Springfield News-Sun

NCAA rules panel recommends change to shorten overtime games

- By Eric Olson

The NCAA Football Rules Committee is recommendi­ng a slight change to overtime rules. It would require a team to try a two-point conversion after a touchdown when a game reaches the second overtime instead of the third. The committee also addressed the problem of teams faking injuries to slow the opponent’s momentum and blocking below the waist. Changes must be approved by the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel next month. The overtime recommenda­tion was based on player safety and intended to reduce the number of plays it takes to win a game.

The overtime recommenda­tion was based on player safety and intended to reduce the number of plays it takes for a winner to be determined. National coordinato­r of officials Steve Shaw said overtime games add an average of 16.4 plays to a contest.

The new rule would have teams run alternatin­g twopoint plays in the third overtime instead of starting another drive at the opponent’s 25-yard line. Alternatin­g two-point plays currently start in the fifth overtime.

Teams could still choose whether to kick the point after touchdown or run a two-point conversion play in the first overtime.

The committee has discussed the issue of faking injuries in recent years and now is proposing that a school or conference be allowed to ask Shaw for a postgame video review about questionab­le actions.

“Any time a player is injured, we want to honor that injury and make sure they get their full protection, but feigning injuries is an integrity issue and something we don’t want in the game,” Shaw said.

Still to be determined is what repercussi­ons there would be if a player were found to have faked an injury.

The committee plans to review injury data for the 2021 season before deciding whether to recommend changes to rules regarding blocking below the waist. Members are looking at limiting blocking below the waist to inside the tackle box, which is the area spanning the length of the offensive line and extending from the line of scrimmage to the opponent’s goal line.

The committee supported the team area being permanentl­y extended to the 20-yard lines. The team area now stretches between the 25-yard lines, but the area was expanded to the 15-yard lines in 2020 to create more social-distancing space because of the COVID19 pandemic.

The committee also listed points of emphasis for 2021.

Officials will crack down on any taunting, Shaw said, because it reflects poorly on the game and can lead to unnecessar­y confrontat­ions.

Officials will be on the look-out for uniform violations and will send the player out of the game to correct the issue. This will include specifical­ly pants, jerseys and T-shirts.

Also, coaches who enter the field or leave the team area to debate officiatin­g decisions will be committing an automatic unsportsma­nlike conduct foul.

 ?? AP ?? Texas A&M’s Quartney Davis celebrates a touchdown catch during the seventh overtime of a game against LSU in 2018. To shorten overtime games, the NCAA on Friday recommende­d requiring teams to go for two when games reach the second overtime instead of the third.
AP Texas A&M’s Quartney Davis celebrates a touchdown catch during the seventh overtime of a game against LSU in 2018. To shorten overtime games, the NCAA on Friday recommende­d requiring teams to go for two when games reach the second overtime instead of the third.

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