Sep 6, 2024; Sao Paulo, BRA; NFL commissioner Roger Goodell before a game in Brazil between the Green Bay Packers and Philadelphia Eagles at Neo Quimica Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Roger Goodell talks kickoff rules, Super Bowl outside U.S.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said on Saturday that the results of the new kickoff rules are “incredibly promising,” with just over 30 percent of kickoffs returned in 2024, up from 20 percent last season.

Speaking at a fan forum in London ahead of Sunday’s game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and Chicago Bears, Goodell said kickoff drives – which started just past the 24-yard line in 2023 – are beginning just past the 29 this year.

“With that increase in returns, it’s giving us more data to determine whether we can do it more safely,” Goodell said. “It actually is incredibly promising. We’re seeing lower impacts that have led to less severe injuries and less number of injuries. So I think it’s working,”

Goodell anticipates the kickoff rules will undergo a bit of tweaking after this season to ensure player safety.

“I think what we’ll see ultimately is a change in the offseason,” he said. “Once we know it’s a safer play, it will encourage more kickoffs. That could happen in a couple of ways. You could move the kickoff line back, so that they can’t kick it out as easily. You could also say the penalty for kicking it out is going to go to the 35 instead of where we’re at, the 30.”

Along with discussing the kickoff rules, Goodell told the fan forum that holding a Super Bowl outside the U.S. for the first time is a possibility. He had previously dismissed the idea.

“We’ve always traditionally tried to play a Super Bowl in an NFL city,” he said. “That was always sort of a reward for the cities that have NFL franchises. But things change. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if that happens one day.”

If the NFL expands its regular season to 18 games, Goodell could see the league play 16 games per season outside the U.S. He expects the NFL to play games in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, and Ireland in the near future. Madrid, Spain, is slated to host its first game in 2025.

–Field Level Media

Feb 12, 2023; Glendale, Arizona, US; Kansas City Chiefs place kicker Harrison Butker (7) kicks off against the Philadelphia Eagles to start Super Bowl LVII at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Kartozian-USA TODAY Sports

NFL adopts kickoff rule aimed at boosting return rate

NFL owners approved new kickoff rules that are designed to increase return rates while also reducing the chance of high-impact injuries on Tuesday at their annual meeting in Orlando, Fla.

The kickoff modification is modeled after the format used by the XFL and is a one-year program with the expectation that further alterations could be made.

It will take effect in 2024.

Under new rules, the kicker will kick from his own 35-yard line while his teammates line up at the receiving team’s 40-yard line. Nine players on the receiving team will line up at their own 35, with two players near the goal line as returners.

On the kicking team, only the kicker can move until the ball hits the ground in the designated “landing zone” inside the receiving team’s 20-yard line.

If the kick doesn’t go that far, the ball will be placed at the receiving team’s 40-yard line. The receiving team will get the ball at its own 30 in the instance of a touchback.

By putting the majority of players closer together, and without that running start, high-speed collisions are less likely, reducing “space and speed,” according to the league.

The plan was reviewed and refined by the 32 NFL special teams coordinators before being presented to the league Competition Committee and, ultimately, owners this week.

As the NFL has modified the kickoff in the past decade to reduce concussions, the return rate has fallen. Just under 22 percent of kickoffs were returned last season, and ESPN reported Tuesday that the goal for 2024 is about 80 percent.

Atlanta Falcons head coach Raheem Morris told The Athletic that the newly designed kickoff will be intriguing.

“I think it’s important for us to find ways to bring excitement back for our fans and us,” he said. “And also to make special teams coaches more relevant, right? We don’t want to lose the relevance in any position of what we’re doing. So I’ve got to give those guys credit for coming up with the idea. We’re going to fight the battles of the unknown. Without a doubt, we haven’t seen the play. (We have) seen a form of the play in a different league.”

–Field Level Media

Dec 27, 2020; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Mecole Hardman (17) makes a fair catch in the end zone during the game against the Atlanta Falcons at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports

NFL approved rule: Fair catches on kickoffs spotted at 25

NFL owners approved a new rule Tuesday that will spot the ball at the 25-yard line as a result of fair catches and touchbacks coming on kickoffs.

The new rule now mirrors the college rule and will be a one-season trial for 2023. The ball is placed at the 25 regardless of where the fair catch is made inside the 25.

The rule’s intent is to reduce injuries by incentivizing fair catches on kickoffs. NFL leadership said in March that marking the ball at the 25 could reduce injuries that occur during kickoffs by 25 percent.

However, the rule was universally panned by special teams coordinators across the league. Coaches and players say the new rule will just lead to more squib kicks, which can’t be fair caught and would have to be returned – turning the intent of the rule on its head.

The measure was introduced by the competition committee in March and made it out of the panel unanimously.

–Field Level Media

Nov 20, 2022; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Falcons running back Cordarrelle Patterson (84) runs the ball against the Chicago Bears in the first quarter at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports

Kickoff king: Cordarrelle Patterson sets record with ninth TD return

Atlanta Falcons dynamo Cordarrelle Patterson set an NFL record on Sunday after posting his ninth career kickoff return for a touchdown.

Patterson caught the ball three yards deep in the end zone and raced up the middle en route to a 103-yard return for a touchdown in the second quarter against the visiting Chicago Bears.

Patterson previously shared the NFL record with Josh Cribbs and Leon Washington.

–Field Level Media