Helmet Maker Unveils Latest Safe Headgear for Youth Football

By Tim Booth | July 2, 2019

The company that produces the top-rated helmet for NFL players and introduced a youth version of the headgear is rolling out a version for flag football.

Seattle-based VICIS already produces the helmet that rated best for three straight years at reducing head impact severity, according to testing conducted by the NFL and the NFLPA. The company unveiled a youth version of the helmet last year with an influx of funding, including contributions from Aaron Rodgers.

“It completes our football portfolio,” VICIS CEO Dave Marver said.

The latest product from VICIS is the ULTIM Cap is intended for use with youth flag football and the quickly expanding competitive 7-on-7 football played during the offseason for youth and high school programs. The target audience is youth and high school football players in those specific areas, but Marver noted some high school programs are considering the ULTIM Cap for non-helmeted, in-season practices.

It was the goal of VICIS when it first developed its Zero 1 helmet to eventually fill out its entire portfolio by adding the youth helmet and eventually a product for flag football.

Dave Marver, CEO of VICIS, a Seattle-based company that makes football helmets, talks in Seattle about his company’s latest offering, the ULTIM cap. The cap is intended for use with youth flag football and the quickly expanding competitive 7-on-7 football played during the offseason for youth and high school programs. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren). (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

“When we first started the company, we realized not everyone was playing tackle football, especially the kids. And we wanted to be able to protect as many athletes as possible,” Marver said. “That’s our mission. That’s what drives us. We started at the professional level because we really could prove the technology and as quickly as possible we wanted to cascade down into the younger reaches of the sport.”

Most of the current headgear used for flag football and 7-on-7 competition has been made of stiff foam. VICIS couldn’t use the same columns it uses in its football helmets to make a soft product viable, but was able to transfer some of the protective technology in the new headgear.

The company put the new product through the same testing as its tackle football helmets _ both the NFL/NFLPA tests, and Virginia Tech’s helmet lab that has conducted helmet testing across multiple sports since 2011. Virginia Tech is expected to test 7-on-7/flag football head protections for the first time this year.

VICIS also partnered with a training facility in the Seattle area that operates several 7-on-7 teams for on-field testing.

“We want to make more protective products, but we also want to make them cool and interesting and stylish so the young athletes want to wear them. That is what I think we’ve done here,” Marver said.

With its football portfolio completed, VICIS is expected to expand into other sports. While not ready to make any announcements, Marver hinted the next venture is, “likely to go into a sport played on ice.” The VICIS headquarters are a short walk from where Seattle’s new NHL franchise will play its home games.

“Our current structures are really good for sports with competitive impacts,” Marver said. “So we’re looking at the big sports with repetitive impacts and that’s where we’re going to go next.”

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Latest Comments

  • July 8, 2019 at 5:01 pm
    Realist says:
    So let'em ride the couch and play video games all day, huh snowflakes? The benefits of team sports far outweigh the down side. Quit buying them lace drawers.
  • July 2, 2019 at 2:36 pm
    Craig Cornell says:
    Whether it's football or rugby or ice hockey, nothing can guarantee safety. CTE danger is greatest with cumulative small hits, so if this product reduces "severity" it doesn't... read more
  • July 2, 2019 at 9:59 am
    retired risk manager says:
    Again, all that "protection", be it a helmet or padding, creates a false sense of security. And the insanity of the way coaches act. Egging on young players to "get out there ... read more

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