What are the NFL’s Super Bowl pass interference rules in 2024?

It’s not complicated!

Editor’s note: This story was originally published in 2022 and has been updated.

You’re probably here because someone in the 2024 Super Bowl just committed an egregious pass interference penalty, as dictated by the officials. Or you’re here because the officials missed what was clearly a pass interference penalty, and everyone on social media and in your living room is arguing about what the rule actually means.

It’s the Super Bowl; would you have it any other way?

The pass interference answer applies to both offensive players and defenders, and it’s rather simple (if not always in application).

According to the NFL 2023 rulebook: “It is pass interference by either team when any act by a player more than one yard beyond the line of scrimmage significantly hinders an eligible player’s opportunity to catch the ball.”

So what are those acts that can “significantly hinder” a catch attempt? Here we go:

Acts that are pass interference include, but are not limited to:

  1. Contact by a player who is not playing the ball that restricts the opponent’s opportunity to make the catch;
  2. Playing through the back of an opponent in an attempt to make a play on the ball;
  3. Grabbing an opponent’s arm(s) in such a manner that restricts his opportunity to catch a pass;
  4. Extending an arm across the body of an opponent, thus restricting his ability to catch a pass, and regardless of whether the player committing such act is playing the ball;
  5. Cutting off the path of an opponent by making contact with him, without playing the ball;
  6. Hooking an opponent in an attempt to get to the ball in such a manner that it causes the opponent’s body to turn prior to the ball arriving; or
  7. Initiating contact with an opponent by shoving or pushing off, thus creating separation.

There you have it!

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‘I thought that’s what interference was’: Brent Venables, Drake Stoops sound off on no-call

Brent Venables and Drake Stoops sound off on pass interference no-call after loss to Oklahoma State. A day later, it still doesn’t make sense.

There’s no way to sugarcoat what happened to Drake Stoops in the end zone. He was the victim of assault. But if you ask the Big 12 official just feet away from the play, he’d be a terrible eyewitness.

Don’t call him to the stand.

Stoops was having a career game. And that was an opportunity for him to put an exclamation point on a Bedlam performance for the ages. And the official observing the play robbed him of it.

It wasn’t the only questionable no-call in coverage; Oklahoma State got away with a great deal on Saturday.

“I felt like I was getting held on the out and up,” Stoops said. “I ran out a couple times, but they didn’t call it.”

Oklahoma State defensive back Dylan Smith was as shocked as Stoops, Brent Venables, and Oklahoma fans.

Smith didn’t celebrate once he popped back up on his feet. He stared at the referee for a brief moment instead, almost as if he was expecting to be called for pass interference. – Justin Martinez, The Oklahoman

More: Social media reacts to pass interference no-call.

It was such a head-scratching moment that the ESPN rules analyst was baffled by the no-call. Venables didn’t mince words on the failure of the officials saying, “I thought that was what interference was.”

It was pass interference, Coach. Though Oklahoma could have played better in other moments for it to have not mattered, the fact of the matter is that the no-call mattered.

Instead of kicking a field goal to cut Oklahoma State’s lead to three, the Sooners would have had first-and-goal at the 1-yard line with a chance to take the lead.

Instead of being down three in the final two minutes, the Sooners would have been up one and putting the onus on Alan Bowman to go win the game.

And we’ll never know how differently the game would have turned out because the Big 12 officiating crew kept the flags in their pockets. And in that singular instance, kept the Sooners from having a chance to win the game.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow John on Twitter @john9williams.

Veteran referee Ron Torbert assigned to Week 9 Saints-Bears game

Veteran referee Ron Torbert assigned to Week 9 Saints-Bears game

We’re moving on to Week 9, where referee Ron Torbert and his crew have been assigned to work Sunday’s game between the New Orleans Saints and Chicago Bears. Torbert is one of the most experienced referees in the league, having been promoted to that role back in 2014. The Saints are 7-3 in games with him on the field as referee, while the Bears are 2-6.

But the Saints played too much sloppy football this year to take past performance for granted. The Saints are tied for the third-most penalties in the league (54) and they’ve given up 513 penalty yards, more than anyone else, primarily on defensive pass interference fouls (12 infractions for 219 yards, which leads the NFL) on starting cornerbacks Paulson Adebo (4 DPI’s) and Marshon Lattimore (3).

That could be a problem on Sunday. Torbert’s crew has thrown eight flags for DPI, which is in line with league average, but six of them have gone against home teams, which is the second-most. Adebo and Lattimore must watch their hands and take care to not give up free yards.

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Titans get two suspect pass interference calls on first drive, still can’t score a touchdown

The Titans were bailed out by two questionable pass interference calls on their first drive, and they still couldn’t score a touchdown.

Coming into Sunday’s game between the Baltimore Ravens and the Tennessee Titans, referee Bill Vinovich and his crew were in a three-way tie for the most defensive pass interference penalties called this season with eight. And it didn’t take long for Vinovich to separate himself from his peers. On the Titans’ first drive, the Ravens were flagged twice on some iffy interference calls, and Tennessee’s offense gained 29 extra yards on those two calls.

The penalty called on safety Marcus Williams with 7:16 left in the first quarter was especially “interesting,” and this did not escape the notice of Ravens head coach John Harbaugh and NFL Network rules analyst Gene Steratore.

Even with all that help, the Titans fell short on that opening drive, having to settle for a field goal.

Saints still lead the NFL in penalty yards through 4 weeks

The New Orleans Saints lead the NFL in penalty yards through their first four games, mostly due to defensive pass interference fouls.

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With the majority of NFL teams having played four games to start the 2020 season, and the New Orleans Saints are still an outlier when it comes to penalties. While they were fouled just four times for 67 yards in their win over the Detroit Lions, the Saints still lead the league in total penalty yardage (398), averaging nearly 100 yards per game.

Most of that can be attributed to defensive penalties; their offense has yielded just 70 penalty yards, the twelfth-fewest number in the NFL. The defense leads the league with 328 penalty yards. About 61.3% of that yardage has come from defensive pass interference fouls alone, where New Orleans has given up nearly as many yards (244) as the next three teams combined (252 from the Indianapolis Colts, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and New England Patriots, who have played just three games so far).

Things will continue to normalize as the sample size grows with more games being played. This week, the New York Jets and Chicago Bears each racked up more than 100 penalty yards, helping to close the gap between the Saints and the rest of the NFL. But that’s not company the Saints want to keep, and even now they are an outlier among outliers — the NFL average for defensive penalty yards per game is just 113.4. The Saints have nearly tripled that.

Wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders called out the NFL’s officiating after Week 3’s loss to the Green Bay Packers, publicly asking why opposing defenders were allowed to get away with penalty-worthy moves that earned flags for his Saints teammates. Through four weeks, the Saints have been the beneficiary of just 19 penalties, the seventh-fewest in the league (tying with the Patriots, who play Monday night).

And there were moments when the referees took aim at the Saints for fouls in coverage against Detroit. Linebacker Alex Anzalone was flagged twice, once for DPI and again for illegal contact, on moves that didn’t appear very egregious but still helped lead to Lions touchdowns. Free safety Marcus Williams was also penalized for competing on a contested catch, despite having turned his head around to look for the ball.

Maybe the NFL’s officiating brotherhood is still stinging from last year’s rebuke, when Saints coach Sean Payton helped introduce a new rule making pass interference subject to replay review (it didn’t take; the rule was ineffective and criticized for slowing down game flow, and abandoned after one year). That was a big affront to their authority and it’s easy to explain this trend away as them looking for any reason to penalize Payton’s team. But you’d think they could be better professionals and not stoop to that.

Whatever the case, the Saints must continue to clean up their act. Giving up so many free yards to opposing teams has put them in too many tight spots this season. Whether it’s changes in coaching instruction or play style, the Saints have to keep tweaking things to limit the impact penalties can have on their games. It’s tough enough to beat one opponent, much less two.

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NFL already axing pass interference rule instituted after Rams-Saints debacle

Coaches won’t be able to challenge pass interference penalties in 2020.

Well, that didn’t last very long.

The NFL is already removing the ability for coaches to challenge pass interference penalties, a rule that was instituted last season in wake of the costly mistake made by officials in the 2019 NFC Championship Game between the Saints and Rams. It was a failed experiment that was tested for one season alone, and after seeing so few penalties overturned, the league is axing that rule.

“We’re not going to vote on (it), because nobody is putting forward the OPI/DPI review again. So that dies a natural death,” competition committee chairman Rich McKay said on SiriusXM NFL Radio.

After the rule was put in place, Nickell Robey-Coleman wasn’t opposed to it being called the “Nickell Robey-Coleman Rule,” since he was the one at the center of the blunder. He clearly interfered with Saints wideout Tommylee Lewis, but no flag was thrown. The Saints would’ve gone on to win the game had the penalty been called, but the Rams got the ball back and wound up winning later in overtime after tying it late in the fourth quarter.

The review rule simply resulted in too many wasted timeouts and not enough overturned calls. Even when it seemed obvious that a foul was committed, the call was not reversed, resulting in a lost time out for the challenging coach.

According to the Washington Post, there were 101 interference calls reviewed, and only 24 of them were reversed. That’s not a large enough number to warrant the rule staying in place, which is why it’s going away in 2020 – relatively quietly, too.

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Pass interference penalties will not be reviewable in 2020

After just one season, the NFL has reversed course and will no longer allow pass interference to be reviewed in the 2020 season.

After just one year, the NFL has ruled that pass interference penalties will not be reviewable again in 2020, according to NFL Competition Committee Chairman Rick McKay.

The rule allowing pass interference penalties to be reviewed via coaching challenges was highly-anticipated heading into the 2019 season, particularly after the debacle in the NFC Championship game in New Orleans last year, but the NFL referees made it clear they had little intention of overturning even the most obvious of pass interference calls – making it seem like a foregone conclusion that the rule would only last one season.

Coach Pete Carroll was among the most proactive coaches in attempting to challenge pass interference plays, and while he won one early in the year he was not successful otherwise – and often his challenges were ruled against in a very short period of time, leading some to believe the officials never had any intention of overturning the call on the field.

The NFL will go back to the way things were previously, and you can bet that until the league starts to take the inconsistencies in pass interference seriously, it will continue to be a sore spot for fans, coaches, and players during the 2020 season.

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Pass interference reviews and challenges appear to be going away

Pass interference reviews and challenges appear to be going away

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In the 2019 NFL season, coaches were allowed to challenge pass interference penalties for the first time. The ability to question a judgment call was a trial balloon that was not popular with officials and wasn’t effective in between the sidelines.

Now it appears the ability to challenge pass interference situations is a one-and-done. Ian Rapoport of NFL.com reported on Monday that the NFL is not expected to continue the controversial practice into a second season.

Based on the results from the first year, killing the procedure makes sense. Just 24 of 101 replay reviews resulted in a change, and not a single case of defensive pass interference being called on the field that was challenged was overturned.

The NFL surveyed teams about the rule after the one-year trial in 2019. The results were unfavorable for continuing, to say the least.

“An overwhelming number of those who were asked did not believe that this rule should come back,” Rapoport cited.

Report: Reviewing pass interference calls not coming back in 2020

The NFL is giving up on the notion of reviewing pass interference calls.

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It seems that every time the NFL tries to fix a problem with their product all they do is create another one. This was definitely the case when the NFL decided to review pass interference plays and potential pass interference calls. As bad as the league is at calling PI in the moment, they proved to be worse at reviewing it.

According to NFL reporter Ian Rapoport, the failed experiment of reviewing PI calls might be over. Rapoport is reporting the rule isn’t expected to extend into the 2020 season.

What this means for fans is instead of complaining about how the booth official got the review wrong you can focus on how the officials on the field got it wrong instead.

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WATCH: Did Kyle Rudolph push off on Vikings’ game-winning TD in OT?

Kirk Cousins found Kyle Rudolph in overtime to give the Vikings a Wild-Card victory over the Saints.

The Minnesota Vikings move on to a Divisional round date Saturday with the San Francisco 49ers after surviving New Orleans and the Saints in overtime, 26-20, Sunday at the Superdome. The game was decided on the first play of the extra session when Kirk Cousins found Kyle Rudolph in the end zone.

The winning score was set up by a 43-yard pass from Cousins to Adam Thielin, who made a wonderful over-the-shoulder catch.

New Orleans players were indicating the Minnesota tight end pushed off to get separation on the play that ended the Wild-Card game. However, no review was made and the Saints were done.

New Orleans seems to have a thing with playoffs and controversy. Remember last season?

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images