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Cryptocurrency News Articles
NFL is considering changing overtime rules in the regular season to decrease the advantage for teams that win the coin toss.
Feb 27, 2025 at 07:57 am
The NFL is considering changing overtime rules in the regular season to decrease the advantage for teams that win the coin toss.
The NFL is considering changing overtime rules in the regular season to decrease the advantage for teams that win the coin toss.
The league’s competition committee agreed Wednesday at the scouting combine that overtime rules need to be addressed.
The advantage of receiving the ball first in overtime is more significant than it was before 2011, when overtime went to sudden death. Receiving teams won 56.8% of overtime games from 2017-24, up from 55.4% from 2001-11.
Both teams currently get an opportunity to possess the ball in overtime unless a touchdown is scored on the first possession.
The rules are different in the playoffs. Both teams get a chance to have a possession even if the offense scores a touchdown on the opening drive. That postseason change came after the Buffalo Bills’ loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in a divisional-round game in January 2022.
Making the overtime rules the same in the regular season is one possible solution, along with extending the period to 15 minutes.
Among other changes, the NFL plans to use its virtual measuring system to determine first downs in 2025. This wouldn’t eliminate the officials who manually spot the ball and use chains to mark the line to gain. The optimal tracking system notifies officiating instantly if a first down was gained after the ball is spotted by hand.
“We used this in the background last season,” said Kimberly Fields, NFL senior vice president of football operations. “The goal for 2025 is to continue to train our techs, who are the ones who will be utilizing the technology, finalizing all of our officiating processes and procedures around virtual measurements and testing the graphics for the broadcast and in-stadium, so fans in the stadium and fans watching on television can see what we’re doing. The chain crew will still be there as backup.”
Also, the competition committee will review expansion of the replay assist to include more fouls, but Troy Vincent, NFL executive vice president of trust and safety, said “there was no appetite” from the committee to use video replay to throw a flag.
A team still could propose a rule change to do that. For now, if officials miss an obvious penalty such as a face mask, replay assist can’t throw a flag.
Replay assist was used in 2024 to pick up flags thrown for roughing the passer (contact with head/neck), unnecessary roughness (runner out of bounds), intentional grounding and ineligible player downfield.
Expansion under consideration for 2025 would include roughing the passer (hit below the knee), unnecessary roughness (defenseless receiver/player), face mask (contact of hand with facemask), tripping, illegal crack-back block and horse-collar tackle, among others.
Vincent said the league wants to find a way to bring back onside kicks while also installing a permanent kickoff rule after a one-year trial with what’s called the dynamic kickoff.
The trial made kickoffs more exciting with a higher rate of returns. Vincent said he anticipates the spot of the touchback on kickoffs being moved from the 30- to the 35-yard line.
But the changes affected the onside kick. Teams were 3-for-50, the lowest recovery rate since 2001.
“Universal consensus that we know we need to do something with this play,” Vincent said.
He added there wasn’t much conversation around a fourth-and-long option to keep possession, though those discussions could occur next month.
The tush-push play the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles mastered has been a hot topic this week because the Green Bay Packers proposed banning it. Some opponents have argued the play is dangerous, but Vincent said the league found no injuries on the play in 2024.
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- Avalanche Foundation and Rain Launch the Avalanche Card Targeting Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America
- Feb 27, 2025 at 01:05 pm
- The Avalanche Foundation and digital payment firm Rain launched the Avalanche Card on Feb. 26, 2025, enabling users in Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America to spend
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