Lodi News-Sentinel

RULE CHANGES TO WATCH FOR THIS NFL SEASON

- By Nick Klopsis

After years of confusion, debate and yelling in disbelief at the TV, NFL fans might finally find out the answer to what feels like an age-old question: What is a catch?

The NFL revamped its catch rule this offseason, one of many rule changes that will take effect this coming season. Here’s a rundown of what will be different on game day:

Catch rule — The NFL eliminated the “surviving the ground” requiremen­t of the previous catch rule, simplifyin­g it to a three-step process:

1) The player must establish control of the ball (i.e.: not bobble it while catching).

2) The player then must establish himself in bounds — the usual “two feet in bounds” requiremen­t.

3) There must be a “football move” — a third step, or a dive or lunge to the line-togain (or the ability to perform such a dive).

Helmet-to-helmet hits — Leading with the head and initiating helmet-tohelmet contact now results in a 15-yard personal foul penalty and possible ejection. The rule applies to tacklers, ballcarrie­rs and linemen. It replaces the old rule that only penalized a player if they hit with the crown of the helmet.

Kickoffs — The league passed a litany of rule changes to help make kickoffs safer.

—The kicking team now must have five players on each side of the kicker before kicking off.

—Players on the kicking team can line up no more than one yard behind the ball, effectivel­y eliminatin­g the running starts that previously were allowed.

—At least two players on the kicking team must line up outside the yard-line number, and at least two must line up between the yard-line number and the hash marks.

—At least eight players on the receiving team must line up in a 15-yard “set-up zone” behind its restrainin­g line. Only three players are allowed outside of that zone.

—Until the ball is touched or hits the ground, no member of the receiving team may cross its restrainin­g line or initiate a block in the 15-yard area after the kicking team’s restrainin­g line. —Wedge blocks are no longer allowed. —The ball now becomes dead if it’s not touched by the receiving team in the end zone. The ruling on the field would be a touchback.

Ejections — Al Riveron, the NFL’s senior vice president of officiatin­g, now can order an ejection for a player who has been penalized for a non-football act, such as throwing a punch or fighting, even if it means overruling referees at the game.

All ejections now are reviewable to confirm whether the infraction was grounds for the ejection.

Extra points — Teams no longer are required to kick an extra point, go for a two-point conversion or kneel after a score on the final play of regulation.

Overtime — In overtime, if the team that gets the ball first kicks a field goal on its initial possession and the second team throws an intercepti­on or loses a fumble on the ensuing drive, the down will run to its conclusion. This includes any points scored by either team on the play (i.e.: an intercepti­on that’s returned for a touchdown, or an intercepti­on that’s fumbled by the returning team, recovered by the intercepte­d team and returned for a game-winning touchdown).

Illegal kicking and batting — The penalty for illegal kicking and illegal batting of a ball both are now 10 yards.

Touchbacks — In 2016, an experiment­al rule was passed to put touchbacks at the 25-yard line. That rule now is permanent.

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 ?? RON JENKINS/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant (88) makes a would-be catch over Green Bay Packers cornerback Sam Shields (37) late in the fourth quarter on Jan. 11, 2015, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis. The play was ruled a catch but was overturned via instant replay.
RON JENKINS/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant (88) makes a would-be catch over Green Bay Packers cornerback Sam Shields (37) late in the fourth quarter on Jan. 11, 2015, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis. The play was ruled a catch but was overturned via instant replay.

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