Waterloo Region Record

Ban on field goal leaps among NFL rule talks

- Mark Maske

The NFL’s competitio­n committee is expected to propose a ban on defensive players leaping over the line of scrimmage on field goal and extra point attempts and a modificati­on to the instant replay system by which rulings would be made by members of the league’s officiatin­g department stationed in New York, according to a person familiar with the league’s inner workings.

The committee also is making plans to suggest automatic suspension­s for players guilty of certain egregious illegal hits and intends to clarify and soften the sport’s rules regarding illegal celebratio­ns, according to the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the committee’s deliberati­ons are ongoing and the league has made no official announceme­nt.

The owners of the 32 NFL teams will consider proposals by the rule-making competitio­n committee when they meet early next week at a Phoenix-area resort for the annual league meeting. Competitio­n committee members are to announce their proposals later this week.

Last-minute changes are possible. The committee, for example, has been mulling either automatic ejections or mandatory suspension­s for certain illegal hits. But the person with knowledge of the deliberati­ons said it does not appear likely that automatic ejections will be proposed.

The ban on a player leaping over the line of scrimmage on a field goal or extra point was suggested by representa­tives of the NFL Players Associatio­n when they met with the competitio­n committee at the NFL scouting combine. The tactic has become somewhat common as a means to block kicks and has resulted in some highprofil­e, closely scrutinize­d plays.

The prohibitio­n would be a player-safety measure designed to protect both the player doing the leaping and any offensive player on whom he might land. Under current rules, such a leap is illegal if the player lands on an offensive player but legal if the player successful­ly clears the line of scrimmage.

Any rule-change proposal must be approved by at least 24 of 32 teams.

The change to the procedure by which replay rulings are made is designed to streamline the process and make instant replay decisions more consistent. Representa­tives of the league office would make the rulings in consultati­on with the referee of that particular game, who would view the replay via a tablet brought to him on the field.

Replay decisions currently are made by the referee. Competitio­n committee members had debated whether to have the referee make the rulings in consultati­on with the league office, or have the league office make the rulings in consultati­on with the referee. The committee appears poised to go with the more centralize­d approach. League officials informed the committee that there would be sufficient manpower in the NFL’s officiatin­g department to take such an approach even during the busy time slot early Sunday afternoons with many games in progress simultaneo­usly.

On the automatic suspension­s, committee members considered proposing automatic ejections for certain illegal hits. The considerat­ion of automatic ejections or suspension­s was based on the belief that the fines being imposed by the league for illegal hits are not serving as a sufficient deterrent.

The suspension would apply even to first-time offenders, according to the person familiar with the deliberati­ons. Only certain illegal hits would qualify.

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