On Tuesday, the NFL team owners voted to change the rules for overtime in the playoffs, allowing each team to possess the ball. Competition committee chairman Rich McKay made the announcement at the league’s annual meeting at The Breakers in Palm Beach, Florida, saying that the Kansas City Chiefs’ overtime win over the Buffalo Bills on Jan. 23 in the divisional round of the playoffs led to the change. The Chiefs ended that back-and-forth matchup with a walk-off touchdown on the first possession of overtime. The Bills were not given a chance to answer the score under the old rules.
Under the old regular-season and playoff rules, the team that received the overtime kickoff won the game if it scored on the first possession, and will still apply in the 2022 regular season. Under the new playoff rules, the team that kicks off in overtime will get a possession, even if the receiving team scores on its opening drive. That second possession will be played out in full, even if the clock runs out. In addition, under the new playoff format, if both teams score touchdowns on their opening drives, the next team to score will win the game.
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