process.

Collins described Roberts’ primary symptom as “fogginess,” adding, “I know it sounds very cryptic.” To a normal person, walking through a crowded place, be it a hallway, mall or ballpark, is no problem. But Roberts, Collins says, would feel, “foggy,” in such situations, “kind of one step behind, sort of outside himself, slow.” He would suffer headaches, dizziness, vision problems. Merely moving his eyes would cause him stress.

Even when Roberts resumed baseball activities, he needed to take special precautions. Collins recalls consulting with the Orioles’ training staff, telling them to limit the number of people on the field when Roberts performed drills. Not even re-acclimating to a batting cage came naturally.

Roberts’ problems weren’t just physical, either.

“Physiologically, it can kick off emotional stuff,” Collins says. “The same neuro-chemicals that kind of feed the (vestibular) system feed the emotional circuitry in the brain.

“He’d feel down. He’d feel anxious. He’d feel crushed from an emotional standpoint. Which, of course, exacerbated all of the physical symptoms he was feeling as well.”

Diana Roberts recalls tapping on her computer, researching Brian’s condition as he lay on the couch. Collins recalls Diana calling him three or four times during periods “when Brian had kind of gone to that darker place.”

“A weaker person would have just hung it up,” Collins says.


So here is Roberts in the spring of ’13, recovered from his concussions, recovered from his recent hip and sports-hernia surgeries, seemingly reborn.

Over the past three seasons, Roberts has played in only 115 of the Orioles’ 486 games, or 23.7 percent. But this spring, he’s batting .357 with a .937 OPS in 46 plate appearances, and has stolen three bases in four attempts.

“He looks just like I remember him,” Orioles outfielder Nate McLouth says. “He would be as good as any off-season addition you could make.”

But can Roberts be the same player he once was?

He batted only .182 with a .415 OPS in the 17 games he played last season between returning from his concussion and injuring his hip. But the feeling now, he says, is different.

For one thing, Roberts is going through a full spring of preparation. Even more important, he says he turned a corner in October or November, and is more completely recovered from his concussions than when he rejoined the Orioles last June.

“I can remember telling my wife, I wake up in the morning and I feel like a normal person again,” Roberts says. “For the first time in years, I don’t think about, what am I going to feel like in the morning when I wake up? It was definitely a serious weight lifted.”

Roberts says the next step is to get back to playing the game instinctively, something that requires repetition. But that’s simple stuff - baseball. He remains mindful of the big picture, calling it a “a huge blessing” just to be back on the field. Diana, watching from the stands, says the feeling is “indescribable.”

“When your husband comes back from stuff like this, those games are sweeter,” she says. “You don’t take anything for granted.”

Collins speaks even more excitedly about Roberts’ future, even though it might adversely affect his favorite team, the Red Sox.

“I’m very confident that Brian put this behind him,” Collins says. “I can’t wait to see what that guy does this year.

“I think he’s healthy. I think he’s hungry. I think his brain is working perfectly well. I think he’s going to have a great season, knock on wood that no other injuries occur.”

A few days ago, Orioles manager Buck Showalter met with reporters before Roberts played his first road game of the spring in Fort Myers, Fl., and spoke with great empathy about all that his second baseman has endured.

Showalter talked about how so much is still unknown about concussions, about how concussions cannot all be put in the same category, about the times last season when he worried Roberts might never be a healthy human being again, much less a healthy player.

Even the most enlightened manager might not have spoken with the same compassion in Sept. 2011, when Roberts suffered his first concussion.

“If anyone deserves to be healthy, it’s Brian,” Showalter said.

Everyone in the room nodded. Everyone understood.

Those questions from the past, they’ve all been answered.

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