ROBBINSVILLE, NJ -- Player-on-player practice contact for New Jersey high schools has been reduced to the lowest level in the history of football – less contact than mandates or recommendations by the NFL, NCAA, Ivy League, USA Football, Pop Warner or any other football jurisdiction.
The New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA), governing body of New Jersey high school athletics, acting on a proposal by Practice Like Pros and theNew Jersey Football Coaches Association (NJFCA), today imposed the following limits on practice-field contact:
In-season full contact will reduce from 90 minutes per week to 15
Pre-season full contact will reduce from unlimited to 6 hours total, including scrimmage(s).
No change in the existing ban on full contact in spring/summer.
These new rules make New Jersey’s year-round high school practice regulations the most restrictive ever at any level of football.
“Congratulations and thank you to the NJSIAA and NJFCA,” said Practice Like Pros founder Terry O’Neil. “This is a Valentine for the 23,000 boys who play New Jersey high school football. The one certain way to mitigate football injury is to limit contact in practice. New Jersey has pioneered a model that is sure to be emulated across the country.”
Larry White, executive director of the NJSIAA, said, “We thank Terry O’Neil and Practice Like Pros for educating us on this issue. When Practice Like Pros and our New Jersey coaches came to us jointly with this recommendation, it was not a difficult decision. TheNJSIAA strives always to be a leading state association in matters of health and safety for our student-athletes.”
The new regulations began to take shape in April, 2017, when O’Neil made a presentation to the NJFCA’s annual coaches’ clinic at Rutgers University. The NJFCA and Practice Like Pros agreed in July, 2018, on a proposal that was submitted to the NJSIAA. Approval was granted last October by NJSIAA’s Sports Medical Advisory Committee and today by its Executive Committee.
A similar contact-limits proposal is moving forward in the state of Michigan. The Football Committee of the Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA), with input and support from the Michigan High School Football Coaches Association (MHSFCA), has made a recommendation to reduce live contact and refine practice limitations based on many of the Practice Like Pros principles. This proposal will be considered for adoption by the MHSAA Representative Council in May. If approved, full-contact limits in Michigan would be similar to many of the new in-season regulations in New Jersey.
Read the USA Today story by clicking here.
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