Appeals process approved for football players called for targeting in the second half

Appeals process approved for football players called for targeting in the second half

Appeals process approved for football players called for targeting in the second half NCAA.com

CHAMPS

PRESENTED BY The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel on Wednesday approved football measures intended to strengthen the accuracy of the targeting rule, limit blocking below the waist and address teams that appear to fake injuries to gain an advantage. All these rules changes will take effect in the 2022 season. In games that have instant replay, when a targeting foul occurs in the second half, the carryover penalty (of sitting out the first half of that player's next game) will be eligible for further appeal. The process will begin with a conference submitting a request to the NCAA national coordinator of officials, who would review video of the play. If it is obvious that a player was incorrectly penalized for targeting, the call would be overturned, and the player would be cleared to play in the first half of the next game. To address teams that are awarded an injury timeout through deceptive actions, panel members approved a reporting and investigation process. Schools and conferences will be able to report questionable scenarios to the national coordinator of officials, who will review and provide feedback to the conference for further action. Any penalties levied would be up to the conference office or school involved. The NCAA Football Rules Committee considered several in-game options to address this, including altering the injury timeout rule to remove the injured student-athlete for more than one play. Currently, an injured player is required to sit out one play. This concept was debated at length, but the committee was concerned with the additional issues that could be created and did not want to encourage players to continue to participate when injured. Committee members discussed how the pace of play appears to be contributing to this concern. "We considered all options to address this issue, including allowing both teams an opportunity to substitute after a first down," said David Shaw, chair of the Football Rules Committee and coach at Stanford. "This is another step to consider in the future."

Blocking below the waist

The panel approved a proposal to improve safety and simplify the rules governing blocking below the waist. The proposal will allow blocking below the waist only by linemen and stationary backs inside the tackle box. Outside the tackle box on scrimmage plays, blocking below the waist will be prohibited. Analysis of available NCAA injury surveillance data indicates a decreasing knee injury trend that coincides with recent rules changes in this area.

Other rules changes

If a ball carrier simulates a feet-first slide, officials will declare the runner down at that spot. Defensive holding will remain a 10-yard penalty but will always carry an automatic first down.
RANKINGS: STAY UPDATED:
CFP:
MORE:

Undefeated college football teams in 2022

We're tracking all the remaining undefeated teams in college football in the FBS. Here's what's ahead for the unbeaten teams.

2022 Celebration Bowl Date time location tv channel history

Here's the what you need to know for the 2022 Celebration Bowl in Atlanta, including a list of past Celebration Bowl champions and how teams qualify for the postseason game.

Alabama escapes Ole Miss Washington upsets Oregon and more from college football' s Week 11

Here's what you may have missed from an exciting Week 11 of college football.

Follow FBS Football

Subscribe To Email Updates

Enter your information to receive emails about offers, promotions from NCAA.com and our partners Sign Me Up
Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!