NFL
notebook: Catch rule altered, "targeting" rule added
Send a link to a friend
[March 28, 2018]
NFL owners, meeting in Orlando,
Fla., unanimously approved a simplified version of what constitutes
a completion for the 2018 season.
Under the new wording instituted Tuesday, a catch will require
control, two feet (or another body part) inbounds and a football
move such as a third step or reaching/extending for the line to
gain. Gone is the "going-to-the-ground" element of the previous
rule.
Al Riveron, the NFL's senior vice president of officiating, said
last week the league's competition committee would recommend
simplifying the language of the catch rule and that the proposed
changes would be presented this week at the league meeting. Riveron
said the league examined footage of multiple prominent plays in
recent years -- including Pittsburgh Steelers tight end Jesse James'
overturned touchdown last season -- to help shape the new catch
rule.
--NFL owners also passed a "targeting" rule aimed at taking head
contact out of the game.
According to league spokesman Brian McCarthy, the new rule reads,
"It is a foul if a player lowers his head to initiate and make
contact with his helmet against an opponent. The player may be
disqualified. Applies to any player anywhere on the field."
The circumstances in which such a foul would merit an ejection are
still being fleshed out, according to competition committee chairman
Rich McKay. McKay added that the primary motivation behind the rule
is to eliminate the use of helmets "as a weapon," whether by linemen
in the trenches or by ball carriers and tacklers.
--New York Giants owner John Mara is doing his best to stomp out
trade rumors swirling around Odell Beckham Jr.
Mara told reporters on Tuesday at the NFL owner's meetings that if
he had his druthers, the Giants would not trade away their star wide
receiver. However, he isn't ruling out the possibility of a trade
entirely.
"Do I want him to be traded? Absolutely not," Mara said. "I want him
to be a Giant. I can't promise that's going to happen. We're not
looking to get rid of him, OK?"
--After going 1-31 in two seasons as head coach in Cleveland, Hue
Jackson believes the Browns can find a franchise quarterback in the
2018 NFL Draft.
"I think the guy's in there. I really do," Jackson said in at the
NFL coaches' breakfast in Orlando.
When asked about discussing each player's potential fit with the
Browns, Jackson said, "I think we're very close. Yeah, I think we're
close. We just haven't had the chance to be together. I gave the
staff the week off. They're vacationing. We're here at the owners
meetings and we'll get together here soon and put our heads together
and see what's best."
--Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson's recovery from his
season-ending anterior cruciate ligament tear a year ago is "ahead
of schedule," coach Bill O'Brien said at the league's meetings.
"Deshaun's ahead of schedule, but there's still a lot of work,"
O'Brien told reporters. "He has a great idea how he feels and how
his knee is. He knows the stages he needs to get back on the field.
...
"He hurt the other knee in college, so he has a real good idea about
how to go about the rehab. He knows the different stages, the
different goals he has to meet along the way. I believe that he
feels real good about where he is right now."
--Oakland Raiders head coach Jon Gruden had thoughts to share at the
coaches' breakfast at the NFL owners meetings, saying he would like
to get rid of instant replay and voicing his surprise that Colin
Kaepernick remains unsigned by an NFL team.
"I'd like to eliminate instant replay, honestly," Gruden said when
asked what he would change now that he is returning to coaching.
"That would be my No. 1 thing. Let the officials call the game.
That's just my opinion. I try not to play that game of 'wish list,'
you know what I mean?"
Gruden, returning to the Raiders after nine years in the broadcast
booth with ESPN, also indicated that he expects Kaepernick to be on
an NFL team some time in the near future, saying, "I am surprised
he's not in camp with somebody. He probably will be soon."
--While the New York Jets didn't hesitate to sign Teddy Bridgewater
to a one-year deal at the start of free agency, his former team had
concerns with the quarterback's medical evaluation.
"The reports I'd get back from the medical people weren't as
positive as I was about it," Minnesota Vikings head coach Mike
Zimmer told reporters at the NFL owner's meetings. "That's kind of
how it came down is that his knee wasn't as ... he still has some
recovery to do. When I watched him in practice, he moved well, I
didn't see limitations, but from what I told, there was some.
"When I saw him in practice, I thought he could handle it. I never
saw him being hampered with that, but other people are talking to me
and had different opinions, I guess."
--A suspect in the burglary of New England Patriots tight end Rob
Gronkowski's house during the week leading up to Super Bowl LII
turned himself in to police.
Eric Tyrrell, 28, was arrested on a warrant and is currently being
held on $10,000 bail, according to the Foxborough (Mass.) Police
Department. Tyrrell will be arraigned at Wrentham (Mass.) District
Court on Wednesday morning.
[to top of second column] |
Gronkowski reported the robbery of his Foxborough home to police on
Feb. 5 after the Patriots were defeated by the Philadelphia Eagles
41-33 in the Super Bowl a day earlier.
--If Johnny Manziel's NFL comeback attempt doesn't pan out as he
hopes, he intends to fall back on the Canadian Football League.
Manziel threw in front of scouts and coaches at Texas A&M's pro day,
telling reporters afterward that he hopes an NFL team reaches out,
but he isn't solely focused on the possibility.
"I've blocked it off," Manziel said, via ESPN. "I can't do anything,
I can't stress about it, all I can do is make sure I'm where I need
to be. ... All I can do is block it off. If something (with the NFL)
pops up, it pops up. And if not, if I don't get the opportunity to
go back, I'm going to go play in the CFL, and things are going to be
fine. One way or another, one day down the line, I'll get back to
exactly where I want to be, because I'm not going to stop until I
do."
--Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin isn't a fan of touchdown
celebrations despite his team showcasing some of the most notable
end-zone shenanigans in the league last season.
"It's for the entertainment of the fans, so I respect it on that
level, but personally I don't like it," Tomlin said from the NFL
owners meetings, via ESPN. "I just think it takes away from the
game. It's not a good look for young people. Young people aren't
allowed to celebrate in that way (during games), so why should we?"
Tomlin said he doesn't watch when his players celebrate in the end
zone. Antonio Brown, Le'Veon Bell and JuJu Smith-Schuster were often
at the forefront of the planned celebrations, which became possible
when the NFL relaxed its rules on excessive celebrating last year.
--Just two years in as the Tennessee Titans' general manager, Jon
Robinson received an extension this offseason that runs through
2022.
Controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk told PaulKuharsky.com that she
signed Robinson to an extension within the last month, putting him
on the same schedule as newly hired head coach Mike Vrabel, who has
a five-year contract.
Robinson's contract was set to run through the 2019 draft, but he
and Vrabel are now both secured through 2022. The 42-year-old
Robinson has deep familiarity with Vrabel, a former NFL linebacker,
from their time together with the New England Patriots when Vrabel
was a player and Robinson a rising executive.
--Blaine Gabbert will replace Matt Cassel as the No. 2 quarterback
for the Titans.
Gabbert, joining his fourth NFL team, spent last season with the
Arizona Cardinals after previously playing for the San Francisco
49ers and Jacksonville Jaguars.
Gabbert agreed to terms with the Titans after visiting the team
facility last week. Terms of the agreement were not immediately
available.
--The Seattle Seahawks cut troubled backup quarterback Trevone
Boykin on Tuesday shortly after reports of an alleged
domestic-violence attack on his girlfriend began circulating.
Boykin, 24, is under investigation for aggravated assault resulting
in serious bodily injury, police in Mansfield, Texas, told
Dallas-Fort Worth television station WFAA.
Shabrika Bailey detailed last week's incident to WFAA on Monday
night, saying Boykin beat up and left her with a broken jaw wired
shut. Bailey said the incident happened on March 20 at her home in
Mansfield, Texas. She said she refused to show Boykin a text message
on her phone and that led to the attack.
--The Raiders are waiving tight end Clive Walford, according to
ESPN's Adam Schefter, who adds that the former third-round pick is
"expected to find a new home quickly."
Walford, 26, will be subject to waivers. He has one year remaining
on his rookie contract. Any team that claims him would owe him $1.9
million in base salary for 2018.
One of the top-rated tight ends in a weak class, Walford was the
second tight end selected in the 2015 draft, going 68th overall out
of Miami (Fla.). He caught 61 passes for 688 yards and six
touchdowns through his first two seasons before sinking to third on
the depth chart in 2017, when he caught just nine passes for 81
yards.
--Dan Patrick's days as the studio host for NBC's "Football Night in
America" are over.
Patrick told the New York Post that he decided not to renew his
contract with NBC to host the pregame show leading into the
network's "Sunday Night Football" broadcast.
"I didn't want to do it and not love doing it," the 61-year-old
Patrick told the newspaper, adding that he turned down a new
five-year deal from NBC in December.
--Field Level Media
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |