Stated in the “Spartan Hockey Helmets Going Under Microscope" article, “Virginia Tech engineers cut a hockey helmet and a five-star football helmet in half to show the contrast. The hockey helmet contained two thin layers of relatively rigid padding, but the football helmet had three thick layers of soft padding. The greater cushioning inside the football helmet is designed to slow the acceleration of the brain after a strong impact, thus lessening the risk of concussion.” This states that more padding that is located in any type of hockey helmet can lower the risk of a concussion. If improved hockey helmets have many, thick layers of padding, but the padding is relatively soft, the helmet would not hurt a person’s head as much when they are giving, or experiencing a check, or fakking into the boards or onto the ice. I understand that new and improved hockey helmets may make some hockey players look rediculous because they have a bigger helmet, but in the long run, an improved, bigger helmet will reduce concussion risk. Stated in the “Game changer: a biomedical engineer tests helmets to make sports safer” article, “A concussion occurs when a sudden impact, such as a head-to-head collision on the field, causes the head to accelerate very fast. As it accelerates, the…