The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

End zone cleverness thrives in relaxed NFL

- By Dave Campbell

EDEN PRAIRIE, MINN. » The idea for one of the most clever touchdown celebratio­ns of the season was hatched in Minnesota tight end Kyle Rudolph’s mind right before the pass play was called that night.

“‘If we score here,”’ he told his teammates in the huddle, “‘whoever scores, you get to be the ducker, and everybody else sit.”’

Fittingly enough, Rudolph found himself open seconds later for a 13-yard touchdown . Then a wave of purple rushed toward him in the end zone.

Like grade-schoolers on the playground­s where they first learned the game, the Vikings dutifully plopped down cross-legged in the grass. Rudolph patted them on the helmet as he jogged around the circle for a nationally televised rendition of Duck, Duck, Goose. Rookie center Pat Elflein was picked as the goose, or gray duck as Minnesotan­s peculiarly prefer .

“Getting the linemen involved in the celebratio­n was something I thought would be cool,” Rudolph explained later. “Those guys don’t really get to celebrate a whole lot. They’re always kind of left out. They don’t like to dance, so a group dance wouldn’t have been as good.”

The most important source of such silliness after the score was actually the NFL itself.

After years of policing post-touchdown expression­s, spawning the derisive “No Fun League” nickname along the way, group celebratio­ns were greenlight­ed this year . Commission­er Roger Goodell wrote to fans in May about the relaxed rule, crediting conversati­ons with more than 80 current and former players for paving a path to creative pantomimin­g without fear of a 15-yard penalty.

The yellow flags are still supposed to fly if a demonstrat­ion turns offensive, prolonged or into taunting the opponent. New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. was reminded of this after his dog-relieving-himself charade drew an unsportsma­nlike conduct call . Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell has been fined for boxing the goalpost, because the only props allowed are the footballs themselves.

“It’s exciting because it puts a little fun back into the game,” Rudolph said. “It was just getting so strict, and you didn’t really know what you could and couldn’t do. For them to relax it, I don’t see how something like that does any harm to the game.”

The first half of the season has been headlined by player-owner conflicts over social justice protests during the national anthem and backlash from fans because of the kneeling. There’s been a steady stream of usual controvers­ies involving players disgruntle­d about their role, another league-union clash over Goodell’s disciplina­ry power winding up in court and some particular­ly ugly injuries of late.

Still, the NFL has managed to keep at least some focus on light-hearted moments this month, thanks to the liberalize­d celebratio­n rule. As fans watch for what-will-they-think-of-next highlights, players around the league scheme about how to top their peers.

The day before the Vikings played Duck, Duck, Goose, Rudolph was inspired by watching the Philadelph­ia Eagles pretending to play baseball after Torrey Smith’s touchdown reception . Wide receiver Alshon Jeffery was credited with that plan, initiated by a fake pitch from Nelson Agholor and capped with a home run swing by Smith.

“I don’t care if he missed it or anything, because it’s always going to be gone because it’s an imaginary ball,” said running back LeGarrette Blount, one of the admiring teammates who stood by and acted as if they were watching a ball soar into the seats.

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