NFL officials spotting the football
isn't going away despite several technological advances
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[February 01, 2025]
By ROB MAADDI
The NFL will engage its Competition Committee on technology to take
virtual line-to-gain measurements next season, but officials will
continue to spot the football.
There’s no current technology being considered that would help
determine forward progress, which became a point of contention after
Josh Allen was stopped short on a sneak on fourth-and-1 early in the
fourth quarter of Buffalo’s 32-29 loss to Kansas City in the AFC
championship game.
The league tested Sony’s Hawk-Eye tracking services for virtual
line-to-gain measurements in the preseason and in the background
during the regular season. The optimal tracking system notifies
officiating instantly if a first down was gained after the ball is
spotted by hand.
The key word is after. This technology replaces the chain
measurement. The NFL has long used two bright orange sticks and a
chain — the chain gang — to measure for first downs. That method
would remain in a backup capacity.
“What this technology cannot do is take the place of the human
element in determining where forward progress ends,” NFL executive
Kimberly Fields told The Associated Press on Friday. “There will
always be a human official spotting the ball. Once the ball is
spotted, then the line-to-gain technology actually does the
measurement itself. So I think it’s probably been a point of
confusion around what the technology can and can’t do. There will
always be a human element because of the forward progress
conversation.”
Fields said an average of 12 measurements took place each week
during the regular season. The new technology would’ve dropped the
time spent to measure from 75 seconds to 35 seconds.
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Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Nick Bolton (32) hits Buffalo Bills
quarterback Josh Allen (17) during the second half of the AFC
Championship NFL football game, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025, in Kansas
City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)
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NFL balls have been equipped with Zebra microchips
since 2017, powering the NFL’s Next Gen Stats data product. The
chips are also affixed to players’ pads. They provide various data
and metrics that help clubs, media and fans with player evaluation
and analysis of team performance. But these chips can’t determine
where a player was tackled, whether a player is down by contact or
which team gained possession of a loose ball to the precision
necessary for officiating use.
The league also began using boundary line cameras in Week 5 to
assist with replay reviews. The cameras were installed in each of
the 30 stadiums along the end line, goal line and sideline. Usage
was limited to scores, plays with under two minutes remaining and
turnovers.
Discussion for expanding its use to coaches’ challenges and replay
assist is ongoing and would have to be approved by the Competition
Committee.
Fields said the league also experimented with providing back judges
smart watches to assist with objective information so they can make
decisions faster, specifically as it relates to the play clock.
“We want to make the game efficient and more accurate,” Fields said.
“The things that we do around technology, if it’s not going to make
the process better, if it’s not going to assist our officials, then
we shouldn’t be doing it. Everything that we do is going through a
rigorous testing process to make sure we are making things easier
and more efficient.”
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