With the low season of the NFL comes the possible changes in the rules. Last year, of course, we saw the movement towards the dynamic beginning, as well as the League that gives a third challenge to a team after a successful challenge. We also saw the “outlawed” hip back, although it was fined more frequently after the fact of what he called the field.
What changes in the rule could be in the future this year? First, the proposed changes must be approved by 24 of the 32 NFL owners to enter into force, and those votes could take place at the NFL owners meeting next month in Palm Beach, Florida. Let’s take a look at some of the problems that arise in the League.
Virtual measurement
The chain gang could become a thing of the past. Well, it will still be on the sidelines, but not in the main authority when it comes to governing the first attempts. According to the privileged information of CBS Sports NFL Jonathan Jones, the NFL plans to recommend the use of virtual measurement As the main way to determine the first attempts that begin in the regular season 2025.
Sony Hawk-Eye’s Skeletrack system is the future, and the NFL has been working with this technology since 2021. Jones really detailed this a couple of weeks ago at the Super Bowl. Look at your article, here.
“… A 14 cameras system that specifically monitors more than two dozen skeletal points in a player’s body. That system, along with the chips in the football and the 18 specific cameras are strategically placed in the stadium, can be combined to harvest a fully computerized model that potentially tracks where the ball is when it is inactive, if someone has achieved a first Down or if they have scanned.” “
‘Tush push’
One of the main conclusions of the NFL Scouting Combine is that other NFL teams I still hate “Tush Push” by Philadelphia Eagles. The Green Bay Packers, who lost to the Eagles in the playoffs this year, issued a proposal to the Competition Committee of the League to ban the special field marshal, according to Athletic.
“There is no skill involved and it is almost an automatic first time in the plays of a patio or less,” wrote the president and CEO of the Packers, Mark Murphy, on the Packers website. “I would like to see that the league prohibits pressing or helping the corridor (QB) in this play. There was a rule that prohibits this, but it no longer applies because I think it was believed that it was too difficult for officials to see. The game is bad for the game, and we should prohibit the Packer of the Packer. Bol.”
The Packers are not the only team against the “push of Tush”, since the chief coach of the Atlanta Falcons Raheem Morris said that he is not a fan, while the chief coach of Buffalo Bills, Sean McDermott, believes that there is a risk of injuries associated with the play. Interestingly, the privileged information of the NFL of CBS Sports, Jonathan Jones, reported that the internal data of the league about the “push of Tush” revealed that there was a rate of injuries of 0% by pushing the toshes. Do not expect the NFL to prohibit the Eagles special play this low season.
Extra regular seasonal rules
According to the privileged information of CBS Sports Nfl Jonathan JonesThe Competition Committee will analyze the adjustment of the extra regular seasonal time rules of the NFL and potentially change the format to what we see in post -time overtime games. In the playoffs, extra time is a period of 15 minutes in which each team has the opportunity to possess the ball, even if the team that receives the ball to start the overtime of a touchdown.
In 2024, the teams that won the launch of the currency in the extravagant of the regular season won 12 of the 16 games. There were only 11.6 plays for extra time in 2024, which was the second minor in the last two decades.
Reproduction review
This can be the biggest change we see this low season. Last year, the Competition Committee expanded the repetition aid to include objective contributions on the mistreatment of the passerby, late successes outside the limits and intentional base. Could you get more?
The NFL executive, Troy Vincent, said in December that the Competition Committee will discuss the expanding repetition assistance to include certain sanctions, such as facial masks, according to the NFL media. However, there is much to discuss when it comes to this potential change. Are we going to allow people to call the sanctions that are not in the field? Then, the Competition Committee has not seemed exactly motivated to make, if we call them, subjective, reviewable faults. Do you remember how it was when the League made the pass interference reviewable in 2019? There is much to consider with this.