Tennessee Football: In 2024, More Changes Are Anticipated for College Football
The Tennessee Volunteers are renowned for their fast-paced, potent attack, but with new college football regulations slated to take effect in 2024, that might look a bit different. This autumn, the on-field product will undergo modifications in addition to the addition of 12 teams to the College Football Playoff.
During Bowl Season, we were able to see how some of the new regulations that the NCAA Rules Committee had proposed may operate. Teams could choose to try a few new elements that are currently up for vote in the NCAA.
The practice of coaches communicating with players through their helmets has become more popular since the Michigan sign-stealing scandal that occurred at the start of the 2023 football season. If there are no signals or indicators to intercept, it will be simpler to figure out what your opponent is running.
It’s also the first step toward the NFL’s on-field product and the NCAA’s modernization of college football. If this passes, one of the best aspects of college football—weird signals and humorous signs—will come to an end. It might also mean that the players on the field won’t be able to see three or four graduate assistants dressed in different colors to indicate the next play.
Why would someone desire to eliminate the mayhem that results from using play cards?
Tennessee may effectively be the fastest offensive in the nation with Josh Heupel’s attack because to the graduate assistants’ play-signaling in the play. In order to maintain Tennessee’s up-tempo approach, I wouldn’t be shocked to see some sort of signals being employed even if helmet communications pass the NCAA Rules Committee decision.
Tablets Off to the Side
The addition of tablets to the sideline is the next item on the schedule. This is the one of the three suggested changes that I am totally in favor of putting into effect this autumn. A two-minute warning will provide players a natural break, and helmet communications will help coaches interact with players on the field more effectively, but neither should be the main focus for college football.
Tablets are a handy tool to help teams communicate, make adjustments, and perform better on the field, even though they aren’t absolutely necessary. College football should be allowed to use iPads on the sidelines to assist its players, much as large and small high schools now do. To be honest, I’m shocked that the NCAA has taken this long to think about allowing iPads for college football.
Two-Minute Alert
The NCAA is also attempting to modernize by introducing a two-minute warning as a mini-NFL. As I previously indicated, this can be an excellent approach to provide the athletes on the field a natural respite, particularly early in the year when a large portion of the south experiences intense heat.However, I’m positive that this is merely another ruse to insert an extra commercial break into every show.
I’d be wary of accepting any action taken by the NCAA that might help supporters or student-athletes. The NCAA does not feel that forced three-minute commercial breaks several times a quarter is sufficient, so we must create an additional option for commercial breaks.
We might expect further adjustments in the near future given these developments and the possibility of an extended College Football Playoff. There is currently a new proposal to increase the postseason to 14 teams, following the College Football Playoffs announcement of a new 12-team playoff.
We’ll have to wait and watch which teams adjust to the suggested new regulations, as we witnessed with the transfer portal. The collegiate football landscape is constantly evolving, and the NCAA’s recent decision to turn Saturdays into a mini-NFL is definitely not the last one.