The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

An 18-game regular season? It’s what Goodell, owners want

League would have to get NFLPA to agree to proposal.

- By Mark Maske

NFL team owners largely support Commission­er Roger Goodell’s preference for an 18-game regular season, and the league and owners might make a renewed attempt to get the players’ union to agree to such a lengthenin­g of the season well before the current collective bargaining agreement expires in 2031, five people familiar with the NFL’s inner workings and the owners’ views said.

The league and owners have not initiated a new set of formal discussion­s with the NFL Players Associatio­n on the topic, two people with knowledge of the matter said. But some owners and league leaders have been contemplat­ing such an effort for months, and Goodell expressed his support for an 18-game season during a broadcast interview last week.

An 18-game season, if implemente­d, would be accompanie­d by a reduction of the preseason from three to two games per team. It could lead to each team being given a second bye week during the regular season. It probably would result in the Super Bowl being played annually on Presidents’ Day weekend.

That, in turn, perhaps could lead to a reworking of the offseason schedule in which the league might hold a major “tentpole” event in each month — the NFL scouting combine in March (it currently starts in late February), free agency in April and the draft in May (it’s now in April, though it was in May from 1977-79, 1984 and 2014).

The owners have sought an 18-game regular season since the negotiatio­ns with the NFLPA that led to the 2011 labor deal; the regular season went from 16 to 17 games per team in 2021 after the league secured the right to do so in the CBA completed in 2020.

It’s not clear how the NFLPA would react to an attempt by the owners to negotiate an 18-game season. The current CBA allowed the owners to go to a 17-game season, provided that the total number of preseason and regular season games did not exceed 20 per team. But the CBA also says, “The League and/or Clubs shall not increase the number of regular season games per Club to eighteen (18) or more games.” Thus, the NFL and owners would have to convince the NFLPA to agree to such a change, and it’s not known what the union might seek in return.

“I strongly believe they will bring something to (the NFLPA) in the next 12 to 18 months,” a person on the players’ side said.

There is considerab­le support among the 32 owners for Goodell’s goal to implement an 18-game season, the five people with knowledge of the owners’ views said in recent months. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the topic, with possible negotiatio­ns between the league and NFLPA pending.

“I think we are moving toward 18 games,” a high-ranking official for one NFL team said just before the scouting combine began in late February. “Not sure when, though.”

People on the players’ side believe that powerful owners such as the Cowboys’ Jerry Jones and the Patriots’ Robert Kraft are strong supporters, based in part on the attractive­ness of such a change to broadcast partners.

Browns general manager Andrew Berry told Pro Football Talk at the scouting combine that a proposal to push back the NFL trade deadline by two weeks, from the Tuesday after the Week 8 games to the Tuesday after the Week 10 games, was made in anticipati­on of an eventual move to an 18-game season. The owners voted at the annual league meeting in March in Orlando to push back the trade deadline by only one week, to the Tuesday after the Week 9 games. PFT reported in March there is sentiment for an 18-game season, saying that possibilit­y likely is tied to the next labor deal.

That was before Goodell publicly expressed his views on the issue during draft weekend.

“I think we’re good at 17 now,” Goodell said during an appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show” on ESPN. “But, listen, we’re looking at how we continue. I’m not a fan of the preseason. I don’t think we need three preseason games. I don’t buy it. And I don’t think these guys (fans) like it, either.

“... I’d rather replace a preseason game with a regular-season (game) any day. That’s just picking quality, right? So if we got to 18 and two (preseason games), that’s not an unreasonab­le thing.”

The NFL declined further comment this week.

The owners proposed an 18-game season, with a twogame preseason, during the negotiatio­ns with the NFLPA that led to the 2011 CBA. The union objected on player-safety grounds and called the proposal a nonstarter. The owners abandoned the measure for that labor deal, then came back to it during the negotiatio­ns that led to the 2020 CBA.

The union remained firmly against an 18-game season, and the owners’ focus shifted to 17 games. The fundamenta­l trade-off of that negotiatio­n became the NFLPA agreeing to give the owners the option to implement a 17-game season in exchange for the players receiving an increased share of revenue under the salary cap system. The union also secured other concession­s, and the CBA was narrowly ratified by players in March 2020.

If a new set of negotiatio­ns over an 18-game regular season occurs, the league and owners could attempt to allay player-safety concerns by pointing to advancemen­ts in areas such as equipment, rules and offseason training and practice routines, said several of the people familiar with the NFL’s inner workings. The owners also might argue that players, under the salary cap system, share in any increase in revenue related to the additional regular season game, those people said.

The details associated with an 18-game season would have to be negotiated. The NFLPA could press for a second bye week for each team during the season. It perhaps could seek further cutbacks in offseason practices and additional reductions in the amount of permissibl­e practice-field hitting.

If a second in-season bye week is added along with an additional week of games, the league could opt to begin the regular season earlier — it currently prefers to wait until after Labor Day weekend, which is the first big weekend of college football — or eliminate the bye week before the Super Bowl.

The league and owners long have contemplat­ed the possibilit­y of playing the Super Bowl on Presidents’ Day weekend, which Goodell also mentioned during last week’s TV interview. Presidents’ Day always is the third Monday in February.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/TNS 2024 ?? NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell went public last week with the idea of an 18-game regular season. The current agreement with the NFLPA caps the season at 17, but the NFL likely will try to negotiate a change.
GETTY IMAGES/TNS 2024 NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell went public last week with the idea of an 18-game regular season. The current agreement with the NFLPA caps the season at 17, but the NFL likely will try to negotiate a change.

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