Las Vegas Review-Journal

Crackdown against illegal contact seen as helping offenses

Strict enforcemen­t to be point of emphasis

- By MARK MASKE THE WASHINGTON POST

RICHMOND, Va. — The way Brandon Browner figures it, his approach to playing pass defense won’t change this season, even with the NFL telling its game officials for the first time in seven years to crack down on illegal contact in the secondary. Browner, in his view, has no choice but to keep playing the same way he always has.

“I just try to play my game, be physical out there, because that’s the big asset in my game is to be physical,” the former Pro Bowl cornerback, readying for his first season with the New England Patriots after three seasons with the Seattle Seahawks, said last week after a joint training camp practice with the Washington Redskins. “I’m a big (6 feet 4 inches), 200-pound guy. So I’m not as quick as some of these other guys. I’ve got to use my abilities.”

But will Browner be able to keep playing such a physical style successful­ly? That remains to be seen. The NFL has said strict enforcemen­t of the illegal contact rules will be a “major” point of officiatin­g emphasis for the 2014 season. That could have significan­t implicatio­ns, not only for Browner and fellow defensive backs leaguewide but also for quarterbac­ks, receivers and statistici­ans.

The NFL last made illegal contact a point of emphasis for officials in each season from 2004 to 2007. The 2004 crackdown helped to usher in the most passing-friendly era that the sport has seen. So will passing numbers increase significan­tly again this season? Is that even possible after the dizzying heights they already have reached? Some players say there’s no way of knowing yet.

“They always want the offense to score touchdowns,” Patriots safety Devin McCourty said. “So I’m sure it’ll make it a little tougher. But I tell people, I mean, each year we hear it’s gonna be an emphasis: You can’t touch the guy. So we’ll see. I think each game you’ve got to just do business as business is being done.”

In the 2004 season, quarterbac­k Peyton Manning threw 49 touchdown passes for the Indianapol­is Colts, breaking the NFL’s season record. That record, previously held by Dan Marino, had stood for 20 years. But Manning’s record lasted only until 2007, when Tom Brady threw 50 touchdown passes for the Patriots. And Brady’s mark lasted only until last season, when Manning threw 55 touchdown passes for the Denver Broncos.

Entering 2008, there had been one 5,000-yard passing season in league history: by Marino for the Miami Dolphins in 1984. There have been seven 5,000-yard passing seasons by four quarterbac­ks since — four by Drew Brees of the New Orleans Saints and one each by Manning, Brady and the Detroit Lions’ Matthew Stafford. Manning set a single-season NFL record with 5,477 passing yards last year, topping Brees’ 2011 output by a yard.

Both crackdowns on illegal contact came after Manning was frustrated by an opposing defense in a high-profile postseason game. It happened against the Patriots in the AFC title game in the 2003 season while Manning was with the Colts, and it happened in last season’s Super Bowl when he and the Broncos were overrun by Seattle’s dominating defensive performanc­e. This time around, there is at least a flip side to the point of emphasis on illegal contact and the closely related penalty of holding by pass defenders. The league also has instructed officials to strictly monitor receivers for pushing off.

When officials made a recent visit to the Philadelph­ia Eagles’ training camp and were on the field for a practice, many of the flags they threw during one-onone drills between receivers and defensive backs were for offensive pass interferen­ce.

“They’re cutting it off at five yards, where last year it lingered through six or seven,” Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins said that day. “They’re gonna be really strict on that five-yard rule, as well as defensive holding. If they see any tug on the jersey, regardless if it affects the receiver or not, they’re going to call holding. So that makes it hard on us. We’ve got to rely on our technique.

“But they’re giving us something back where receivers can’t push off at the top of the route. We saw them throw a lot of those flags today. So it allows us to use our technique without being bullied over.”

An offensive player, Saints tight end Jimmy Graham, had a similar view.

“They say they’re emphasizin­g illegal contact,” Graham said last week at the Saints’ camp in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. “But also they’re also emphasizin­g offensive (pass interferen­ce) as well. This is a league where if you’re running a route and you’re going full go and you come to a stop, these last couple years you’ve been able to push off. And so equally as much as they’re being harder on them (defensive backs), they say down the field with us there’s going to be no messing around. So there’s give and take there. I think it will equal out.”

If the early preseason numbers are any indication, however, the calls against offensive players won’t come close to matching the calls against defenders. Through the first 17 preseason games, there were 58 defensive holding, 27 illegal contact and 11 offensive pass interferen­ce calls. Five teams already have had defensive holding called against them at least four times.

Defensive players have frequently complained that rule-makers have done everything to favor offenses, saying the rules restrictin­g contact on quarterbac­ks and receivers have made effective defense next to impossible.

McCourty was asked whether he’s waiting for the day when the NFL will make a major rule change to favor defenses.

“Yeah,” he said, “I don’t know if I’ll ever see that.”

 ?? ROGELIO SOLIS/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Saints tight end Jimmy Graham pulls in a touchdown reception in front of Titans linebacker Avery Williamson on Friday at New Orleans.
ROGELIO SOLIS/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Saints tight end Jimmy Graham pulls in a touchdown reception in front of Titans linebacker Avery Williamson on Friday at New Orleans.

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