Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

NFL kickoffs need to go

- Nancy Armour

The kickoff’s days in the NFL are numbered.

Oh, I know what Troy Vincent, the NFL’s executive vice president of football operations, said. With kickoffs among the topics of discussion at this week’s league meetings, Vincent insisted Tuesday that the NFL is looking to modify the play, not eliminate it. “Absolutely not,” Vincent said. But whether the league eliminates kickoffs or simply changes the rules to the point where they become irrelevant, it doesn’t really matter. The result will be the same.

And it’s long overdue.

While the NFL remains stubborn in its refusal to acknowledg­e a definitive link between football and neurodegen­erative diseases such as chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE), it is at least making an effort to take the head out of the game. Violent hits that were once celebrated on DVDs and “SportsCent­er” have been outlawed. Defenseles­s receivers now get virtually the same protected status once reserved for quarterbac­ks.

But the kickoff remains by far the most dangerous play in football. You remember those videos with the crashtest dummies, right? Kickoffs are football’s equivalent.

After the owners meeting in March, Green Bay Packers President Mark Murphy told ESPN that the league’s medical staff had presented data showing concussion­s were five times as likely to happen on kickoffs as on an average play. No surprise, given that it involves collisions of 200- and 300pound men who have been running at full speed for half the field or more.

The NFL already has tried to limit the carnage. In 2011, it moved kickoffs up 5 yards, the idea being it would result in more touchbacks. At that March meeting, owners voted to put touchbacks at the 25-yard line, further reducing the incentive for returns.

But that, Murphy warned, would not be enough.

“If you don’t make changes to make it safer, we’re going to do away with it,” Murphy, a member of the competitio­n committee, said then. “It’s that serious.”

The alarm bell has apparently been heard. While Vincent didn’t say what the proposals are that will be considered Wednesday, a look at what the NCAA did last month could offer a clue. College teams can now call for a fair catch anywhere inside the 25 and it will result in a touchback.

When you consider that touchbacks have been moved up to the 25, it makes the idea of returning a kick as silly as going for a two-point conversion in the first quarter. Why bother?

Traditiona­lists might balk at the changes, but safety concerns surroundin­g football are real.

Making kickoffs irrelevant won’t make a marked difference in the game, but it will reduce injuries and head trauma. By protecting the future health of its players, the NFL is protecting itself, too.

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