
What does Eric Lindros do now

Eric Lindros was one of hockey's most dominant players. The Hall of Famer won the Hart Trophy and led the Philadelphia Flyers' famous "Legion of Doom" line. What does Eric Lindros do now? Since retiring in 2007, he's become a powerful voice fighting for safer hockey by pushing concussion awareness and research forward.
From NHL star to concussion advocate
Lindros dominated the ice as a first-overall draft pick in 1991. He played for the Flyers, Rangers, Maple Leafs, and Stars during his career. The Hockey Hall of Fame inducted him in 2016. But his playing years came with a cost Lindros suffered multiple concussions that affected his health (something he doesn't shy away from talking about). After retirement, he made a clear choice. Rather than fade into the background, he decided to use his platform to protect other players from similar injuries.
How Lindros pushes for safer hockey
Lindros stays busy with concrete work that makes a real diference. He speaks publicly about concussion dangers and educates hockey communities on proper safety protocols. He fights against false treatments and demands evidence-based approaches to recovery. In a major move, Lindros donated $5 million to the London Health Sciences Centre to fund sports medicine and concussion research programs. This money supports scientists studying head injuries in hockey. He also works with leagues across Canada to improve return-to-play rules and coaching education on recognizing concussion symptoms.
Why his message matters to hockey communities
Lindros's advocacy reaches players, coaches, parents, and fans who need better safety information. Young hockey players benefit when coaches spot concussion signs early. Parents learn warning signals like dizziness, confusion and sensitivity to light. Teams adopt stricter return-to-play protocols that protect injured athletes. His fame as a Hall of Famer gives weight to safety conversations. When Lindros speaks, people listen. Hockey communities respect his experience and care deeply about his message (honestly, it's refreshing to see a legend use his platform this way).
Hockey news outlets regularly cover Lindros's advocacy work. blogs share his insights on concussion research and prevention. his ongoing efforts shape how the sport handles player safety moving forward. for ice hockey fans and participants, Lindros proves that legendary athletes can change the game off the ice just as powerfully as they did on it.