Edmonton Journal

CFL shifts direction on first coach challenges

- The Canadian Press/Postmedia News

TORONTO The Canadian Football League has approved a rule change on coaches’ challenges.

Effective immediatel­y, if a team makes their first coach’s challenge of the game and does not win that challenge, the team will now lose a timeout. If the team wins its challenge, it will keep its timeout.

In other words, the first coach’s challenge of a game is no longer a “free” one. With this change in place, teams now put a timeout at risk with their first challenge, in the same way they already do for their second challenge of the game. Teams must be in possession of a timeout to make a challenge.

Teams are allowed two timeouts per game and can only use one timeout in the last three minutes of the game.

“We are listening to our fans,” said CFL commission­er Jeffrey L. Orridge. “And while it’s unusual to have a rule change during the season, the league and our teams wanted to respond to fans’ concerns about the frequency of challenges.

“We are proud of the innovation we have brought to our game, including innovation in the use of replay, and the fact that these advances are being followed by other leagues.

“But innovation in any pursuit is often followed by adjustment­s and alteration­s. Fan enjoyment is vitally important.”

Some fans have been peeved by the increase in coaches’ challenges. There have been an average of 2.5 per game this season and some think coaches throw their flags just hoping to find an infraction on an incident away from the play. Coaches this year can challenge eight penalties, up from only defensive pass interferen­ce for the past two seasons.

Last year through Week 9 there had been only 1.26 challenges per game, but some fans this season have called the CFL “unwatchabl­e” because of all the delays.

This rule change was unanimousl­y approved Thursday by the league’s governors, following a recommenda­tion from its rules committee.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? CFL Commission­er Jeffrey L. Orridge says the mid-season rule change on coach challenges was made in response to fan complaints about excessive game delays.
GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES CFL Commission­er Jeffrey L. Orridge says the mid-season rule change on coach challenges was made in response to fan complaints about excessive game delays.

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