Rules of engagement

Brian Allen (left) and Alex McGough discuss USFL rule tweaks. (Scott Adamson photo)

Some football fans – especially those of us who have an affinity for alternative leagues – go into full geek mode when we learn about rule changes. That was the case last week when the United States Football League announced its innovations for the inaugural 2022 season, which begins next month in Birmingham.

But what about the players? They’re the ones who’ll have to play by the rules.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

On Monday I talked with Birmingham Stallions quarterback Alex McGough and safety Brian Allen to get their thoughts on the rules package. When I asked them which tweaks they found the most interesting, the first they mentioned was the double forward pass. A rule used for the second iteration of the XFL in 2020, this makes a trick play a normal option in the offensive game plan.

“The biggest rule change for me is now they get to do two forward passes, so as a defensive back, as soon as I see the ball thrown I’m coming in to make a tackle,” Allen said. “But with any rule change it makes you hone in on your keys and learn to play different techniques. For me, I’m just trying to take the coaching and just do what I can to make the plays I can.”

McGough, who admits he’s spent most of his time away from the practice field studying in his hotel room, is already plotting how to use the double pass.

He isn’t telling, though.

“The double forward pass seems like it could be interesting,” he said. “I don’t know how we could use it – I’m not gonna give anything away – but it could be interesting.”

Yet what got McGough most excited was the 3-point conversion option and the onside kick – and how they could work in concert.

Following a touchdown, the team that scores has three options: it can get one point for a successful PAT kick snapped from the 15-yard line (and placed down at the 22); two points for a successful scrimmage play from the two-yard line; and three points for a successful scrimmage play from the 10-yard line.

And if that team wants to ball back immediately, they have two ways to make that happen. The first is via a “traditional” onside kick attempt from the 25-yard line. The second is running a fourth-and-12 play from its own 33-yard line.

When I first looked at the conversion and onside kick rules I thought, “Hmmm … this can really help a team that’s behind get back in the game.”

McGough, however, sees something else.

“The 3-point conversion is interesting and I also like the onside kick where you can go for a fourth and 12, because you’re never out of it.” he explained. “But think of this … you could start the game out, score a touchdown, go for three, go up 9-0, and go for fourth-and-12 again, and score again, go for three, make it again, and get up 18-0 before the other team even gets the ball.

“You’re never really out of it no matter how many points you’re down, but you can also use it to get a big lead.”

All the rule changes for 2022 are designed to either add an element of excitement to the game or streamline it, and both benefit the fans.

Ultimately, that’s what it’s all about. Done right, rules like these can put eyes on the television and fannies in the seats.

“Birmingham is the hometown team so it has a different weight to it, I feel,” McGough said. “All these fans will be coming to watch Birmingham, I assume. We’re gonna try to put on a show for them.”

Read about USFL rule changes here: USFL does good job on rules

Stallions get busy

Stallions players prep for practice at the Hoover Met Complex. (Scott Adamson photo)

On March 28, 2021, Skip Holtz was 10 days into Louisiana Tech’s spring football practice. The Bulldogs’ spring game would be played on April 24, then the coach had three months to plan before resuming workouts on August 6 ahead of a September 4 season opener.

On March 28, 2022, time is a luxury Holtz doesn’t have.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

Now coaching the Birmingham Stallions of the fledgling United States Football League, he started putting his new team through drills just last week and they’ll face the New Jersey Generals in the USFL opener at Protective Stadium on Saturday, April 16, at 6:30 p.m. CDT.

That’s a fast turnaround from first practice to first contest, but the coach is more excited than stressed by the situation.

“It’s been interesting to say the least … it’s like drinking through a fire hose,” Holtz said earlier today following a morning practice in Hoover. “There’s no way you can absorb all the information we’re trying to throw at these guys, but they’ve been great. We have a great group of young men and I’ve really been impressed with how much they’ve picked up. This is only day four, which is just a little walk-through. We’ve had three spirited days and three days where they’re probably been really confused, so just coming out here today we were just trying to clean some things up and take care of some of the little details.

“Then the next three days we’ll get some pads on and have some good practice and grade film, and just keep growing and developing. That’s all we can do.”

All eight teams are playing in a Birmingham hub this season, with four different sites hosting camps divided into morning and afternoon sessions. The Stallions and Tampa Bay Bandits are training at the Hoover Metropolitan Complex; the Philadelphia Stars and Michigan Panthers are occupying Legion Field; the Generals and Pittsburgh Maulers are using the facilities at Miles College; and the New Orleans Beakers and Houston Gamblers practice at Samford University.

Due to safety reasons, practices are closed to the public unless otherwise announced.

“Everybody’s in the same boat,” Holtz said. “It’s not like everybody else had spring ball and extra preparation. We all had the draft the same day and we’ve all had the same amount of time, it’s just you don’t try to do too much with your football team so you can execute what you’re trying to do.”

Stallions defensive back Brian Allen, who has experience with the Pittsburgh Steelers as well as five other NFL teams, says he’s not only learning the playbook as quickly as he can but trying to help some of his younger teammates along the way.

“I just finished the season with the Cleveland Browns in January, so for me this is a case of jumping right back into it and learning the playbook, which is a playbook I’m familiar with,” Allen said. “I’m just trying to come in and give my knowledge to some of the younger guys and get the ball rolling.

“A lot of these guys are coming from the CFL or The Spring League, and so it was kinda like all of us jumping back in and Coach Holtz has just eased us back into it. We have guys coming from different systems and we’re trying to build chemistry and be the best team we can be.”

Allen says he’s also stressing to his new teammates that standing out as a Stallion can pay bigger dividends down the road.

“In my group after practice or after dinner we’ll sit down and talk I try to share some of my experiences with them, like it’s not about where you started or how it’s going, but how you finish,” he said. “Just try to let the guys know they need to get out there, make plays, put some plays on film, and know that their hope for the NFL isn’t over. You’re still playing football and we all have dreams of getting back, so we need to get out here and do what we need to do.”

Quarterback Alex McGough has taken a “nose to the grindstone” approach to getting up to speed, saying he rarely leaves his hotel except for practice.

“I have 100 or 200 flash cards – plays, formations, signals – and I try to record myself using signals then try to watch and tell myself what those signals are,” McGough said. “I have a lot of ways to learn. Some might be odd or different from others, but it works for me. But it’s been great. We’re getting used to the playbook. It takes some time to adjust because everybody is coming from a different place and a different system and different schemes, and we’re kinda like trying to blend it all together and get everyone on the same page.”

Holtz said a prime factor in moving the process along is the hard work of his assistants. Holtz is serving as offensive coordinator/QB coach as well as head man, while his staff is made up of Jonathan Himebauch (offensive linemen); Corey Chamblin defensive backs); John Chavis (defensive coordinator/linebackers); Bill Johnson (defensive linemen); Larry Kirksey (running backs); and Mike Jones (wide receivers).

“We flew the staff in and met as an offense, met as a defense, and tried to get everybody in on the playbook,” Holtz said. “I’ve been coaching the offensive staff and John (Chavis) has been coaching the defensive staff with what the calls are going to be and how we’re going to do things. Normally this is something you’d do in January, but we had a week so we just try to whittle everything down. You can’t carry as much maybe at the beginning of the year because you have to give your players the opportunity to execute.”

Despite the truncated practice time, Holtz says this new chapter in his coaching journey is certainly worth it.

“This is as much fun as I’ve ever had in coaching … I mean that sincerely,” Holtz said. “I had to coach for 35 years to finally find professional football. We’ve got a great group of guys and I’ve really enjoyed it. The logistics has probably been the hardest part, just trying to get the schedules put together, when do we leave to come out to Hoover, when do we leave to go back to the hotel, when do we come back, when are we gonna meet, when are we gonna lift – that’s been the hardest part of this whole thing. The football part of it – this is my sanctuary.

“To have the opportunity to be with these guys and coach football, I’ve absolutely loved it. These are exciting times.”

USFL does good job on rules

After the United States Football League’s “Welcome to Birmingham” news conference back in January, I asked the league’s president of operations, Brian Woods, what kind of rules fans could expect. He told me it would be “90 percent” of the NFL playbook, with a few tweaks here and there to speed up the game.

I’m not gonna lie – that kind of bummed me out. One of the things that draws me to alternative football leagues is innovative (and sometimes off the wall) rules, and that comment made me think things this spring and summer wouldn’t be much different than what we see on Sundays in the fall and winter.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

This morning, however, I was pleasantly surprised when the fledgling league announced its “10 percent” modifications. Truthfully, there’s not a single one I dislike.

“Fans are the USFL’s top priority, so our rules are designed to give fans the traditional physical play they know and love while adding some modern fast-paced elements,” Mike Pereira, USFL head of officiating, said in a statement. “The overwhelming majority of rules that govern game play in the USFL are standard at the professional or collegiate level. But we are incorporating a few unconventional ideas that we’re convinced will add offense, alter some coaching decisions and strategy for the better, and make it easier to get major penalty calls correct. Collectively, these changes will be good for the game of football and keep fans more engaged and entertained.”

For starters, post-touchdown conversions can be old school or new school. In recent years in alt-football there has been a move away from the kick entirely, but the USFL will offer the option of a single point kicked from the 15-yard line; 2-point conversion attempt ran or passed from the two-yard line, or a 3-point conversion for a successful run or pass from the 10-yard line.

Solid multiple choices, there.

The kicking game is also getting an upgrade as the league improvises an innovation from the 2020 XFL.

Kickoffs will be from the 25-yard line and no kicking team member may line up any further back than one yard. The receiving team must have a minimum of eight players in the set-up zone between their 35 and 45-yard lines. After a kickoff travels 20 yards, the first touch must be by the receiving team. If an untouched kick becomes dead, the ball belongs to the receiving team at that spot.

(The XFL rule had 10 players from the receiving team lining up on their own 30-yard line while the kick coverage team lined up five yards away on the 35-yard line).

I think this trend of eliminating high speed collisions on kickoffs is the wave of the future, and I like this rule very much.

Punts will be safer as well, since the USFL rule forbids gunners from lining up outside the numbers and being double-team blocked until the ball is kicked. 

The onside kick vs. scrimmage play will make for some tough decisions by coaches. After scoring, a team can either attempt an onside kick from the 25-yard line or run a fourth-and-12 play from its own 33-yard line. If the team makes a first down, it retains possession.

(The Alliance of American Football had a similar rule in 2019, although the fourth-and-12 play was made from the 28).

Overtime looks fun, too, thanks to a “best-of three-play shootout” also inspired by the XFL. Each team’s offense will alternate plays against the opposing defense from the two-yard line. Each successful scoring attempt will receive two points. The team with the most points after three plays wins. The subsequent attempts become sudden death if the score is tied after each team runs three plays. The overtime period will extend until there’s a winner.

Other rule changes include the legality of two forward passes from behind the line of scrimmage; the clock stopping on first downs inside the final two minutes of the second and fourth quarters; all replay decisions made at the Fox Sports Control in Center in Los Angeles; defensive pass interference 15 yards from the line of scrimmage unless a defender intentionally tackles a receiver beyond 15 yards, which is a spot foul; and if a pass doesn’t cross the line of scrimmage, there can be no pass interference or ineligible player downfield penalties.

Pereira and the rules committee deserve a lot of credit. There are people like me who have no trouble with changes that go way outside the box, while others don’t want to see anything too abrupt.

The USFL rules package for 2022 does a nice job, I think, of making all of us relatively happy.