Current:Home > reviewsNFL's bid to outlaw hip-drop tackles is slippery slope -FutureFinance
NFL's bid to outlaw hip-drop tackles is slippery slope
View
Date:2025-04-17 17:39:12
The look on Logan Wilson’s face said it all.
His Cincinnati Bengals had just been whipped by the Ravens in Baltimore in front of a prime-time, Thursday night audience last November. Joe Burrow was injured during that season-turning 34-20 setback, and a pall was already settling over a locker room that clearly understood the Cincy quarterback wouldn’t be coming back until 2024.
Adding insult to injury – injuries – Wilson, a linebacker, was being approached by reporters, who were summarily shooed away by the Bengals public relations staff. They proceeded to clue him into the hubbub at his stall, and you could see Wilson’s eyes widen and jaw drop as he pointed to his chest with an increasingly quizzical expression.
Then he asked the question: “What’s a hip-drop tackle?”
It’s a query players and fans have been uttering with increasing frequency, but the volume – both the amount and noise – is likely about to escalate with the NFL trying to legislate hip-drop tackles out of the game.
NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.
NFL FREE AGENCY GRADES: Who aced it? Who bombed?
The league announced Wednesday that its competition committee is recommending an amended rule that bars the tackling, uh, technique. Players who employ it would incur a 15-yard penalty and automatic first down for the opponent. Owners will vote on it at next week’s league meeting in Orlando, Florida.
Here’s the specific language: “It is a foul if a player uses the following technique to bring a runner to the ground: (a) grabs the runner with both hands or wraps the runner with both arms; and (b) unweights himself by swiveling and dropping his hips and/or lower body, landing on and trapping the runner’s leg(s) at or below the knee.”
Got it?
Wilson didn’t get it back in Week 11 when he seriously injured Ravens tight end Mark Andrews and temporarily hurt quarterback Lamar Jackson with tackles that would likely qualify as hip-drops, the one on Andrews probably a textbook example.
But here’s the rub: Players appear to be just about universally against the proposal. The NFL Players Association issued a statement Wednesday that read: “The players oppose any attempt by the NFL to implement a rule prohibiting a 'swivel hip-drop' tackle. While the NFLPA remains committed to improvements to our game with health and safety in mind, we cannot support a rule change that causes confusion for us as players, for coaches, for officials and especially, for fans. We call on the NFL, again, to reconsider implementing this rule."
NFL executive vice president of player health and safety Jeff Miller said at the annual scouting combine that the league had reviewed approximately 20,000 tackles from recent seasons and concluded that hip-drop tackles, particularly when defenders swivel around the hips of a ball carrier and land on his legs, result in an injury rate 20 to 25 times higher than a normal tackle. Miller also contended that the frequency of hip-drop tackles has been climbing significantly and that roughly one player per week was being hurt sufficiently that it “leads to lost time.”
Clearly, no one wants to see these guys get injured. And I don't want to be the "Get off my lawn" guy who just spews, "Put flags on them already."
But this seems like a slippery slope.
Yes, players and coaches usually adapt, as they did when the league vigorously began attempting to reduce concussive hits more than a decade ago. And while head injuries have dropped, many players continue to bemoan the fact that their brains may be better off, yet they pay a higher price (often literally) – and face shorter careers – when their legs are consequently targeted instead. Yet they also accept and celebrate the fact that football is an inherently risky sport, and that it already has become too hard for defensive players to do their jobs. They can't hit you high. They get hurdled or even knocked in the head themselves way too often if they go low. Now they have to think twice while attempting to wrap up around the waist of a ball carrier who's already trying to evade them while doubtless moving in a different direction?
“I think it really compromises the quality of the game on multiple levels,” the Washington Commanders’ Austin Ekeler said during Super Bowl week.
“One is the officials – it puts another gray area involving the officials. Was that a (hip-drop tackle)? Was it not? Was it a 15-yard penalty? And maybe it was, maybe it wasn’t. And the fines associated with that as well, that’s another thing that we’re trying to figure out, how to make that system better.”
By the way, Ekeler plays running back and would enjoy more protection from the suggested rule than most of his peers. He’s also a vice president on the union’s leadership team, as informed as anyone regarding the issue and underscoring potential unintended consequences.
“Like, you’re on the goal line, and … you’re trying to pull someone back away from the goal line?” Ekeler asked.“So there’s multiple levels that I think that it compromises the quality of play. To the fact where I’m like, ‘Are they really serious about this?’ … (I)t just seems so ridiculous to me that this is something that they’re really putting on the table.
“I know especially my body gets twisted and turned, and I’m all over the place. And it’s because you kind of lay out, you’re at full speed, both guys are going with a lot of energy. Your body is gonna end up in different types of places and different types of situations.
“I think it’s honestly detrimental to the game that you try to move forward with it.”
The proposal also comes at a time when the players feel the league is being hypocritical about their safety, putting a spotlight on this issue but – so far – unwilling to push for uniform, high-quality grass playing fields at stadiums and training facilities when so many injuries have occurred on artificial surfaces. That issue will continue to fester and could be a sticking point in future collective bargaining negotiations.
As for the hip-drop? Enforcement, both its frequency and accuracy, could ultimately be the key.
Years ago, the NFL did away with dangerous horse-collar tackles – though those are fairly easy to see, define and adjudicate. As Ekeler notes, hip-drops are going to be a lot tougher to identify – and just wait until the late goal-line stand in a playoff game is nullified by a hip-drop flag when the infraction is far less clear than, say, Wilson's takedown of Andrews.
“A lot of rules that were put in place over the last 10-plus years that made the game a lot safer were big adjustments for players,” defensive lineman Calais Campbell, another NFLPA leader who just completed his 16th season, said at the Super Bowl.
“I feel like this particular rule change, I don’t understand how you can police it the right way and allow us to do our job.”
One that’s apparently about to become that much tougher.
***Follow USA TODAY Sports' Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter @ByNateDavis.
veryGood! (359)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- AP Top 25: No. 13 Alabama is out of the top 10 for the first time since 2015. Georgia remains No. 1
- 'We can’t let this dude win': What Deion Sanders said after Colorado's comeback win
- Former Phillies manager Charlie Manuel suffers a stroke in Florida hospital
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Former Colorado officer gets probation for putting woman in police vehicle that was hit by a train
- Fulton County judge to call 900 potential jurors for trial of Trump co-defendants Chesebro and Powell
- An explosion hits an apartment in northern Syria. At least 1 person was killed with others wounded
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Small plane crashes in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest, killing all 14 people on board
Ranking
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Armed man accused of impersonating officer detained at Kennedy campaign event in LA
- Mood upbeat along picket lines as U.S. auto strike enters its second day
- Turkey cave rescue survivor Mark Dickey on his death-defying adventure, and why he'll never stop caving
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- California Gov. Gavin Newsom says he will sign climate-focused transparency laws for big business
- Bernie Taupin says he and Elton John will make more music: Plans afoot to go in the studio very soon
- California sues oil giants, saying they downplayed climate change. Here's what to know
Recommendation
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
1-year-old dies of suspected opioid exposure at NYC daycare, 3 hospitalized: Police
Maybe think twice before making an innocent stranger go viral?
'Rocky' road: 'Sly' director details revelations from Netflix Sylvester Stallone doc
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Cleveland Cavaliers executive Koby Altman charged with operating vehicle while impaired
Former Colorado officer gets probation for putting woman in police vehicle that was hit by a train
Drew Barrymore Reverses Decision to Bring Back Talk Show Amid Strikes