NFL competition committee
The National Football League Competition Committee was created in 1968 following the announcement of the AFL-NFL merger. It replaced the NFL Rules Committee, which was formed in 1932 when the NFL adopted its own rulebook. Prior to 1932 the NFL used the college rulebook.
Members of the Competition Committee are chosen by the NFL commissioner. The members are:[1]
- Rich McKay (chairman) – president, Atlanta Falcons
- Katie Blackburn – executive vice president, Cincinnati Bengals
- Chris Grier – general manager, Miami Dolphins
- Stephen Jones – executive vice president, Dallas Cowboys
- John Mara – owner, New York Giants
- Ozzie Newsome – executive vice president, Baltimore Ravens
- Frank Reich – head coach, Carolina Panthers
- Ron Rivera – head coach, Washington Commanders
- Mike Tomlin – head coach, Pittsburgh Steelers
- Mike Vrabel – head coach, Tennessee Titans
Each year, the committee reviews the competive aspects of NFL football and may new rule and rule changes to based on their findings. However new rules and rule changes cannot be adopted unless it is supported by 75% of NFL team Owners (which is currently 24 out of 32 team owners).[1]
References
- "The NFL Competition Committee". NFL.com. Retrieved February 12, 2022.
External links
- NFL Football Operations: The NFL Competition Committee
- Saints' Sean Payton named to NFL's competition committee
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.