NFL players can wear Guardian Caps during games in 2024

NFL players will have the option to wear a Guardian Cap on their helmet for games this season.

The helmets of select NFL players might look a little larger than usual this fall.

The league has approved the (optional) use of Guardian Caps for regular season games during the 2024 season. After mandating the caps for practice in 2023, the NFL saw a reduced number of head injuries. The caps are not mandatory for games, but players can choose to wear them.

“We now have two years of data showing significant concussion reductions among players who wear Guardian Caps during practice so players will be permitted to wear the cap during games this upcoming season,” Jeff Miller, the NFL’s EVP overseeing player health and safety said in a statement.

It remains to be seen how many players will opt into wearing a cap during a game. One would assume that offensive linemen and players returning from concussions will be the most likely candidates to wear the extra protection.

The Guardian Caps will be mandatory for most positions at practice this summer, and then become optional when games begin in the fall.

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Josh Heupel discusses Vols using Guardian Caps during fall training camp

Josh Heupel discusses Tennessee using Guardian Caps during fall training camp.

Tennessee kicked off fall training camp at Haslam Field Monday.

The Vols will kick off its 2022 season Sept. 1 against Ball State at Neyland Stadium. Kickoff is slated for 7 p.m. EDT and SEC Network will televise the season-opening matchup.

Following the Vols’ first practice, second-year head coach Josh Heupel discussed Tennessee utilizing Guardian Caps on helmets during fall training camp.

“You talk about concussions and repetitive hits, I think player safety is at the forefront now of what the NCAA is trying to do and what everybody is trying to do across the country, the NFL as well,” Heupel said. “We’ve been doing it here for a long time. We’ve been fortunate that at the end of a training camp or at the end of the season, we always go back with our medical and strength and conditioning staff to look at the injuries.

“Concussions are a major part of what we look at. How do we prevent, and how do we put them in a position to stay healthy in the immediate, but long term too? Our medical staff does a fantastic job. I wish I was smart enough to recall every stat on that. I can’t, but there is a dramatic improvement in keeping kids healthy from the concussion side from those caps.”

Guardian Cap owner and CEO Erin Hanson discusses her vision to help players’ safety throughout football

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‘Swag factor goes down’: Cowboys wearing soft-shell helmets in practice as part of new NFL mandate

Several position groups sported the Guardian Cap on Tuesday in an effort to cut down on the number of training camp concussions. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Today’s NFL players will say one of the nice things about June minicamp work is the relaxed dress code. Rather than strap on every piece of padding they’ll eventually need come fall, these early sessions feature shorts and lightweight practice jerseys.

But this offseason, there’s an extra piece of equipment for many Cowboys players and their counterparts across the league.

The Cowboys’ offensive and defensive linemen, linebackers, and tight ends wore Guardian Caps at their first mandatory practice of the week, a new mandate by the league this year. The soft-shell pads fit over players’ regular helmets and absorb a good deal of the force delivered by even incidental head contact.

What they don’t do is look fashionable, as confirmed by Cowboys guard Zack Martin.

“Yeah, the swag factor goes down quite a bit with those things on,” he told reporters on Tuesday after sporting the protective cap for the first time, “but we’re all about safety, so, you know…”

The caps are part of the league’s ongoing efforts to cut down on the frequency of concussions in the game, especially in this early phase of the offseason, when younger and inexperienced players are often battling hard to make the roster.

ESPN reports that the first two weeks of training camp produce approximately 30 concussions each year, with a greater degree of head contact in that window of time. The rate of injury drops as teams near the regular season as squads tend to shift to a lighter practice load.

This year, Guardian Caps will be required for every preseason practice beginning with the start of the training camp contact period and going through each team’s second preseason game.

The cap’s manufacturer claims that force from head contact is reduced by up to 20% if all players involved in the contact are wearing it.

Some teams, like the Pittsburgh Steelers, have elected to have all of their players wear the bubble lids.

For the Cowboys, it’s currently an adjustment for certain positions only. And while they’re technically not required yet, Martin says the team tried them out Tuesday as a dress rehearsal of sorts.

“They wanted us to get a day or a couple days to kind of get used to them before we head out to Oxnard,” he explained. “It’s maybe a hair heavier, which is kind of annoying: getting everything unbuckled and then buckled back up when you have to. But it’s part of it. Everyone is doing it.”

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National Concussion Awareness Day: Tennessee’s Guardian Cap

National Concussion Awareness Day: Tennessee’s Guardian Cap

KNOXVILLE — Sept. 18 is National Concussion Awareness Day.

With National Concussion Awareness Day at the forefront, Vols Wire takes a look at Guardian Caps worn by Tennessee’s football team.

Guardian Caps are a noticeable part of Tennessee’s practices since Jeremy Pruitt has taken over as the Vols’ head coach.

Guardian Cap is a leader in soft-shell helmet covers that are engineered for impact reduction. It uses padded, soft-shell technology on the outside of the decades old hard-shell football helmet. The product reduces impact up to 33 percent.

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

The soft-shell cover is used by more than 200 colleges, 1,500-plus high schools and more than 500 youth programs.

Guardian Cap owner and CEO Erin Hanson discussed her vision to help players’ safety throughout football.

“We started this whole project in 2010, so it is a 10-year overnight success story,” Hanson told Vols Wire. “Our whole goal in starting it was really to just help players across the board. We really did not get buy-in from high schools and youth until we started moving it through college.

“Once South Carolina and Clemson used it, it kind of validated the product for high schools.”

The Guardian Cap augments existing helmets to make them more flexible and softer, becoming more effective to manage energy and mitigate repetitive, cumulative blows.

As of 2020, NFL testing has validated the benefit of Guardian Caps and the NFL and NFLPA permit the Guardian Cap to be used by lineman in NFL practices. The Jacksonville Jaguars are currently using Guardian Cap.

Six schools throughout the Southeastern Conference have used Guardian Cap: Arkansas, Missouri, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas A&M and Vanderbilt.

“Coach Pruitt was at the SEC meetings and Jimbo Fisher was praising them,” Tony Plagman of Guardian Cap told Vols Wire. “Coach Fisher used them at Florida State and then brought them with him to Texas A&M.

“It is one thing to hear from a sales guy that says these things are helping, but it is another thing to hear from a coach you know, respect and coached with say they are helping.”

Guardian Cap

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire
  • Cooler — Reduces heat up to 15-20 degrees
  • One size fits all — Universal fit for all sizes, makes and models (youth-adult)
  • Easy on, easy off — Attaches to itself with alteration of the helmet or transfer of liability
  • Quiet — Dampens sound waves and vibrations, removing loud “crack” of the helmet
  • Slick — Less surface friction than painted helmet shells
  • Soft and pliable — Pads compress at point of impact, reducing G-force up to 33 percent
  • Independent movement — Four elastic straps allow shifting at impact, redirecting energy
  • Preserve helmet — Less wear and tear on helmet; protects paint, decals and flex panels
  • Lightweight — Only 7 ounces