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'Tush push' safe for 2026 as submitted NFL rule proposals do not include controversial play

The tush push lives to see another season in the NFL.

Yahoo Sports PHILADELPHIA, PA - JANUARY 11: Jalen Hurts #1 of the Philadelphia Eagles rushes on a tush push during the NFC Wild Card playoff game against the San Francisco 49ers at Lincoln Financial Field on January 11, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The 49ers defeated the Eagles 23-19. (Photo by Michael Zagaris/San Francisco 49ers/Getty Images)

According toESPN's Adam Schefter, the controversial play will not be discussed during next week's NFL owner's meetings. Last month,Competition Committee co-chair Rich McKay saidthat no team had come forward with a proposal to alter or ban the play.

That doesn't mean the topic will go away forever.

"I don't know that it's the end of the debate,"McKay said, via Yahoo Sports' Jori Epstein. "I think there's still people who are concerned with the whole pushing element."

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The play has drawn plenty of criticism, and multiple attempts to ban it, in recent years after teams — notably the Philadelphia Eagles and Buffalo Bills — have found incredible success with it.

Last season was incredibly contentious, and the Green Bay Packers pushed the proposed ban during offseason meetings in 2025. But10 teams ended up voting against that ban, and it was two votes short of passing. In order for a rule change, the NFL requires approval from at least 24 of its 32 franchise owners. Eagles ownerJeffrie Lurie was among those fightingto keep the play in the league during discussions last time around.

According to ESPN, there were 112 attempted tush pushes during the 2025 season — which is 11 more than the 2024 campaign. The Eagles attempted the most (27) and the Bills were second (17). In total, teams successfully converted a first down on a tush push about 77% of the time.

There was plenty of outrage over the play this past season, too. The Eagles, for example, scored a touchdown on a tush push despiteofficials clearly missing a false starton the play during their game in September. The Jacksonville Jaguars were completely unable to stop Bills quarterback Josh Allen on an attempt in the playoffs. Allen ended up going 10 yards before he was brought down, and former official-turned-rules analyst forNBC and Amazon Terry McAuley lit up the league for it.

"I very much hope the NFL competition committee addresses this in the offseason," McAuley wrote last month. "This just cannot be a legal play any more. Now, only pulling a runner is illegal. All pushing, pulling or lifting a runner by a teammate should be illegal."

What rules NFL owners will discuss for 2026

Per Schefter, five proposals were sent to the NFL Competition Committee for discussion.

  • Permit the kicking team to declare an onside kick at any time during the game.

  • Eliminate the kicking team's incentive to intentionally kick the ball out of bounds when kicking off from the 50-yard line.

PITTSBURGH, PA - NOVEMBER 02: Indianapolis Colts punter Rigoberto Sanchez (8) with the onside kick attempt later in the fourth quarter of play during an NFL game between the Indianapolis Colts and the Pittsburgh Steelers on November 02, 2025 at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, PA. (Photo by Jeffrey Brown/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
  • Modify the kickoff alignment requirements for the receiving team in the setup zone.

  • Allow League personnel to consult with on-field officials when considering disqualifications for both flagrant football acts and non-football acts without being called on the field.

  • For one year only, allow the NFL Officiating Department to correct clear and obvious misses by on-field officials that impact the game, in the event of a work stoppage involving the game officials represented by the NFL Referees Association.

'Tush push' safe for 2026 as submitted NFL rule proposals do not include controversial play

The tush push lives to see another season in the NFL. According toESPN's Adam Schefter, the controversial ...
Puka Nacua denies woman's claim that he made antisemitic comment, but says biting her was 'horseplay'

Puka Nacua has denied a woman's claim that he made an antisemitic comment, says the Rams wide receiver's attorney.

LA Times Los Angeles Rams' Puka Nacua arrives before football's NFL Honors award show in San Francisco, Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026.

Madison Atiabi made the claim this week in an application for a temporary restraining order obtained by The Times.

Atiabi asserted in the court filing that during a group New Year's Eve dinner, Nacua made an offensive remark about Jewish people "in a manner audible to [her] and others at the table." Atiabi added that Nacua's "vulgar, threatening, violent and harassing conduct" escalated as the evening progressed.

After dinner, Atiabi said she was in a car with Nacua and others when the Rams star bit her on the left shoulder, leaving a substantial bite mark that was photographed. Nacua also is alleged to have bitten the thumb of Atiabi's friend "so forcefully that she screamed in pain," according to the filing.

Nacua's attorney, Levi McCathern, said he has spoken to witnesses — including other Rams players who were present — who didn't hear Nacua make the antisemitic statement. He also said the bite was innocent "horseplay."

"Puka denies these allegations in the strongest possible terms," McCathern said. "We will pursue all available legal remedies in response to these false and damaging statements."

Read more:Rams' Puka Nacua apologizes for making offensive gesture on livestream

The request for a temporary restraining order was denied by a Los Angeles Superior Court judicial officer and a hearing is scheduled for April 14.

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"Our office was contacted with demands of millions of dollars in exchange for not publicizing these allegations," McCathern told TMZ. "This is not a legitimate claim — it is blackmail."

In December, Nacua apologized for an antisemitic gesture he made while appearing on alivestream with Adin Ross and N3on.

The livestreamers, with Nacua out of earshot, discussed whether Nacua would get in trouble if he performed a move that references an offensive stereotype about Jewish people. Ross is Jewish, but he often performs the move in his livestreams.

They suggested Nacua, wholed the NFLwith 129 receptions and was named an All-Pro in 2025, perform the gesture the next time he scored a touchdown.

"At the time, I had no idea this act was antisemitic in nature and perpetuated hateful stereotypes against Jewish people," Nacua wrote in his post. "I deeply apologize to anyone who was offended by my actions as I do not stand for any form of racism, bigotry or hate of another group of people."

The Rams distanced themselves from Nacua's gesture in a statement.

"There is no place in this world for antisemitism as well as other forms of prejudice or hostility towards the Jewish people and people of any religion, ethnicity, or race," the team said.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

Puka Nacua denies woman's claim that he made antisemitic comment, but says biting her was 'horseplay'

Puka Nacua has denied a woman's claim that he made an antisemitic comment, says the Rams wide receiver's attorney...
Star turn: 10 MLB players poised for '26 breakout

If you like to watch rookies and other young players on the verge of breaking out in Major League Baseball, it's a good time to be a fan.

Field Level Media

With Opening Day upon us, let's take a quick look at 10 players (rookies and others) who are on the verge of making a big name for themselves in MLB.

RHP Shane Baz, Baltimore Orioles

His last name is pronounced like the Wizard of Oz, but pay attention to this man behind the curtain! A onetime top 10-15 prospect with the Rays, Baz needed Tommy John surgery four years ago and has taken longer to develop. At 26 in 2025, his first full major league season went OK (4.87 ERA, 176 strikeouts in 166 1/3 innings). His 97 mph four-seam fastball is complemented by an effective knuckle-curve. He's got top-of-the-rotation stuff, but can slide in among Kyle Bradish and Trevor Rogers to give the O's a sneaky good front end.

SS Kevin McGonigle, Detroit Tigers

Opposing fans will be shouting "McGonigle!" with raised fists once he makes his way around the AL Central once. He would be the top prospect in MLB were it not for Konnor Griffin of the Pirates. McGonigle just turned 21 in August, but he already has a career slash line of .308/.410/.512 with 25 home runs, 51 doubles, 135 runs scored and 40 stolen bases in 183 minor-league games. His left-handed stroke produces power and contact -- he's got a career walk-to-strikeout ratio of 123-84. He might be best used at second base in the long run but many scouts have said he'll stick at shortstop and be effective. Look for him on Opening Day at Petco Park.

2B JJ Wetherholt, St. Louis Cardinals

Let the rebuild begin! Wetherholt played shortstop at West Virginia but will take second base as a rookie (makes sense with Masyn Winn at short), and could also be a third baseman someday. A consensus top 5 prospect, he has a career minor-league slash of .304/.418/.487 with 19 homers, 29 doubles and 25 steals in 138 games. His BB-K stats: 88-88. Oh, yeah. He hit 10 homers in 47 games at Triple-A, so he's hiding some power in his 5-foot-9, 190-pound left-handed swing. He turns 24 in September.

DH/C Moises Ballesteros, Chicago Cubs

The Cubs plan to use Ballesteros as their primary DH, a big assignment for a 22-year-old rookie -- even a top-50 overall prospect. Ballesteros hit well in a 20-game call-up in '25 after producing .316/.385/.473 with 13 homers in 114 games at Triple-A. Listed at 5-foot-8 with a stocky build, Ballesteros is said to use a short path to the ball on his swing. Shaped more like a fan or sportswriter than a player, this guy has folk hero written all over him.

RHP Carlos Lagrange, New York Yankees

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With a last name pronounced "Le-GRON-hay," the 22-year-old righty was the talk of Yankees camp. He reached 103.1 mph on his four-seamer along with throwing "knee-buckling" secondary pitches via an imposing 6-foot-7, 250-pound frame. Yankees manager Aaron Boone said Lagrange, who has zero experience higher than Double-A, made the decision difficult to send him to minor-league camp. Lagrange has 301 career strikeouts (and 125 walks) in 215 2/3 innings as a starter in the minors, so he'll have to sharpen his command. Clubs always need arms down the stretch, so he's a likely promotion at some point.

1B Sal Stewart, Cincinnati Reds

Reds manager Terry Francona started using Stewart as the cleanup hitter toward the end of spring training, preferring him following Elly De La Cruz in the batting order. Stewart, a top 20 overall prospect, had a 15.6 K% in Triple-A in 2025, and generally makes better contact than Eugenio Suárez. Hitting fourth and playing first base everyday is a lot for any 22-year-old to handle, but Stewart obviously made a strong impression in his September call-up and continues to do so in camp. If he ends up playing every day, playing home games at Great American Ball Park, Stewart could finish with 30 home runs or more.

--David Brown, Field Level Media

SS Colson Montgomery, Chicago White Sox

Montgomery's major league career got off to a fast start in '25. He hit .239/.311/.529 with 21 homers in his first 255 at-bats. He also played outstanding defense at short. None of it was a complete surprise, given that Montgomery was a first-round pick in 2021, and a top 11-12 consensus prospect in 2024 who gave off Corey Seager vibes. But he was overmatched during two stints at Triple-A in '24-25 and analysts cooled on him. Montgomery struggled so much a season ago, the Sox sent him to the Arizona Complex League mid-season to improve his swing with coach Ryan Fuller. The changes worked, and a few weeks later, he was in the majors. Given his size and Chicago's minor league depth at shortstop, Montgomery might be a third baseman in the long run.

RHP Bubba Chandler, Pittsburgh Pirates

Many analysts considered Chandler the top pitching prospect still in the minor leagues, but the Pirates recently announced that he made the Opening Day roster. Using only his 99 mph fastball and changeup, analyst Keith Law wrote in The Athletic, makes Chandler a mid-rotation starter right now. His ceiling is much higher, perhaps not that of teammate Paul Skenes, but still pretty high. Prepare for some inconsistency but also fun moments of domination in '26. His third best pitch is probably a curve. His given name is Roy Ruben Chandler.

OF Emmanuel Rodriguez, Minnesota Twins

Injuries have slowed his ascent, but he's shown glimpses of being a charismatic riot for fans to watch hit, run and play defense. He's slashing .254/.424/.488 with 50 home runs, 46 doubles, 17 triples and 59 stolen bases through his first 981 at-bats in the minors. Now 23 years old, he's got just 409 plate appearances above Single-A, and with the Twins in some kind of organizational transition, they re-assigned him to minor league camp. They can't even find at-bats for Alan Roden right now. They'll have to find time for Rodriguez soon, and chances are he'll never go back once he reaches the majors.

SS Konnor Griffin, Pittsburgh Pirates

Even though he's still just 19 years old, the Bucs seemed open to promoting Griffin out of Spring Training. MLB's top overall prospect didn't show quite enough, hitting four homers but batting .171 with 13 strikeouts in 46 plate appearances overall. He likely needs just a little more time in the high minors. In his first minor-league season, Griffin batted .333/.415/.527 with 21 homers, 23 doubles, 65 stolen bases and 50 walks in 122 games, including 21 at Class AA. Hardcore prospect watchers know about Griffin being on the rise, but with him drawing comparisons (fair or not) to Mike Trout and Robin Yount, the rest of the world is about to meet the sport's next big deal.

Star turn: 10 MLB players poised for '26 breakout

If you like to watch rookies and other young players on the verge of breaking out in Major League Baseball, it's a go...
Houston's Bush Airport has had some of the worst TSA wait times. Here's why

Increasingly agitated travelers are sacrificing countless hours and missing milestone events as apartial government shutdownspills into its 40th day and the country loses hundreds of airport security employees.

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Nowhere is the scene more miserable than at Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH), where predawn lines this week packed an underground tunnel and forcedsome travelers to miss their flights— again.

"We see the families arriving early and waiting for hours. We see missed flights. We see missed moments, weddings, vacations, time with loved ones," said Jim Szczesniak, director of aviation for the Houston Airport System.

Even more sobering: "We worry conditions will only get worse at airports across the US until Congress ends this shutdown," Szczesniak said.

Throngs of travelers filled parts of Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport on Wednesday while waiting for TSA screening. - David J. Phillip/AP

Here's why the situation is so dire, why some airports are faring better and why the problems could get worse.

'You may not clear security in time'

Some travelers who missed their flights at George Bush Intercontinental were forced to return to the airport the next day and spend more hours in line.

They were among a sea of frustrated passengers that stretched down into a tunnel where a subway tram typically runs. As they waited, awarning blaredover the speakers:

"Due to the federal government shutdown, TSA wait times are currently exceeding four hours," the announcement said. "If your flight is departing soon, you may not clear security in time. Please consider contacting your airlines now for rebooking options."

The wait time at Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport topped four hours on Tuesday. - Aleena Fayaz/CNN

On Wednesday morning, the lines were noticeably shorter. But Wednesdays are typically low-volume days, said Houston Airport System spokesperson Casey Curry.

"We are expecting a higher passenger load Thursday and Friday," she said, in part because of conference departures and NCAA Sweet 16 events.

By Wednesday afternoon, the wait time at Bush Intercontinentalreached two hours. Curry said she expects traffic to increase Sunday and Monday, when many business travelers fly.

Other airports, including Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, said they expect traffic to pick up during peak travel days Friday through Monday.

Travelers wait in line at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on March 25, 2026, in Atlanta. - Megan Varner/Getty Images

10 minutes vs. 4 hours

Wait timesvaried widelyat Houston's two largest airports.

Just 30 miles away from IAH, passengers at Houston's Hobby Airport breezed through security in about 10 minutes this week. That's because a surge of TSA agents bolstered Hobby's staffing in the early days of the shutdown.

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Travelers languished in a security line Wednesday at George Bush Intercontinental Airport. - David J. Phillip/AP

As TSA employees worked without pay, called out or quit, the smaller Hobby Airport soon saw massive lines. So on March 8, the Houston Airport System asked forhelp from TSA national deployment officers, who assist airports in times of acute need. Those officers started working at Hobby on March 10.

But as the shutdown continued, the number of TSA agents dwindled and more airports across the country saw significant increases in wait times.

On Wednesday, a handful of TSA national deployment officers were added to the staff at George Bush Intercontinental Airport, the Houston Airport System said.

"The small number of NDOs are able to support the opening of an additional screening lane or two at IAH," the airport authoritysaid.

It was not immediately clear where those additional officers came from. TSA had said all extra officers were already assigned.

TSA agents miss almost $1 billion in paychecks – and more might quit

Bush Intercontinental has seen some of the longest lines in the country because at least half of its security lanes have been closed, Szczesniak said.

"So that's 100% (of) spring break loads going through the airport being processed through less than 50% of our TSA lanes," he said. "That is not sustainable."

With lengthy commutes in the greater Houston area, high gas prices might also explain why Bush Intercontinental has been hit particularly hard by TSA staffing shortages.

"Just yesterday, I watched an officer receive a gas card from one of our partners," Szczesniak said. "They had tears in their eyes knowing that they could fill up their tank to get home and come back to work to help keep these lines moving."

Before the shutdown, the callout rate among TSA workers was about 4%, the agency said. Now, about 40% of TSA staffers are calling out at some major airports — including George Bush Intercontinental, the agency said.

That's on top of the growing number of TSA workers who have quit entirely. As of Wednesday, at least 480 agents had resigned.

If the shutdown drags into Friday, TSA employees will have collectively missed $1 billion in paychecks, acting administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill said Wednesday.

To help mitigate the pain, the Houston Airport System said it is providing meals, working with the Houston Food Bank and partnering with nonprofits to try to help TSA agents "in this unbearable position."

CNN's Ed Lavandera, Aleena Fayaz and Maria Aguilar contributed to this report.

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Houston’s Bush Airport has had some of the worst TSA wait times. Here’s why

Increasingly agitated travelers are sacrificing countless hours and missing milestone events as apartial government shutd...
Why Trump may be eyeing Iran's Kharg Island — and why that's a risk

Less than 20 miles off Iran's shallow coastline sits a rare island made of hard coral — a natural, geological platform rising from the Persian Gulf that's perfect for one thing:exporting oil.

NBC Universal

This isKharg Island, a crucial outcrop 5 miles long that might be about to become central tothe Iran war.

Almost one month into their joint military campaign, the United States and Israel havekilled a host of senior Iranian leadersand bombarded key sites across the country. But, in response, Iran has attacked Israel and its Gulf neighbors andblockaded the vital Strait of Hormuz trade route, delivering a global economic shock that has sent energy prices surging and threatened food shortages for billions.

President Donald Trumphas talked up negotiations with Iran, which in turn has disputed any progress. He is also sending thousands more American troops to the Middle East, drawing suggestions from Tehran that Trump is buying time for a ground operation.

Indeed, Trump's team members themselves have refused to rule out seizing Kharg Island, which accounts for more than 90% of Iran's oil exports.Current and former American officials saysuch an assault would be an attempt to collapse the regime's economy and break its stranglehold on global markets.

Satellite Imagery Of Kharg Island In Iran (Gallo Images / Getty Images)

The president is "leaving all options on the table,"Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told NBC News' "Meet the Press"on Sunday. "What could happen with Kharg Island? We'll see."

The U.S. has alreadybombed more than 90 targets on Kharg, including air defenses, a naval base and mine storage facilities, Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a news conference.

It has not been specified why exactly the U.S. forces are headed to the region. They could be used to secure the Strait of Hormuz, blockade — rather than invade — Kharg Island, or merely to continue and assist the operations being carried out by the personnel and assets already there.

But a ground invasion would be far riskier, according to some expert observers.

IRAN-ECONOMY-OIL-KHARK (Atta Kenare / AFP via Getty Images)

"Trump would be gambling that the remaining Iranian leadership, faced with the loss of tens of billions in annual revenue, would capitulate," according to Christian Emery, an associate professor specializing in U.S.-Iran relations at University College London.

But "military success is by no means guaranteed," he added, with the "real risk of it spiraling into a far more dangerous" situation.

The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the concerns over a ground invasion.

What is Kharg Island?

Because most of Iran's coastline is too shallow for supertankers, the country pumps almost all of its crude production through underwater pipelines to Kharg.

Once used by Iran's monarchy to exile political prisoners, this rock is deceptively fertile on the ground.

A short film by regime-controlled broadcaster Press TV last year showed groves of palm trees growing among freshwater springs, a rarity for Gulf islands.

Archeological sites include 2,400-year-old wall carvings and rock-cut tombs, and there is an 18th-century fort built by the Dutch East India Company.

Pipes leading downhill toward the Kharg Island jetty in Iran, from the 17-million barrel capacity tank farm, in 1971. (Horst Faas / AP)

In the 1950s, the island was developed into the sprawling oil facility that exists today. It's home to at least 8,000 residents, many of them oil workers.

Access is restricted, earning it the nickname "Forbidden Island," but satellite and aerial images show rows of oil storage tanks, flames gushing from flare stacks, a web of pipelines and vast piers that allow supertankers to transport oil around the world — mostly to China.

"Kharg Island is a lifeline for Iran's economy," said Dania Thafer, executive director of the Gulf International Forum, a think tank based in Washington, D.C. Tehran would "likely escalate sharply" if the island is attacked, she said, intensifying strikes on U.S. forces and Gulf energy infrastructure.

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Trump himself has downplayed Iran's potential defenses. "I call it 'the little oil island' that sits there, so totally unprotected," he said last week.

He has had designs on it since at least 1988, when he told The Guardian newspaper that "I'd do a number on Kharg Island; I'd go in and take it" if Iran fired at American troops or ships. Trump noted in the interview that taking the island would be a way to pressure Iran.

At the time Trump made the comments, marine traffic was being disrupted in the Persian Gulf. During the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, dozens of merchant vessels were attacked by both parties in what broadly became known as the "tanker war."

Regardless of Trump's intent, what's clear is that extra U.S. personnel are headed to the region. This includes 1,000 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division and 5,000 Marines.

Steaming the Marines toward the Gulf from the Philippine Sea is the USS Tripoli, an amphibious assault ship that could prove useful in any attack on Kharg.

That has not gone unnoticed.

Iran's parliamentary speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said Wednesday that his country was "closely monitoring all US movements in the region, especially troop deployments."

He warned on X, "Do not test our resolve to defend our land."

Russia, Iran's ally that has been providing it with intelligence during the war, hopes the idea of a ground invasion "will not go beyond talk and threats," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told a briefing Wednesday.

USS Tripoli (LHA-7) amphibious assault enters the Singapore Strait (Edgar Su / Reuters)

Some analysts are bullish.

"It is my opinion that this force is capable of taking the island considering the substantial air and naval power we already have deployed in the region," said Francis A. Galgano, a former Army lieutenant colonel who is now a professor of military geography at Villanova University.

"If the plan is to win a war against Iran, then taking Kharg Island should be one of the central missions of the conflict," he added. "It provides the U.S. with enormous leverage in any negotiations and it's is a 'stick' to force the Iranians to stop attacking shipping."

Others are not so sure.

One senior official from a Persian Gulf country, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss these sensitive issues, said Iran was "not weak enough yet" for the U.S. to take Kharg.

"I believe the president's thinking about it" but "I personally, myself, don't think the timing is right yet," the official said. "Iran still has tools that it can make an occupation force by the U.S. still very risky."

Right now, "the regime is definitely not cracking," the official added. "It's weaker, but it's not cracking."

Others are less optimistic still.

Kharg Island is less than 20 miles from the mainland, well within rocket, artillery and drone range, according to Emery at University College London. It is also hundreds of miles inside the Persian Gulf, meaning any U.S. force would take at least a day to reach it and "providing time for Iran to mine surrounding waters and prepare defenses," he said.

Even if the U.S. did capture the island, "holding the position would be extremely challenging, with resupply operations exposed to persistent drone, missile and artillery fire," he said. Ultimately, he believes, it "would be an absolutely disastrous decision that would ensure the conflict lasted many months."

Why Trump may be eyeing Iran's Kharg Island — and why that's a risk

Less than 20 miles off Iran's shallow coastline sits a rare island made of hard coral — a natural, geological platfor...

 

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