The Guardian (USA)

Flag football reaches the Pro Bowl as concussion fears stalk the gridiron

- Beau Dure

Flag football used to be a sport for the young and old. And nothing in between.

By the end of the decade, if the NFL has its way, it could be in the Olympics.

It’s already in the World Games, a sort of incubator for Olympic sports. “Tackle” football has had some world championsh­ips – including women’s championsh­ips, in which the US women hold the crown after defeating upstart Team GB in 2022 – but the need for multiple days of recovery between games doesn’t lend itself to a short tournament. And a game between NFL stars and the rest of the world would make the Dream Team’s romp through the 1992 Olympic men’s basketball tournament look like a series of taut thrillers.

The next step: the Pro Bowl, where the NFL has bowed to the reality that no one’s really interested in hitting each other after they’ve been eliminated from the playoffs. Instead of a lackadaisi­cal tackle football game, fans will see the league’s best players wearing detachable flags instead of pads.

Offering a laidback game for exhausted, aching pro players is one incentive for the NFL’s new all-star event. The other desired outcome is to showcase a game that the NFL hopes will grow American football as concussion concerns make parents wary of putting their kids in pads and helmets. Among children aged six to 12, tackle football participat­ion shrank 29% from 2016 to 2021, according to Project Play’s data, while flag football went up 15% despite the pandemic’s chilling effect on sports.

Through most of its history, the flag game has been a way to introduce kids to the gridiron, prepping players for eventual transition to “tackle” football under the Friday night lights of high school fields. For adults, it’s a way to keep playing – unlike basketball, soccer and softball, tackle football doesn’t lend itself to recreation­al play because of the equipment (and medical) expenses.

Today, the game isn’t just for elementary schoolchil­dren or college fraterniti­es facing off on intramural fields. It’s for high schoolers – especially girls, as schools keep working to comply with Title IX by offering more options for female athletes. In high schools, the numbers are going up quickly -- 341 boys and 6,235 girls in 2009-10, up to 685 boys and 15,716 girls in 2021-22.

Not that it’s always the same game. The World Games’ rules are vastly different from those of NIRSA, an associatio­n for college intramural sports, or high school rules such as those in Georgia. The NFL’s youth program’s rules are similar to what we’ll see in the Pro Bowl.

Field sizes between the two end zones might be 50 yards (World Games, NFL) or 80 yards (NIRSA, Georgia high schools). Field goals don’t exist, but punters may be present on larger fields.

NIRSA and Georgia high schools allow players to screen defenders, not like full-contact combat blocking in tackle football but closer to picks in basketball. The NFL’s youth program is more explicitly contactles­s – no blocking, no screening, no fumble recoveries – which means the quarterbac­k’s only defense against an oncoming rusher is a seven-yard buffer zone before the ball is snapped.

The World Games and NFL youth programs have similar rules but diverge on two important points. The World Games feature five players per team; NFL youth programs are typically 7v7, which will be what we’ll see in the Pro Bowl. (Good luck getting open, NFL receivers.) NFL youth programs curiously don’t allow laterals or backwards passes, a staple of the US men’s offense in the World Games.

Different rules (and different skillsets) lead to vastly different games. A recent state final in Georgia was a dour defensive struggle in which neither team scored until the third overtime. In the World Games, the US men won with a creative, improvisat­ional game with quarterbac­k Darrell “Housh” Doucette occasional­ly running and occasional­ly tossing it back to Ladderick “Pablo” Smith, who can pass as well. Men’s finalist Italy have a more prosaic precision passing game, in which quarterbac­k Luke Zahradka checks a playbook, tucks the book into his shorts, takes the snap, plants his feet and waits for an open receiver.

The Pro Bowl will surely be the most colorful, taking place on an extravagan­tly painted field that also includes space for the skills contests that will test everything from obstacle-course acumen to long snappers’ accuracy. Also, these will almost certainly be the only flag football games in the world with Snoop Dogg and Pete Davidson serving as captains.

Whether all of these games spark a global flag football revolution remains to be seen. At the youth level, there’s little doubt parents will continue to push kids toward the lower-contact gridiron variant.

At other levels, flag football is no more gimmicky than rugby sevens or T20 cricket, both of which condense epic tomes into short stories. The barriers to entry are low, with no need for the body armor and helmets worn in traditiona­l football.

And in an era in which profession­al athletes are investing in pickleball and breakdanci­ng is on the Olympic program, who would rule out another recreation­al sport turning into big business and Olympic competitio­n someday?

in 1967 and sung by Jones. The internatio­nal hit went on to win a coveted 1968 Ivor Novello award, peaking at No 2 in the UK charts in March of that year. Along with another of Sir Tom’s 60s hits, the Green, Green Grass of Home, it has been a supporters’ favourite in the pre-match rituals of Welsh internatio­nals down the years.

The ban is bound to raise hackles among the game’s followers and news of the RFU’s action brought a caustic response from one Wales internatio­nal, Louis Rees-Zammit. The 21year-old wing posted on Twitter: “All the things they need to do and they do that first …”

The acting Welsh Rugby Union chief executive, Nigel Walker, has warned the future of the game in Wales is at stake over the allegation­s of misogyny, sexism, racism and homophobia that have rocked the organisati­on.

Allegation­s of a “toxic culture” at the WRU were aired in a television documentar­y last week, resulting in the resignatio­n of the chief executive, Steve Phillips, on Sunday. An independen­t taskforce is to be set up to tackle the allegation­s, with Sport Wales – a Welsh government-funded body – advising on the make up and remit of the panel.

The Six Nations begins in Cardiff on Saturday when Warren Gatland’s Wales side host Ireland. Wales also face England at the Principali­ty Stadium this year.

• This article was amended on 2 February 2023 to remove a reference to Wales as a “principali­ty”.

 ?? Adam Pintar/AP ?? Team USA celebrate at the Internatio­nal Federation of American Football Flag Football world championsh­ips in December 2021. Photograph:
Adam Pintar/AP Team USA celebrate at the Internatio­nal Federation of American Football Flag Football world championsh­ips in December 2021. Photograph:

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