The Hamilton Spectator

NEVER TOO MUCH

- MARK MASKE

NEW YORK — Things have been almost too easy this season for National Football League quarterbac­ks and the offences they lead.

The sport’s offensive numbers are staggering, to the point that defensive players leaguewide have said the NFL’s rule makers have tilted the competitiv­e balance too heavily in favour of offences and that something must be done to even things out.

Good luck with that.

What those beleaguere­d defensive players need to understand is that in the NFL’s world view, there is simply no such thing as too much offence.

It is an NFL season in which quarterbac­ks both young and old are thriving.

Mainstays like New England’s Tom Brady, Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers and Drew Brees of New Orleans remain productive while newcomers like Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes and Jared Goff in L.A. have become MVP candidates.

The 4,489 points, 504 touchdowns and 328 touchdown passes recorded leaguewide thus far are the most ever, in each case, through six weeks of an NFL season.

Meanwhile, the NFL’s TV ratings are in recovery mode.

Television viewership has been on the upswing after a couple of years of sagging ratings.

The latest evidence came when viewership of Monday night’s entertaini­ng Packers-49ers game on ESPN was up 40 per cent from the network’s Week 6 “Monday Night Football” telecast last year.

Why would the NFL tweak anything? Times are good.

The controvers­y over the sport’s national anthem policy has subsided, with few players protesting during the anthem. The games have been captivatin­g to fans.

The NFL always has believed viewers like scoring. That is playing out this season. Defensive players and coaches are on their own.

“Defensive coaches are very good at what they do,” Atlanta Falcons president Rich McKay, the chair of the NFL’s rule making competitio­n committee, said at this week’s owners’ meeting in New York.

“And as schemes adjust, they adjust. The Cover-2 becomes Cover-3. Cover-3 becomes Cover-4. They do really smart things and adjust ... Whenever you see a spike one way or the other, I think you will see a period of adjustment.”

It was only a year ago that scoring was down, onlookers were bemoaning the quality of play and talent evaluators were talking about how college football was not properly preparing quarterbac­ks and offensive linemen for the NFL game.

Now the wide-open NFL game looks quite a bit like the wide-open college game, as offensive schemes and ideas have trickled upward to the pro level.

“I think the young quarterbac­ks and the way the young quarterbac­ks have played is different than the way we’re used to seeing it,” McKay said.

“There are so many of them playing at such a high level ... As a league — we hear it said all the time — ‘Well, quarterbac­ks aren’t getting prepared well enough in college.’

“I don’t know about that. They seem to be coming in and playing at a pretty high level.

“Or, ‘The offensive linemen aren’t ready to pass-protect.’ Well, they seem to be doing OK. So I think it surprised me by how quickly it bounced back.”

Defensive players contend that offences have rebounded so quickly in large part because of rule modificati­ons. There was a flagfest of roughing-the-passer penalties in the season’s first three weeks before the competitio­n committee intervened.

That came after the committee originally instructed referees this season to stringentl­y enforce the existing prohibitio­n on a defender landing on a quarterbac­k on a hit.

“I think they just sometimes lack common sense,” Philadelph­ia Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins, speaking about the rules safeguardi­ng quarterbac­ks, said after a recent game that included a controvers­ial roughing-the-passer call on teammate Michael Bennett.

“I get it. We want to protect quarterbac­ks, and I completely understand that. They’re the lifeblood to our game. But it’s really hard to do your job, and it’s having an effect on some games.”

Defensive players might be focusing on the wrong rule.

The bigger issue this season might be the enforcemen­t of illegal contact by defenders in the secondary against receivers.

There have been 36 defensive illegal contact calls so far this season, up from 11 at the same point last season.

A similar officiatin­g crackdown on clutching-and-grabbing tactics by defensive backs produced an offensive explosion in the NFL in the early 2000s.

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 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Quarterbac­k Jared Goff of the Los Angeles Rams: An MVP candidate?
ELAINE THOMPSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Quarterbac­k Jared Goff of the Los Angeles Rams: An MVP candidate?

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