Super bowl 2024 had one historical oddity

Super bowl 2024 had one historical oddity


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EXPLORE MORE Super Bowl 2024 between the Chiefs and the 49ers is in a category of its own. While it marked the first Super Bowl for Taylor Swift, it also was the first time in which neither


team returned a kickoff in the big game. There were opportunities — a total of 13 kickoffs in the game — but all 13 kickoffs went for touchbacks. It’s due in part to the new fair catch rule


on kickoffs, which was approved by NFL owners last May for “player safety” in the 2023-24 season. The rule allows players to fair catch on kickoffs with the resulting possession beginning at


the team’s own 25-yard line. The NFL came to the resolution in an effort to limit high-speed collisions and decrease the concussions rate. Rich McKay, chairman of the NFL’s competition


committee, and NFL executive Jeff Miller said their data determined the rate will decrease from 38 to 31 percent, and the concussion rate will drop 15 percent due to the approved proposal.


At the time, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reported that special teams coordinators unanimously opposed the rule change. “The kickoff play for us has been a play that has had a lot of changes


for us over the years, all really driven by health and safety,” McKay told NFL Network’s Judy Battista. “The concussion rate on the play has gone up. “It’s gone up because the ball is being


returned more by kicks that are being hung inside the 5-yard line. College made this rule change in maybe 2018 or 2019. We looked at their data and said, you know what, this is the right


thing to do now.” There could be more rule changes ahead, as NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said last week that the league needs to “find a way to keep the kickoff” in the game. “It’s an


exciting play, it’s important for us, the same as punts, but when you see a higher injury rate for that play, you can’t ignore that,” he said. The league is reportedly considering the XFL


rule for low-impact kickoffs.