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NFL coaches are worried that the league's new rule to keep the game under control might completely backfire

Scott Davis   

NFL coaches are worried that the league's new rule to keep the game under control might completely backfire
Sports3 min read

odell beckham josh norman

Julie Jacobson/AP

The NFL Competition Committee passed a new rule on Wednesday to allow automatic ejections from games.

If a player receives two unsportsmanlike conduct penalties in a game, he will be ejected on the second penalty.

But according to Bleacher Report's Mike Freeman, NFL coaches are worried it may have a negative effect. Freeman explains:

Early in a game, a star player gets a flag for unsportsmanlike conduct. Say it's the Bengals' Vontaze Burfict. One more unsportsmanlike and he's done. So the opposing team, sensing a chance to get a good player kicked out of the game, sends in a backup player to act as an agitator. Or has a starter with no unsportsmanlike penalties do it.

Burfict makes a tackle. Under the pile, he's elbowed in the face by the agitator. The refs don't see it. A few plays later, the same thing happens. A purposeful elbow to the face. Burfict ignores it. Later comes another cheap shot. This time, Burfict responds, and the refs see it. Poof. Burfict's gone. Second unsportsmanlike penalty is called, and Burfict is kicked out.

The NFL, which is, of course, widely criticized for inherent violence, had two particularly noteworthy incidents that drew negative attention. First was the regular-season battle between Josh Norman and Odell Beckham Jr., in which Beckham intentionally laid a helmet-to-helmet hit on Norman. Then, in the AFC Wild Card, the Steelers and Bengals descended into madness with on-field roughness and fights. The new rules tries to limit these incidents.

As Freeman writes, coaches fear a "goon" scenario, in which players act as agitators to get the best opposing player ejected. Fox Sports' Jay Glazer reported a similar worry:

As Freeman notes, this also puts pressure on refs to call unsportsmanlike conduct penalties, specifically, as opposed to unnecessary roughness. This means there needs to be clearer lines between the two penalties and what constitutes unsportsmanlike conduct and unnecessary roughness.

Of course, it's on players to control their emotions. A slip-up can happen where a player gets an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, but afterward, the onus is on them not to get another. Even if they're being baited.

This could have a positive impact on the game, and of course, nobody wants to see the game's biggest stars get kicked out of the game. However, it could look badly for the NFL if the rule actually promotes more dirty play when players try to bait one another.

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