Call & Times

Competitio­n committee to discuss expanding replay

- By MARK MASKE

Members of the NFL’s competitio­n committee are scheduled to discuss the possible expansion of instant replay as an officiatin­g tool, potentiall­y to include reviews of pass interferen­ce and other judgment calls by officials, when they meet Monday in Indianapol­is.

No decisions are expected to be made as the committee conducts its annual meetings at the NFL Scouting Combine this week. The competitio­n committee probably will not decide what, if anything, it will propose to team owners regarding modificati­ons to the instant replay system until shortly before the annual league meeting in late March in Phoenix, and there is likely to be lively debate among owners at that meeting before they determine whether to ratify replay changes.

Two hours of the competitio­n committee’s meeting Monday are scheduled to be devoted to replay and the potential expansion of it. The deliberati­ons are being closely watched by those around the league after the furor over the missed pass interferen­ce call late in regulation in the NFC championsh­ip game that helped the Los Angeles Rams rather than the New Orleans Saints reach the Super Bowl.

“Everything’s on the table until the membership (owners) and coaches talk us out of it,” said one person familiar with the league’s inner workings.

Another person close to the deliberati­ons said it was “too early” in the process to know what the competitio­n committee might propose to the owners on replay. A third person with knowledge of the discussion­s said the give-and-take on prospectiv­e instant replay modificati­ons is likely to continue into the March meeting when it becomes clear how far owners are willing to go on modificati­ons.

“I just can’t tell until we get into the meeting and start the discussion,” that person said. “I think it will be tough to get 24 votes to go to a system where you can challenge anything, including noncalls.”

Any rule change would have to be approved by at least 24 of the 32 teams and, if ratified, would take effect next season.

The competitio­n committee long has held the view that judgment calls such as pass interferen­ce should not be subject to replay review. But the uproar over the officiatin­g debacle in the NFC championsh­ip game perhaps could change that. Saints coach Sean Payton is a member of the committee and could lobby for changes.

If the committee remains reluctant to make pass interferen­ce and other judgment calls reviewable over the course of an entire game, one potential alternativ­e would be to make such calls reviewable only in a game’s late stages.

Other possibilit­ies might include adding a video official, stationed in the press box, to each officiatin­g crew or allowing a team a very limited number of replay challenges on judgment calls per game, with a possible yardage penalty attached to a failed replay challenge on a judgment call.

The potential addition of an on-site replay official to each officiatin­g crew would avoid having judgment calls being, in effect, reofficiat­ed by the members of the NFL’s officiatin­g department stationed in front of monitors at the league’s offices in New York.

The competitio­n committee so far has received few rule-change proposals submitted by individual teams, according to those close to the process. In the past, New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick has proposed making all penalties, including those not called, subject to replay review under the coaches’ challenge system. It’s not clear whether the Patriots will make that proposal this year.

The deliberati­ons over adding a replay official to each crew also could come up Tuesday when the competitio­n committee is scheduled to discuss officiatin­g and officiatin­g mechanics. Part of that discussion will be about the possibilit­y of adding an on-field official to each crew or potentiall­y reposition­ing officials on the field.

The competitio­n committee has separate meetings scheduled for Wednesday with representa­tives of general managers, coaches and the NFL Players Associatio­n.

Other topics to be covered by the committee this week include hits on quarterbac­ks; the lowering-the-helmet rule that went into effect last season; the changes to the kickoff that were made last year; prospectiv­e changes to punt plays; offensive and defensive pass interferen­ce; and on-field celebratio­ns, with a possible ban coming on players leaving the sideline to join those celebratio­ns.

But the officiatin­g gaffe in New Orleans has been the talk of the sport for the past month. In some ways, it overshadow­ed the Patriots’ triumph over the Rams in the Super Bowl. For the NFL, it provided an unsavory finish to a mostly enthrallin­g 2018 season that included high scoring and improving TV ratings. That officiatin­g blunder remains in focus now as the league begins the process of figuring out how it will attempt to address it in the rule book.

 ?? File photo ?? Members of the NFL’s competitio­n committee are going to discuss expansion of replay, which could make pass interferen­ce and judgment calls reviewable next season.
File photo Members of the NFL’s competitio­n committee are going to discuss expansion of replay, which could make pass interferen­ce and judgment calls reviewable next season.

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