Sources – NFL is expected to include QB light images in extended repetition assistant

For all those who complain that Kansas City Chiefs Quarterback Patrick Mahomes get too many calls could be relieved soon.

The NFL Replay Assist is expected to expand this offseason to plays that may include Quarterback -Dias, League told ESPN on Saturday.

The NFL adopted Replay Assist in 2021 to give replay officials and appointed members of the official department to help with on-Field calls in limited gaming situations.

Replay Assist has been used during games when there are clear and obvious video visas, such as the place of the ball or a mistake, a complete or incomplete passport and touch of the ball or a line.

From and by intentional anchoring.

Now more items could be added this season. Replay Assist came in doubt in the third quarter of last weekend’s AFC Divisional Playoff game as Mahomes shrinked out of his pocket, slid under two lukewarm Texans defenders and still pulled a 15-yard penalty on Houston for unnecessary roughness.

“Oh came now,” said Espn analyst Troy Aikman under the telecast when the penalty was called. “I mean he’s a runner and I couldn’t disagree with one anymore. He is hardly hit.”

Aikman said the league has “got it addressed during the high season.”

“As a quarterback you can’t run around playing games with the defenders and then being called for a penalty,” Aikman said.

The NFL’s Competition Committee meets throughout the peak season before they typically vote on rule changes at the end of March at the league’s annual meeting, which this year will be held in Palm Beach, Florida. The Competition Committee will discuss the expanding repetition assistant and it is likely to include quarterback light images.

The belief in the league is that there is no reason not to bring further objectivity and clarity to a theater piece that fans at the stadium or at home can see.

Texans Star Pass Rusher Will Anderson Jr., marked earlier last Saturday’s match to gross passers -by, Houston said “Knew it would be us against the judges who went into this game.”

However, Mahomes pushed back on the idea that the bosses are receiving a favorable treatment from officials.

“I don’t feel that way,” Mahomes said Wednesday when Chiefs began preparations for Sunday’s AFC championship game against Buffalo Bills. “At the end of the day, the judges do their best to call the game as fair and fair and as proper as they might.

“All you can do is go out there and play the game you love as hard as you can and live with the results. … I feel like I have just played the game and I am just trying to win and what that happens, happens.