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Among other things, the new policy limits what information reporters can relay during training camp and practices, including plays, strategies, formations, what groups player are practicing in, and specific plays like dropped passes, incomplete passes, and interceptions.
The NFL world reacted predictably, as many writers and analysts showedtheirdispleasure with a policy that limits what they can report.
On Tuesday, as the Bills began the first day of OTAs, many Bills media members also showed up, ready to work for their first day under the new policy.
Writers and reporters began side-stepping the new rules by relaying the information in clever ways that essentially mock the policy:
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Even players got in on the fun:Interestingly, the Bills seemed to backtrack slightly on the policy on Tuesday. ESPN's Mike Rodak reported that Ryan said he didn't institute the new policy, then pointed to a team spokesperson instead.Tyler Dunne of the Buffalo News said the policy won't last all season.It's unclear why this policy was instituted and if the goal was always for it to be in place simply for OTAs and minicamp. But with it already drawing criticism and being mocked by media members, it's not off to a great start.We have reached out to the Bills for comment on the new policy.