BREAKING: Tush Push Returns with No Proposal to Ban the Powerful Scrum for 2024

BREAKING: Tush Push Returns with No Proposal to Ban the Powerful Scrum for 2024

the “Brotherly Shove” will be back in 2024. According to Troy Vincent, NFL Executive Vice President of Football Operations, the Tush Push, a play that resembles more of a scrum, will still be legal next season. In his conference call, Vincent stated that various NFL committees, such as the competition committee and health and safety committee, decided that there just wasn’t the injury data that would suggest that the play should be banned or even voted on. So the Tush Push lives on, just without the key ingredient, Eagles center Jason Kelce.

An annual salary of $12.5 million is exorbitant for a quarterback who may still be a backup. Nevertheless, quarterback is the most vital position in the NFL, and injuries to this position cost numerous teams their seasons last year. Minshew will still be valuable to the squad even if he doesn’t start.

Aidan O’Connell Fighting for the First QB Job
The highest-paid quarterback on the Raiders, Gardner Minshew, is not a lock to start. He understood going into the team that he would have to fight for the starting position.

The “play” in question is fairly straightforward: three players stand behind and to either side of the quarterback, and the offensive linemen line up foot to foot in low three-point stances. The QB gets as low as possible to follow his linemen, who are barely off the ground, driving their legs while their bodies are as horizontal as humanly possible. While this is going on, the quarterback is being pushed from behind (with hands on the quarterback’s lower back or, you guessed it, tush)—hence the Tush Push.

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