Albuquerque Journal

NFL 2018: Questions abound as kickoff nears

Anthem protests, if any, rule changes grab attention of league, fans

- BY BARRY WILNER ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Rules changes and national anthem demonstrat­ions seem to have folks inside and outside the NFL obsessed as the opening kickoff of the season approaches.

Yes, the Super Bowl champion Eagles and Atlanta Falcons will open things on Thursday night in Philadelph­ia. What many folks wonder: Will there be any social injustice protests during “The Star-Spangled Banner?” And if players, coaches and officials will have a handle on the adjustment to use of the helmet in making a hit.

Not to mention the new kickoff rules and, at last, a catch rule that seems to make sense.

Those are enough issues to grab attention away from Philly’s quarterbac­k situation, as well as the progress of the five first-round QB draft choices expected to make their debuts sooner or later.

Or from the return from injuries of Aaron Rodgers, J.J. Watt, Richard Sherman, Deshaun Watson, David Johnson and Odell Beckham Jr., to name a few.

Or Jon Gruden’s return to an NFL sideline in Oakland.

Plus, Adam Vinatieri’s pursuit of the career points and field goals marks.

What’s ahead through the penultimat­e day of the 2018 calendar?

RULE CHANGES: The preseason has been dominated, even overridden, by discussion of and doubts about the “helmet rule.” Basically, any player on offense or defense lowering his head and making contact with any part of the helmet is subject to a 15-yard penalty, a fine, and even an ejection. It’s a player safety

adjustment for which “the goal long term is to make the game safer and take out some of these hits that should not be part of the game,” says Giants owner John Mara, a member of the competitio­n committee that recommends rules changes to the owners.

The concerns on many levels focus on players adjusting to the tackling requiremen­ts and officials mastering such calls at full speed.

Gene Steratore, who recently retired as an NFL (and college basketball) referee, expects the critical tempest to die down quickly.

“Players will adjust because they are that good,” says Steratore, now an analyst for CBS after 15 seasons in the league. “Officials will, too, because they are that good. There will be a learning curve for all of them, but I think in a fast period of time, a trigger moment will come that will show right before that contact if it is worthy of a flag.”

The fix to the phrasing of the catch rule should eliminate the kind of calls — on Jesse James, Dez Bryant et al — many found bogus.

“Control. If it looks like a catch and smells like a catch, it’s a catch,” says Troy Vincent, the NFL’s chief of football operations. “(The rule) had become convoluted: what you should do, what you shouldn’t do. It should be clear as day. So our job was to simplify and we put it in practical terms.”

The other major rule alteration is on kickoffs, where coverage team players no longer can take a running start, and there are regulation­s on where kick team players can be overall and how they can block.

“This is certainly a way of trying to keep the kickoff in the game and attempting to cut down on high-speed collisions,” Mara says. “There are a lot of us who don’t want to take the kickoff out unless we can’t find ways to make it safer. It is our most dangerous play.”

NATIONAL ANTHEM: Anticipati­on of whether players will demonstrat­e during the national anthem again this year is high, fueled in part by reactions from President Trump. Players argue that their message about the need for change in communitie­s nationwide has been misconstru­ed by the president and his followers, including many team owners.

With the unilateral policy banning players from any on-field protests during the anthem on hold as owners and players discuss the issue, no one can be sure what’s ahead.

Everyone can be sure the topic won’t disappear.

“I think part of the problem is that when you continue the rhetoric that this is controvers­ial or this is somehow a negative thing, people treat it as such,” Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins says. “But we’ve seen in other leagues when they’ve decided to amplify the voices of their players to also emphasize the importance of the issues that we’re raising, and change the narrative away from the anthem, that not only is it more acceptable, the fan base gets educated on what we’re talking about, and we can actually make some movement.”

ROOKIE QBS: Before we reach 2019, it’s a near-certainty that Baker Mayfield, Sam Darnold, Josh Allen, Josh Rosen and Lamar Jackson will get onto the field. Some likely will be starters, maybe even stamp themselves as stars.

Only in Baltimore, where Joe Flacco is the incumbent, is the rookie (Jackson) a long shot to become the No. 1 quarterbac­k this season. The others — Cleveland’s Mayfield, Buffalo’s Allen, the Jets’ Darnold and Arizona’s Rosen — are with teams considered outsiders in the playoff chase and it makes sense as early as prudent to see if they are the franchise QBs they were drafted to be.

COACHES: New coaches in charge of the Cardinals, Titans, Lions, Giants, Bears and Raiders include four newbies to being in charge: Detroit’s Matt Patricia, Chicago’s Matt Nagy, Tennessee’s Mike Vrabel and Arizona’s Steve Wilks. All of them made their marks as proficient coordinato­rs and bring freshness and toughness to their franchises.

Vrabel, of course, has three Super Bowl rings as a player with New England, which surely earns him some respect in the locker room. If he’s considered a product of the Belichick coaching tree, though, Vrabel could struggle; few of the Patriots coach’s protégés have had much success as head men in the NFL.

So the same goes for Patricia, although he has far more experience in coaching.

PURSUING HISTORY: Vinatieri is a marvel. The NFL’s oldest player at 45, he begins his 23rd pro season in range to pass Hall of Famer Morten Andersen as the leading scorer. He was dependable for a decade in New England and then a dozen years in Indianapol­is.

He needs seven field goals to pass Andersen (565) for the most field goals. Andersen scored 2,544 points in a league-record 382 games and Vinatieri needs 58 points to break the record.

“It’s one of those things that I haven’t really though too much about it,” he says. “I’m still just trying to help my team win games and keep on putting chapters in this book, and if that happens, fantastic.”

KAEPERNICK: Colin Kaepernick has a new deal with Nike, even without having a job in the NFL.

Kaepernick’s attorney, Mark Geragos, made the announceme­nt on Twitter, calling the former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k an “All American Icon” and crediting attorney Ben Meiselas for getting the deal done. Kaepernick also posted a Nike ad featuring his face and wrote: “Believe in something, even if it means sacrificin­g everything. #JustDoIt”

Kaepernick already had a deal with Nike that was set to expire, but it was renegotiat­ed into a multi-year deal to make him one of the faces of Nike’s 30th anniversar­y “Just Do It” campaign, The Associated Press reported.

 ?? STEPHEN B. MORTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jacksonvil­le defensive end Yannick Ngakoue drew a penalty for this helmet-to-helmet hit on Buffalo’s Tyrod Taylor during a playoff game this past January. The “helmet rule” already has created a lot of controvers­y before the season kicks off.
STEPHEN B. MORTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Jacksonvil­le defensive end Yannick Ngakoue drew a penalty for this helmet-to-helmet hit on Buffalo’s Tyrod Taylor during a playoff game this past January. The “helmet rule” already has created a lot of controvers­y before the season kicks off.
 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A group of San Fransciso 49ers kneel during the national anthem last December. With the policy to ban onfield protests during the anthem on hold, no one is sure what to expect.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS A group of San Fransciso 49ers kneel during the national anthem last December. With the policy to ban onfield protests during the anthem on hold, no one is sure what to expect.

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