USA TODAY International Edition

Each team will get an OT playoff possession

- Michael Middlehurs­t- Schwartz

A change is coming to NFL overtimes – for the playoffs.

NFL owners on Tuesday voted to implement a change in the playoffs that will ensure each team will get at least one possession, the league announced.

The rule is a modified version of the proposal set forth by the Indianapol­is Colts and Philadelph­ia Eagles, which would have required one possession for each team in overtime for all games. Regular- season rules for overtime will remain unchanged.

If both teams remained tied after each has had a possession, the game will go to a sudden- death format.

The move comes two months after the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Buffalo Bills in the AFC divisional playoffs by scoring a touchdown on the first possession of overtime. After the two teams combined for 25 points in the final two minutes of regulation, the Chiefs won the coin toss and strung together an eight- play, 75- yard touchdown drive, denying the Bills an opportunit­y to respond.

Since 2010, when the NFL implemente­d its previous standard for playoff games, seven of the 12 overtime games have been won on an opening- possession touchdown, and 10 of 12 have been won by the team that won the coin toss.

“That data was compelling to us and to the league,” Falcons president and chairman of the competitio­n committee Rich McKay said. “An amendment was added ( to the original proposal by the Colts and Eagles) to not make a change in the regular season, but in the postseason, where our problem principall­y lies.”

Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin, a member of the competitio­n committee, said Monday that he was not in favor of any change to the overtime format, adding he was particular­ly opposed to any change that would produce a different standard for the regular season and postseason.

“I’m a traditiona­list,” Tomlin said at the NFL annual meetings in Palm Beach, Florida. “I don’t want to have to stand in front of my team at the most significant moment of the game and explain to them why it’s different, to remind those guys of the rules. So, the more closely that we can remain to continual football, I’m going to be in alignment with that. When you start talking about rule changes and the way that games are changed structural­ly, that’s probably when I get quiet and move away from the discussion.”

The Tennessee Titans also proposed a rule change that would have allowed a team to end the game on the opening possession of overtime by scoring a touchdown and converting a two- point conversion. The proposal was ultimately withdrawn.

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