Space Jam Inspired Art Exhibition Hits NYC Space Jam Inspired Art Exhibition Hits NYC SMU notified of allegations by NCAA SMU notified of allegations by NCAA Chargers WR Keenan Allen potentially out for rest of th... Chargers WR Keenan Allen potentially out for rest of th... Jon Lester featured on this week's Sports Illustrated c... Jon Lester featured on this week's Sports Illustrated c... Marcus Mariota shines on Letterman Marcus Mariota shines on Letterman Bobby Petrino's unique bonus Bobby Petrino's unique bonus Close Tweet0 Share0 Comment0 Share0 Share0 Stumble It0 Print0 More SI Wire Report: Youth football participation drops by 9.5 percent by Scooby Axson Email Posted: Wed Nov. 13, 2013 NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell talks with youth football players. (Tom E. Puskar/ AP Images for NFL Network)Pop Warner football, which is the United States' largest football program for young people, saw an almost 10 percent drop in participation, reports ESPN.com's Steve Fainaru and Mark Fainaru-Wada.According to the report, Pop Warner football, which began in 1929, lost 23,612 players in 2012, a 9.5 percent drop from 2010. That is thought to be the largest two-year decline since the organization began keeping statistics.Pop Warner officials say there are several factors in the decline, including the trend of athletes focusing on one sport. One doctor believes it is the concerns about head injuries that is the number one cause in the decline."Unless we deal with these truths, we're not going to get past the dropping popularity of the sport and people dropping out of the sport," said Dr. Julian Bailes, a former Pittsburgh Steelers neurosurgeon whose 10-year-old son, Clint, plays Pop Warner outside Chicago. "We need to get it right."PAGE: Ridley Scott to Direct Drama about Football’s Concussion CrisisMore from ESPN.com:The statistics, which have not been previously disclosed, are consistent with declining participation rates reported in youth football across the country. USA Football, a national governing body partially funded by the NFL, said participation among players ages 6 to 14 fell from 3 million to 2.8 million in 2011, a 6.7 percent decline. The downward trends in youth football participation coincide with a series of ominous reports about football and brain damage in the NFL. In 2005, the first of dozens of confirmed cases of former NFL players with neurodegenerative disease was reported. Promoted Stories Comments