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With NFL teams beginning OTAs on Tuesday, and with training camp a few months away, the Buffalo Bills released a new media policy to credentialed reporters, according to Tyler Dunne of the Buffalo News.
And from the looks of it, this new policy severely limits what reporters can relay from training camp.
Dunne states that while many NFL teams try to prohibit information getting out to the public, the new policy is "bizarre even by bizarre NFL standards."
Dunne relayed what appears to be the entire policy sent to credentialed reporters. Here are some of the most eye-raising excerpts.
- Reporters are prohibited from reporting (which the Bills note includes "radio reports, tweets, podcasts and blogs") specific plays, strategies, formations, packages, sub-packages, and players practicing with specific units.
- Reporters may not relay "who is rushing the passer, dropped passes, interceptions, QB completion percentage, etc."
- Photographers may only shoot during designated portions of practice.
- "Media should not report on any injury situation occurring during a practice that is not open to the public with detailed speculation to the potential nature, severity of the injury or level of practice participation. Acknowledging an injury occurred is permitted, but anything beyond a general report would be purely speculative and possibly inaccurate."
Many in the NFL world reacted with astonishment to the strict new policy.
You read that correctly. If somebody drops a pass, it cannot reported.
NFL paranoia strikes again. It's just football. There are fans there who can report it. Idiots. https://t.co/iSbTM6tN8D
- Pete Prisco (@PriscoCBS) May 24, 2016
NFL teams think they are the CIA. It's amusing. They also think they own the reporters. https://t.co/MCcv8boxtb
- Richard Deitsch (@richarddeitsch) May 24, 2016
Keep wasting time crafting dumb policies that have nothing to do w/drafting good players & winning football games...https://t.co/dV1EcvRALD
- Louis Riddick (@LRiddickESPN) May 24, 2016