I suspect that one of the driving forces motivating the NFL to settle was simply to get the issue out of the public spotlight.
A high profile legal battle between the big corporate football league and sympathetic aging players with dementia just doesn't give the general public warm-and-fuzzy feelings. The other problem is that concussion concerns could derail the entire sport and thus the NFL's industry itself. What would happen if parents no longer allowed their children to play football? What would happen if insurance companies no longer wanted to provide coverage for current and former football players or wanted to deny coverage for football-related injuries?
Hmm... after thinking a little, I have changed my view on this a bit.
The NFL still really won -- they only paid out about a small portion of last year's total revenue, and can legally hide potential life-saving information for the sake of business.
Money can really dehumanize people, and in this case, multi-billion dollar businesses.
