Listeners:
Top listeners:
play_arrow
Revolution Radio Your home for the best variety of Christian music
play_arrow
Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
play_arrow
Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network (Abovecast Backup) Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
play_arrow
Home For The Holidays Radio
We'll See About That with Ron Cey Episode 158 We go 76-6 Ron Cey

NEW YORK (UPI) — NFL team owners voted Tuesday to change the rules for overtime in the playoffs, allowing each team to possess the ball, competition committee chairman Rich McKay said Tuesday at the league’s annual meeting.
McKay made the announcement at a news conference at The Breakers in Palm Beach, Fla. He said that the Kansas City Chiefs’ overtime win over the Buffalo Bills on Jan. 23 in the divisional round of the playoffs led to the change.
The Chiefs ended that back-and-forth matchup with a walk-off touchdown on the first possession of overtime. The Bills were not given a chance to answer the score under the old rules.
“There is no question that that started the discussion,” McKay said. “What typically happens, is [proposed rule changes] lose momentum as you get further away from the game, but that did not happen in this instance.”
Under the old regular-season and playoff rules, the team that received the overtime kickoff won the game if it scored on the first possession. Those rules still will apply in the 2022 regular season.
Under the new playoff rules, the team that kicks off in overtime will get a possession, even if the receiving team scores on its opening drive. That second possession will be played out in full, even if the clock runs out.
Under the new playoff format, if both teams score touchdowns on their opening drives, the next team to score will win the game.
McKay said that under the old format, the team that won the coin toss went 10-2 with seven first-drive touchdowns in 12 postseason games.
Reporting by Alex Butler
United Press International is an international news agency whose newswires, photo, news film, and audio services provided news material to thousands of newspapers, magazines and radio and television stations for most of the 20th century.
Written by: United Press International
Buffalo Bills football news Kansas City Chiefs National Football League NFL news Rich McKay sports news
Heartland Media Group of Central Illinois & Eastern Missouri
107 W. State Street PO Box 149
Nokomis, IL 62075
Tel:Â (866) 420-7790
Newsletter Signup
Download Our App
Submit News
Contact Us
Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
Revolution Radio
Home For The Holidays Radio
Deadlines
News and sports submissions: 11 p.m. Central
Advertising, legals, obituaries: 5 p.m. Central
Publication times
Late breaking news as it happens
Normal publication: 11 p.m. Central daily
Other news: Published as it’s made available
Post comments (0)