Should F1 change its post-race technical procedures?

Picture the scene: You’ve just been to watch a thrilling race, where any one of three drivers looked to be in with a shout of winning for much of it, and there was uncertainty about the outcome right up until the final lap. Then you’ve made your way …

Picture the scene: You’ve just been to watch a thrilling race, where any one of three drivers looked to be in with a shout of winning for much of it, and there was uncertainty about the outcome right up until the final lap.

Then you’ve made your way onto the grid, watched the podium ceremony surrounded by thousands of others, slowly walked off after a few photos, sat in traffic for a while but still made it downtown to grab some dinner while buzzing about the day you’ve had.

Suddenly you start to overhear strange comments and shouts of annoyance or unusual laughter… And then you’re pretty sure the word “disqualified” was said. You grab your phone and check online and there’s the news.

So it turns out there wasn’t uncertainty about the outcome right up until the final lap — there was uncertainty about the outcome right up until over three and a half hours after the checkered flag had been waved to call off the battle.

It just doesn’t seem right, does it?

Podium ceremonies are a big part of the fan experience at F1 races…which makes their being rendered irrelevant by subsequent revelations all the more of a buzz kill. Mark Sutton/Motorsport Images

I’m sure at this point some of you are already busy typing “Do you not know motorsport?! Cars take time to go through technical checks!” And yes, they do. This is not a dig at the FIA, which cannot be expected to check everything on every car within seconds of a race finishing.

In fact, the technical brilliance that is inherent in Formula 1 is something that needs to be protected, but that doesn’t mean the time it took for the result to be changed on Sunday night can’t be looked at and learned from.

In some ways, it’s a tougher challenge than sporting penalties, because of how complex F1 machinery is and the level of detail that needs looking into during post-race scrutineering to ensure that cars are conforming with the technical regulations. But in other ways, it’s much easier.

As we evidenced by the decision that came out from the stewards on Sunday night, there is a zero-tolerance approach to technical breaches.

“The stewards note that the onus is on the competitor to ensure that the car is in compliance with the regulations at all times during an event,” the decision said. “In this particular case, the rear skid in the area defined in the Technical Delegate’s report was outside of the thresholds outlined in Article 3.5.9 e) of the FIA Formula One Technical Regulations, which includes a tolerance for wear. Therefore, the standard penalty for a breach of the Technical Regulations is imposed.”

And it’s not as if Mercedes or Ferrari argued that case at all. Mercedes technical director James Allison has since admitted there is embarrassment within the team for such an error that led to it being disqualified as the rules are so clear cut.

“Of course the disqualification is a significant blow,” Allison said. “It’s a miserable feeling. It hurts and everybody here feels it. Everybody is upset, embarrassed to a degree as well because we absolutely don’t like like being on the wrong side of the rules and just lamenting the lost points.

“Austin is a track with a very bumpy surface and therefore you are a bit more vulnerable to bumping the car on the ground. We just simply didn’t take enough margin at the end of Free Practice 1. When we had done our setup we checked the plank and everything all looked fine, untouched after the FP1 running.

“But the results of the race speak for themselves. We were illegal, so clearly, we should have had our car set a little bit higher up to give ourselves a little bit more margin. It’s of course a mistake — it’s an understandable sort of mistake in a sprint weekend where it’s so much harder to get that stuff right, especially on a bumpy track. But a lesson for us in the future to make sure that we take more margin, especially at a track like that with all its bumps.”

The issue I have is that if there are aspects of a car that can be worn during a race and need to be checked in terms of tolerances, and then a certain car — or two in this week’s case — is proven to be the wrong side of the line, why does it still take so long to be decided upon?

A lesson to be learned from an organizational point of view would be to inform teams they will be called immediately during parc ferme checks to discuss what has happened. There was nearly an hour and a half between Mercedes and Ferrari being summoned and the decision to disqualify both cars being published.

In cases like this, it doesn’t need to take that long. It’s obviously not going to be as simple as the FIA dropping everything to handle that specific situation at a certain time but that’s where resource and investment continues to be required. In a week where the governing body increased the maximum fine amount to competitors in F1 to over $1 million — money that is intended for grassroots motorsport — there surely can be other revenue streams found.

The Remote Operations Center (ROC) in Geneva that was established in the aftermath of the Abu Dhabi 2021 debacle has been up and running for more than a year but doesn’t appear to have had a hugely noticeable impact so far. Perhaps those in the ROC could be tasked with hearing from a team representative as quickly as possible when an issue with a car is found, allowing post-race checks to continue uninterrupted but a decision to be made more quickly.

And perhaps more importantly, there’s got to be flexibility when issues occur. Thresholds surely should be in place for when random technical checks produce multiple infringements of the same type, as was the case at COTA.

Four cars were checked across the top four teams — those of Hamilton, Leclerc, Max Verstappen and Lando Norris — and two of the four were found to be in breach of the regulations. With a 50% hit rate, checking the planks of at least one car from each team should surely become the required follow-up.

The counter argument is everything needs packing up to take to Mexico City, but then we’re in danger of seeing the desire to chase more revenue by constantly adding more races be to the detriment of the actual sporting competition itself. Maybe we’re not quite at that point yet, but that balance needs to be kept in mind.

Austin wasn’t a case of the FIA doing anything wrong — in fact, doing it right by finding discrepancies that then act as deterrents to all teams — but lessons can certainly be learned to ensure fans have a better chance of actually knowing the outcome of a race before they’ve left a track, and teams feel they’ve all been judged equally.

NFL Roster Cuts 101: Difference in being released vs. waived, practice squad rules

Here’s some quick homework for NFL Roster Cuts 101: The difference in being released vs. waived, and how it impacts practice squad formation

The annual NFL roster cuts deadline is one of the busiest 48-hour periods on pro football’s calendar, and you’ll see a lot of different terms thrown around — but what do they all mean? What is a vested veteran? What is the difference in being released and being waived? How does it all tie together in forming the New Orleans Saints practice squad? Let’s break it down.

Released vs. Waived

This is an important distinction. Players earn accrued seasons by being on a team’s roster for six or more games each year, and those with four or more accrued seasons will immediately become free agents upon being released (at least until the NFL trade deadline in November, at which point they’ll hit waivers like everyone else).

That isn’t the case for rookies, second-year pros, and most players returning from last year’s practice squad. The vast majority of players cut on Tuesday are being waived, which of course means they’re testing the waiver wire. That gives other teams an opportunity to freely claim them, though any additions require corresponding moves to open up spots on the 53-man roster.

Practice squad rules

Teams are allowed to keep 16 players on their practice squad, and those accrued seasons come back into play here. 10 of those spots are reserved for players with fewer than two accrued seasons. The other 6 slots are open to players with two or more accrued seasons — meaning veteran players. Last year the Saints had experienced pros like Kirk Merritt, J.P. Holtz, Nick Martin, and Taco Charlton on their practice squad to open the season.

Those accrued seasons matter in pay, too. Players on the practice squad with fewer than two accrued seasons are paid $12,000 each week. Those with two  or more accrued seasons are paid at least $16,100, with room to negotiate up to $20,000 in their weekly game checks. That’s an important recruiting tool teams use when assembling their practice squads but it’s also a cost-cutting measure for the NFL to pinch every possible penny.

Injured reserve protocol

So this is another important point we should touch on. The NFL allows teams to activate up to eight players from injured reserve (and the same player can be designated to return twice, if needed, but they also count against that limit each time) but they must start the season on the 53-man roster in order to qualify, even if it’s only as a day. That’s why you’ll see these referred to as procedural moves.

This is also why so many media projections have the Saints keeping Tre’Quan Smith on the team at wide receiver, or Landon Young at offensive tackle, despite both players being sidelined for weeks with significant injuries. As was the case last year with Trevor Penning and Malcolm Roach, both guys would need to stay on the roster past the cuts deadline on Tuesday before being designated to injured reserve on Wednesday (that’s also the case for players who might have made the cut but are dealing with injuries, such as linebacker Ryan Connelly). Theoretically none of them would be available until Week 5’s road game with the New England Patriots, but it really depends on each player’s recovery timeline.

Teams can put as many players on injured reserve as they need to, but again, just eight of them may return to activation in a single season. A large number also puts a strain on the training staff’s resources. So you’ll see a lot of players who are hurt agree to be released with an injury settlement. That’s a payout which covers the weeks they would have been inactive. It also requires the player to finish rehab on their own. They’re also a free agent and can sign with a new team once they can pass a physical.

Right now the Saints have three players on season-ending injured reserve: Trai Turner, Andrew Dowell, and Eno Benjamin, all of whom were hurt during training camp. None of them will be eligible to play again this year even if they did heal up in time, which is really unfortunate. But the team’s medical staff will handle their recovery and they’ll still be paid the guarantees they were owed.

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Justin Thomas denied relief by PGA Tour rules official: ‘Worth a shot’

Thomas called for a referee to determine whether a scoreboard was in his line of sight.

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GREENSBORO, N.C. — Justin Thomas sought relief after he fanned his tee shot 30 yards to the right on the ninth hole at Sedgefield Country Club and it landed underneath a tree. But a PGA Tour rules official denied the request for a free drop at the Wyndham Championship on Saturday.

Thomas called for a referee to determine whether a scoreboard was in his line of sight. Out came Tour official Pete Lis, who heard his plea and concluded that from his lie behind a tree a scoreboard wasn’t on his intended line of play.

“I feel like you’re not understanding what I’m saying,” Thomas said. “I’ve had it multiple times where a grandstand is in my way and don’t get relief.”

“It’s not on your line of play right now,” Lis said. “You wouldn’t because you can’t get the ball to finish on the line with hole.”

Thomas accepted the decision and punched out from the pine straw and made one of his two bogeys in a round of 66 that lifted him into a tie for 11th as he battles to make the FedEx Cup Playoffs. It was a classic example of a player trying to use the Rules of Golf to their advantage. Thomas was wise to ask.

“You get rulings sometimes where you almost feel bad that it’s happening, and I truly felt like that was going to be one of those scenarios. It’s just weird. It was between me and the hole, and I just had situations before where stuff like that’s happened. It’s not necessarily in your way, but because it’s between you, you get relief,” he explained. “It was just because the tree was there. It was one of those things like you kind of have your tail tucked between your legs asking for relief because it would only happen in a situation like this. But at the same time, I’m always going to ask because you never know, I could have gotten a drop and would have been able to hit on the green. So worth a shot.”

One day earlier, Thomas was granted a ruling in his favor that allowed both he and Adam Scott, who was playing in the same group, to drop in the fairway rather than the rough after they drove into the water on the eighth hole.

“I think drops get abused a decent bit and we’re not those guys, but we just wanted to –  we needed to make sure that it was done correctly because that’s not – that wasn’t in the nature of it, we just wanted to make sure all was OK,” he said on Friday.

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Here’s why the Rules of Golf are constantly being evaluated

“As long as golfers are out there playing the game, the rules are going to keep changing.”

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(Editor’s note: This is the third installment of a three-part series on the Rules of Golf. The first part was a look at the five most-searched rules in 2023 and the second discussed the USGA’s rules hotline.)

The Rules of Golf govern every shot during a professional round or even an outing with friends, but they’re never in the front of your mind when lining up a 10-foot putt or a tee shot.

Where you can take relief from, how you can mark a ball on a green and how to deal with ground under repair are all common issues one may face during a round of golf. Yet the rules guiding the game are constantly changing, and sometimes it can be hard for a weekend golfer to keep up with the changes.

However, that doesn’t stop the United States Golf Association and R&A from continually evaluating the rules to make sure they’re up to par with today’s standards and the way golf is played.

“As long as golfers are out there playing the game, the rules are going to keep changing,” said Craig Winter, the USGA’s senior director of Rules of Golf. “That’s true of any sport and society in general. Rules obviously help golfers understand how the game is played.”

As far as the USGA, which helps govern the game of golf with the R&A, Winter said the organization is always taking feedback on rules and whether changes need to be made.

Winter said there’s a committee, which includes PGA Tour, LPGA, PGA of America and other representation, that meets three times a year to discuss the Rules of Golf. During those meetings, the committee and its experts will talk about the rules, whether they think some need to be changed and try to answer questions that were submitted.

The USGA and R&A partnered for joint governance in 1952, and new rules have been announced in four-year cycles ever since. It changed with the modernized rules update in 2019, meaning the new four-year cycle put rule changes at the beginning of this year with the next to come in 2027.

“The joint meetings are a really good chance for us to get together and get deep into what are you looking for with this particular item, this particular reason for change,” Winter said.

There are also quarterly clarifications that can come out on rules, including one that did in July.

Winter said the USGA receives nearly 15,000 questions a year regarding the Rules of Golf. Although the USGA doesn’t discuss all of them among the committee, the ones that get them thinking and stir up a conversation on whether a change needs to be made are brought up on the bigger stage.

“We live and breath the rules,” Winter said. “Especially as a staff, that’s what our job is. We’re always thinking about the rules. Anything you’re thinking about, you’re thinking about how it is, how it was and how it could be. That process just kind of feeds itself.”

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Did you know the USGA has a rules hotline? The stories are comical

Rulings can get interesting on the golf course. Just ask the USGA.

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(Editor’s note: This is the second installment of a three-part series on the Rules of Golf. The first part was a look at the five most-searched rules in 2023.)

Golf is complicated. The rules are complicated. So much so that PGA Tour players still ask to speak with an official during the simplest of rulings to ensure they don’t mistakenly receive a penalty.

And if Tour players can ask for help, so can you.

The United States Golf Association offers a helpline that amateurs around the country can call to ask about the rules of the game.

According to the USGA’s Todd Stice, the organization receives 15,000 rules inquiries — calls, emails, texts — per year and already eclipsed the 10,000 mark for 2023 on July 1.

“Shows you how much the game of golf is booming. Everyone is playing and loving it and wanting to be a part of it,” Stice told Golfweek.

If you ever encounter a situation on the course that entices you to call the hotline, Stice says there’s one thing that will help you and the USGA official et to the solution more efficiently.

“The biggest thing is getting the facts clear to us. The rules are actually very black and white, it’s those facts that are fuzzy. Making sure we know exactly what happened. A person can call me up and just start talking me through a situation and I got to be like, ‘Okay, was this match play or stroke play?’ The rules really fork quite a bit when you’re talking about the differences there.

“That’s the biggest thing. Just making sure that we’re aware of exactly what happened.”

As you’d expect, there have been memorable situations the USGA has had to handle.

“I got a call from a woman who was driving in her car and she had a situation where a ball was in the middle of the fairway and the player put their club down and started waggling it and it moved the ball. And she’s like, ‘So I think that’s a stroke and I just, you know, play it as it lies.’ And I said, ‘Well, the ruling is going to be a little different.’

“Then immediately her husband is in the car, comes on and says, ‘Okay, that was me. What’s the ruling?’ And they start going back and forth at each other and the wife thought it was one thing, she goes, ‘No, it’s a stroke, you play it as it lies,’ and the husband says, ‘There’s no penalty, you put it back,’ and I’m sitting there and they’re both going at each other and I’m like, ‘You guys are you both wrong, I’m sorry.’

“And when I explained it to them, I’m like ‘Alright, there’s a one-stroke penalty and you have to replace it, but it’s not a stroke.’ And they both got quiet for 20 seconds and I’m just kind of sitting there, twiddling my thumbs going, ‘Did you hear me?’ It’s so much fun when you get situations like that where people are — they’re trying to be right. These two were playing against each other and they just went back and forth and they were at each other’s throats until I cleared it up, and they both hung up. You could tell both of them were a little grumpy at the end. But that’s what this game does to us. This game is so fun and passionate.”

While Stice’s first tale was about a married couple, his second was about a dog.

“This one I got about 10 days ago. The guy calls me up on the phone and he’s already laughing. He says, ‘I hit this tee shot on this par 3 that was going to the right of the green and we saw a dog that was just kind of running around over there and didn’t think anything of it, just a dog loose on the golf course. The ball one-hopped, the dog jumps up into the air and catches it in his mouth and runs off into his yard, out of bounds.’ And he’s just laughing as he’s telling this story.

“I started laughing with him, too, and he’s like, ‘We didn’t know what to do, we have no clue what happens here.’

Stice eventually gave the group his ruling, saying the ball is dropped within a club length of where they thought the dog caught it and there’s no stroke penalty involved.

If you’re interested in contacting the USGA, or want to save the information for future rounds, here’s how to get in touch.

Phone: 908-326-1850
Email: rules@usga.org

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Darren Rizzi thinks new kickoff rule will make the play more dangerous

Saints special teams coordinator Darren Rizzi believes NFL’s new kickoff rule will make the play more dangerous, via @southexclusives:

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The kickoff is one of the most exciting plays in football. The NFL has added rules to try to make that play safer over the years. As exciting as it is, it can also be one of the most violent plays as well, including some of the most frequent high speed collisions in the sport. There have been changes to blocking schemes, and we’ve seen spring football leagues try their own variations to make the play safe while keeping kickoffs exciting. The newest rule change might be detrimental to the excitement and the safety.

This latest rule change is the ball is spotted at the 25-yard line on fair catches in kickoffs. The hope is to see more fair catches as a result. More fair catches means less returns which obviously takes the excitement away from the play. That’s an easy reason to see why fans might not like the new rule. New Orleans Saints special teams coordinator Darren Rizzi also stands against the rule, but for a much different reason. He’s worked on an advisory committee with other special teams coaches around the league since 2018, aiming to make the game’s third phase safer.

But not only does Rizzi not expect teams to actually fair catch kickoffs more often, he objects to this rule because he thinks it will only lead to more chaos and danger. He directly called out the notion of number of returns impacting the reaction to the rule. Rizzi is solely focused on the health of players, telling NewOrleans.Football’s Mike Triplett: “There was this false narrative being thrown around that the coaches didn’t want it because it was gonna be less returns. … The last thing any coach wants is to lose a player to injury.”

He foresees teams attempting to cancel out fair catches with squib kicks. This would lead to even more high speed collisions, clearly counter productive to what the league is trying to accomplish. Rizzi doesn’t believe the league considered the other side of the coin.

Rizzi even went as far to say, “I don’t think there’s a special teams coach in the league – in fact, I know there’s not a special teams coach in the league right now that likes the rule.” He sees other, more effective, ways to make the game safer, such as more penalties for lowering the head. This would put the power in coaches and officials to make the game safer. The extra 15 yards would definitely make keeping your head a point of emphasis. Coaches can teach that part out of the game with an extra motivation of penalties being called.

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SEC could make changes to punish field-storming

Storming the field has been a hot topic recently in college football, especially among Florida fans. Could the SEC change its rules?

No sports movie is complete without a game-winning touchdown that leads to fans storming the field, but the group celebration is a major point of debate in the real-life college football world.

The Florida faithful is no stranger to this conversation. The general consensus is that Gators fans are above it. No team that’s been to the mountaintop before needs to act like winning is something new, even if players come and go in 3-4 year cycles.

And that rule doesn’t just apply to the gridiron. When UF fans stormed the court in O’Connell Center after a February 2022 win over Auburn from the men’s basketball team, it was the first time it had happened in nearly 35 years.

“It’s just not an act of celebration Florida fans engage in,” Ethan Budowsky wrote for The Independent Florida Alligator.

Traditionalists will be happy to learn then that the SEC is considering rule changes that would heavily penalize teams from storming the field after a win.

Commissioner Greg Sankey appointed a group last November to tackle event safety, according to Sports Illustrated, and they are set to hear proposals for a new policy that would replace the fine structure that no penalizes schools whose fans rush the field.

Some of the proposed policies include forfeiting the game after a field-storming incident or losing a home game from a future schedule as punishment. The former is unlikely to get any serious consideration, but the latter isn’t totally ridiculous.

The threat of playing a rivalry game on the road for three-straight seasons would keep fans off the field, and the goal is to scare off the impulsive types who might be willing to instigate a crowd. The SEC is prioritizing fan safety, even if it appears to be at the cost of fun.

Fans have been seriously maimed and injured while storming the field, and there is no way to keep everyone safe when such chaos ensues.

Whatever changes come to the rules will likely be broken, but a conference administrator told SI that it would take just one incident for the hammer to come down and scare the rest of the fanbases into compliance.

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Which Saints player do you want to see wearing No. 0?

Which Saints player should be wearing the coveted No. 0 jersey? A new tweak to NFL rules opens it up for quarterbacks, specialists, RB’s, TE’s, WR’s, and select defenders:

The NFL has changed its jersey number designation rules again, just a year after the first big shakeup in years. The single-digit No. 0 will be eligible for select players on offense and defense as well as some specialists for the 2023 season, but who should be wearing it for the New Orleans Saints?

Here’s the list of positions eligible for No. 0:

  • Quarterbacks
  • Punters
  • Kickers
  • Running backs
  • Fullbacks
  • Tight ends
  • Wide receivers
  • Linebackers
  • Defensive backs

We can probably rule out established veterans in signature numbers like Alvin Kamara, Taysom Hill, Michael Thomas, Demario Davis, Marshon Lattimore, and Tyrann Mathieu, and it’s unlikely that Chris Olave will switch up on us so soon. Right now there are just two Saints players listed on the official team website’s roster without jersey numbers: wide receiver Bryan Edwards and kicker Alex Quevedo.

Edwards has used No. 89 (taken by Rashid Shaheed) in the NFL and in college, but he wore No. 4 (Derek Carr’s, of course) in high school. Quevedo used No. 34 in college and was initially signed No. 15 with the Saints before it was given to Kawaan Baker; he also wore No. 1 during rookie minicamp tryouts last summer, which is available again.

One good take we’ll credit first to Nola.com’s Terrin Waack is that Blake Gillikin should have first dibs on it, seeing as Derek Carr took the No. 4 he used to start his NFL career. Gillikin has already pivoted to No. 5, but he could easily make the switch if he’s interested.

The NCAA allowed student-athletes to wear No. 0 only in 2020, so there aren’t any players on the roster who have used it before in college. But there are many draft prospects coming up who could hold onto it in the NFL if they land with the Saints: Georgia tight end Darnell Washington, Boise State safety JL Skinner, Oklahoma running back Eric Gray, and Cincinnati linebacker Ivan Pace Jr. among them. This question might not get answered until after the 2023 NFL draft.

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Chargers ask for rule change to tweak playoff home-field rules

The Chargers want to create an exception that would allow wild-card teams to host division winners in certain circumstances.

The Los Angeles Chargers finished the 2022 season with a better record than the Jacksonville Jaguars, but were the road team in a Wild Card Weekend matchup.

Now the Chargers are aiming to add an exception to the rulebook that would allow a path for a wild-card team to host a division winner.

In a rule proposal that will be voted on by owners later this offseason, the Chargers want to add an exception that would strip home-field advantage from a division winner if they are below .500 and finish at least four games behind their playoff opponent.

It’s worth nothing that that’s an exception that would’ve had no bearing on the playoff game in Jacksonville a couple months ago. While the Chargers finished with a better record than the Jaguars, it was just a one-game difference and Jacksonville finished above .500 at 9-8 on the year.

In fact, it’s an exception that would’ve mattered just three times in NFL history.

The 2010 Seattle Seahawks won the NFC West with a 7-9 record and played host to the 11-5 New Orleans Saints. That Seahawks won that game with Marshawn Lynch’s game-clinching Beast Quake touchdown run.

A decade later, the 2020 Washington Football Team also won a division with a 7-9 record and hosted the 11-5 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The visiting team won and eventually beat the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl.

This season, the Buccaneers snuck into the playoffs with an 8-9 record and hosted the 12-5 Dallas Cowboys. The visiting Cowboys won by 17 points before losing in the Divisional Round.

The only other divisional winner with a losing record was the 2014 Carolina Panthers, but that team finished just 3.5 games behind the Arizona Cardinals.

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Sean Payton plans to use an Eagles play in 2023 — if the NFL doesn’t ban it

Broncos coach Sean Payton plans to use the ‘Tush Push’ quarterback sneak play in 2023 — if the NFL doesn’t ban it this offseason.

There was a time when pushing your teammate from behind was outlawed in the NFL. The league changed the rule in 2005 to allow pushing from behind, but teams weren’t really taking advantage of it until the Philadelphia Eagles popularized the “Tush Push” play with quarterback Jalen Hurts.

In short-yardage situations, the Eagles have several players line up behind Hurts and push him beyond the line to gain. Using the play, Hurts went 36-of-40 on quarterback sneaks last season.

The play was so successful in 2022 that some fans and pundits have suggested it isn’t fair. The NFL might agree.

“I think the league is going to look at this, and I’d be shocked if they don’t make a change,’’ Fox Sports rules analyst Dean Blandino said in a recent interview with The 33rd Team.

Blandino went on to say that new Denver Broncos coach Sean Payton told him he plans to use the play frequently with quarterback Russell Wilson in 2023 if the league does not ban it.

“I was talking to Sean Payton during [the Super Bowl], and he said we’re going to do this every time next season if they don’t take it out,’’ Blandino said.

“It amounts to a rugby scrum. The NFL wants to showcase the athleticism and skill of our athletes. This is just not a skillful play. This is just a tactic that is not an aesthetically pleasing play, and I think the competition committee is going to take a look at it.’’

The competition committee will meet at the NFL combine later this month and then again in March. Any rule change recommendations from the competition committee will be voted on by owners next month.

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