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NFL owners approve centralized instantaneous replay system

As expected, NFL owners approved some sort of centralized instant replay system Tuesday giving the league office the electricity to make final decisions every time a play is challenged.

Although he will have input within the decision made by vice chief executive of officiating Dean Blandino and also his staff, the referee will will no longer make the final decision within the field.
The centralized replay system was considered one of eight rules changes owners made in the Arizona Biltmore.
The league is re-emphasizing the rule allowing officials to kick players from the game if they devote an egregious shot on the head, which is basically a targeting rule that's forced in college football.
The owners tabled a vote on reducing overtime through 15 to 10 minutes, which means they'll gather more details and possibly vote into it at their next getting together with in May.
Among the rules changes weren't allowing a player to be able to leap over blockers on field goals and further points, making permanent the rule that disqualifies a person for being penalized 2 times for certain unsportsmanlike conduct penalties and continuing with regard to another year the ball being placed at the 25 after touchbacks on kickoffs to Madden-NFL site.
Other changes called intended for designating receivers running complete routes as defenseless gamers, prohibiting players in movement from performing crackback prevents, making it unsportsmanlike carryout to commit multiple penalties for a passing fancy down to manipulate the action clock and making actions to save time illegal after the two-minute warning of every half.