
The annual NFL owners league meeting for kicks off Sunday in Palm Beach, FL and there is a lot to discuss. Chief among the topics are several proposed rule changes that are making headlines. Let’s break down a few of them.
Starting with making the new ‘dynamic kickoff’ we saw last season a permanent feature. The original change was made to improve player safety, but it also brought back some of the excitement on kickoffs as fewer teams kicked the ball in the endzone for a touchback.
One tweak this year’s proposal would add, moving the spot of the touchback up to the 35-yard line, instead of the 30. Head of the competition committee Rich McKay believes the return rate will rise to between 60% and 70% if owners approve that small change.
The Green Bay Packers made some headlines a week ago for officially proposing a ban on the Tush Push play made famous and used with great success by the Philadelphia Eagles. The Packers say it should be banned in the name of player safety. Several NFL insiders report the ban doesn’t currently have the votes to pass.
A new rule proposed last week by the Detroit Lions would change the way teams are seeded for the playoffs. There will still be a number one seed with a Bye and home field advantage but after that teams would be seeded by record, with no advantage given to teams that win their division. Last season all three wild card teams had better records than Tampa Bay Bucs and Los Angeles Rams. Former Vikings safety Cam Bynum, who is now with the Colts, says he’s all for the change. His team would have been seeded 3rd with 14 wins instead of 5th last year.
“No matter what, winning is hard to do and if you can win 14 games in the regular season you should be rewarded for that. You shouldn’t be held to the same standard as a ten win team, no offense, but once you get to the playoffs you have to win football regardless but if you work that much to win 14 games in the regular season I don’t see any reason you shouldn’t be rewarded when it comes to playoff time.”
The owners will also vote on beefing up the league’s ‘replay assist’. If approved, the on-site replay official will be able to reverse flags that are thrown for hits to defenseless players, facemasks, horse collar tackles, tripping, and running into or roughing the kicker. The flag can be picked up if “clear and obvious video evidence exists”, the replay official will not be able to ADD a penalty.
In order to be adopted, each of these proposals requires a 75% yes vote from league owners, that’s 24 out of the 32 teams. The league meetings run from Sunday March 30 to Tuesday April 1st.
For Straight Arrow News I’m Chris Francis.