PatsFaninAZ
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I think the new protection of the passer rules are good. I think by the end of the year, it will balance itself out for most teams. I suspect we'll get stung by it eventually too.
My problem with the penalty is that they've changed the criteria for what constitutes the penalty, but left the punishment the same. The result is a situation where the punishment does not always meet the crime. I think I would probably favor breaking it into two different penalties -- a personal foul and a less severe penalty like a 5 yarder perhaps with an automatic first down or perhaps not. It could be like roughing the kicker and running into the kicker. I think that would be enough to serve the NFL's goal of protecting passers by detering the conduct while also not unduly punishing the defense for trying to make a play. The glancing blow to the helmet in the continuous action of a play could be the 5 yarder, while a blow to the knees or a pile drive well after the pass could be a personal foul.
I think this will never happen. The NFL has decided to go the other way with penalties -- trying to get rid of ALL discretionary referee calls. They objectified the standards for intentional grounding. They did away with the 5 yard facemask. They got rid of the play that allowed a ref to judge whether a receiver was forced out of bounds. And as I understand it they've even given refs instructions on how to call the late hit out of bounds, to make it based on objective criteria about where the feet are. They've tried to do similar things with pass interference, although that will always be a losing battle. Roughing/Running Into the Kicker is pretty much the last vestige of the old judgment-based penalty system, except for certain instances of unnecessary roughness.
So, I don't think the NFL would ever backtrack and develop a 5/15 penalty system for passer protection. I think it would be a good idea, though.
My problem with the penalty is that they've changed the criteria for what constitutes the penalty, but left the punishment the same. The result is a situation where the punishment does not always meet the crime. I think I would probably favor breaking it into two different penalties -- a personal foul and a less severe penalty like a 5 yarder perhaps with an automatic first down or perhaps not. It could be like roughing the kicker and running into the kicker. I think that would be enough to serve the NFL's goal of protecting passers by detering the conduct while also not unduly punishing the defense for trying to make a play. The glancing blow to the helmet in the continuous action of a play could be the 5 yarder, while a blow to the knees or a pile drive well after the pass could be a personal foul.
I think this will never happen. The NFL has decided to go the other way with penalties -- trying to get rid of ALL discretionary referee calls. They objectified the standards for intentional grounding. They did away with the 5 yard facemask. They got rid of the play that allowed a ref to judge whether a receiver was forced out of bounds. And as I understand it they've even given refs instructions on how to call the late hit out of bounds, to make it based on objective criteria about where the feet are. They've tried to do similar things with pass interference, although that will always be a losing battle. Roughing/Running Into the Kicker is pretty much the last vestige of the old judgment-based penalty system, except for certain instances of unnecessary roughness.
So, I don't think the NFL would ever backtrack and develop a 5/15 penalty system for passer protection. I think it would be a good idea, though.