New Rule: Kickoffs Falling Short of Landing Zone to Result in 25-Yard Start from Spot of Kick

New Rule: Kickoffs Falling Short of Landing Zone to Result in 25-Yard Start from Spot of Kick

The tweaked kickoff proposal has been released by the NFL. The changes apply only to kicks that are downed in the end zone, that strikes the goal post/uprights/cross bar, or that goes out of the end zone on the fly.

The New Kickoff Proposal

In those situations, the next drive will start on the receiving team's 30, not the receiving team's 35. For kicks that fall short of the landing zone, which starts at the receiving team's 20, the ball will still go to the 40.

Clarifications

There was some mild confusion during Thursday's conference call on this point; a kickoff short of the landing zone will indeed result in the ball being placed 25 yards from the spot of the kick. For a normal kickoff from the kicking team's 35, that means the receiving team's 40. The new tweak does not change that.

Out of Bounds Kickoffs

A kickoff out of bounds also will start the drive 25 yards from the spot of the kick, or where the ball went out of bounds. (The receiving team has the option.)

Safety Kicks

If a safety kick fails to reach the landing zone, possession begins 30 yards from the spot of the kick. Normally, that will be midfield. A safety kick that goes out of bounds also will start the drive 30 yards from the spot of the kick, or where the ball went out of bounds.

Possible Tweaks

More tweaks are possible as the owners ponder the proposal. And more tweaks could happen if the proposal is tabled until May so that more time can be spent pondering the realities of the dramatic change to the kickoff — and its consequences, both intended and unintended.