The NFL would love the main focus of 2019 to be on the celebrations of its 100th season.
Sorry.
While the history of the league is a widespread and fun topic, what happened last January in the NFC championship game has guaranteed the spotlight will be shining on officiating and replays.
After an egregious missed penalty (or two) that basically kept the Saints from making the Super Bowl and helped the Rams get there instead, there was little chance attention could be diverted from the guys with the whistles and their impact on games. Commissioner Roger Goodell, the leagueโs powerful competition committee and a vast majority of the owners recognized this โ and did something about it.
Coaches can now challenge pass interference calls and non-calls as part of the replay review system. Just as with other in-game instances, the replay booth will initiate any reviews in the final two minutes of both halves and for an entire overtime.
As former NFL defensive back Adam Archuleta, now a CBS game analyst, notes: โThey have opened a huge can of worms.โ
Sure, the Brownsโ upgrades โ some people envision Cleveland (yes, Cleveland) as a Super Bowl contender โ provide a ripe subject. So do the head coaching changes, including Bruce Arians returning to the sideline one year after retiring.
There are the aged quarterbacks, from 42-year-old Tom Brady to 40-year-old Drew Brees to late-thirtysomethings Ben Roethlisberger, Eli Manning and Philip Rivers. And the fledging QBs such as Baker Mayfield, Sam Darnold, Lamar Jackson and Kyler Murray.
Donโt forget those big stars in new places: LeโVeon Bell, Odell Beckham Jr., Earl Thomas. And letโs ignore Antonio Brownโs helmet complaints and frost-bitten digits.
But we all know what will hog the limelight:
Interfering With Replay: Gene Steratore spent 13 years as an NFL referee and also was a college basketball official. Now with CBS as an officiating analyst, he knew some sort of change in the review system would emerge from the Rams-Saints debacle.
โUnderstand first that they were making the call in real time,โ Steratore said. โThat will remain the standard and base on which calls will be made on all plays. Then we get to replays, which are in slow motion, of course, and you are getting a different look (than an official might get in real time).
โThen there is the determination of what is significant contact. Did it impede someone from making a play? Was it incidental? Some of that is adding subjectivity to the process.โ
Archuleta, not surprisingly for a former safety, adamantly disagrees with adding anything to the replay system, particularly pass interference penalties.
โItโs not good for the game, which is not meant to be played in slow motion or officiated that way,โ he said. โI donโt want them stopping games in critical moments. Pro football is an exciting and emotional sport and stoppages take away from that.โ
A realist, Archuleta admits he knew something would happen after the New Orleans debacle. He accepts the coachesโ challenge as the most logical means but doesnโt have to like it.
The addition of pass interference will change the strategies for using challenges. An early false spotting of the ball, for example, might not see a red flag thrown because a coach realizes a late DPI or OPI call or non-call would be far more impactful. Indeed, there might be fewer overall disruptions by challenges as coaches save them for second-half needs that maybe never arrive.
Can Anybody Play Defense? With spread offenses overtaking the college game โ and college defenses โ it was only a matter of time before scoring records fell in the pros. Nothing much is expected to change this season with rules designed to boost points production; players on that side of the ball better prepared for the NFL when they reach it; and fansโ insatiable appetite for shootouts. Fantasy football fanatics can rejoice.
Still, the Super Bowl final score was 13-3, and there are several teams whose defenses successfully can determine their fate. The Rams, Chargers, Ravens, Bears, Cowboys and Bills could fall into that category.
Chicago, which led the league with 27 interceptions in โ18, believes the Monsters of the Midway have been reborn. The Bears are primed to prove it.
Old QBs, Kid QBs: Brady, Brees, Roethlisberger, Rivers and Manning equal 194 years of age, 87 seasons in the NFL. Each of them remains the starter, though Manningโs hold on the Giantsโ job is tenuous.
Itโs fair to think that, except for Manning, seeing any of those four oldies but goodies in the Super Bowl next February โ particularly Brady, who is going for an unprecedented seventh Lombardi Trophy โ would be no shock.
At the other end of the maturity chart are the youngsters. Weโve already seen one prodigy, Kansas Cityโs Patrick Mahomes, mesmerize the league and win MVP honors in his second year, first as a starter. Now the spotlight could be taken by Clevelandโs Mayfield or the Jetsโ Darnold or the Ravensโ Jackson, pro sophomores whose teamโs ascensions depend largely on their further progress.
Changes on the Sideline: Eight clubs jumped on the coaching carousel, including one head man swapping teams as Adam Gase went from the Dolphins to the Jets. Also new on the job are Brian Flores (Miami), Zac Taylor (Cincinnati), Freddie Kitchens (Cleveland), Vic Fangio (Denver), Kliff Kingsbury (Arizona), Matt LaFleur (Green Bay) and Arians (Tampa Bay).
Most intriguing might be the new boss with the Bucs, a proven QB guru who tries to mold Jameis Winston into a winner in a prove-it year for the 2015 top overall draftee.
Changes on the Field: New faces in new places figure to have a major impact, and if those effects are positive, their teams could be playoff bound.
Bell would seem the perfect guy to bring in to help Darnold make the next big step. Following a year off in a holdout, Bell will be driven to prove heโs worth the money the Jets paid and the Steelers would not. At his best, thereโs no better all-around running back in football.
When healthy and at his best, Thomas finds the right spot to be in โ and gets his defensive teammates in those positions, too.
There are few stronger leaders in the game, and he also has extra motivation after the way things deteriorated in Seattle.
Beckham is a magnificent talent with baggage and a fragile psyche. If he is the playmaker and not the pouter, the Browns have a prize.
As for Brown, well, the numbers heโs produced for nearly a decade canโt be ignored. Unfortunately, neither can the drama he has brought from the Steelers to the Raiders.
But it does keep us watching, doesnโt it?
