Changes to injury timeouts proposed by Football Rules Committee

Members also propose limiting timeouts after third overtime

Posted on 2/28/25 11:30 AM

The NCAA Football Rules Committee on Friday proposed modifications to the injury timeout rules for the 2025-26 season.

Committee members, who met in Indianapolis this week, recommended that if medical personnel enter the field to evaluate an injured player after the ball is spotted by the officiating crew for the next play, that player's team would be charged a timeout.

If the team does not have any timeouts remaining, a 5-yard delay-of-game penalty would be assessed.

Before becoming official, all rule changes must be approved by the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel, which is scheduled to discuss football rules proposals April 16.

The injury timeout proposal was made after many in the NCAA college football community raised concerns about strategies in which players fake an injury to stop the opposition's momentum or to avoid using an allotted timeout.

This has been a topic of discussion for the NCAA Football Rules Committee in recent years. Before the 2021 season, a framework was instituted that allows a school or conference to request a postgame video review headed by Steve Shaw, the NCAA secretary-rules editor/national coordinator of officials, regarding questionable actions involving injuries.

If it is determined that a player faked an injury to manipulate the rules, the offending team's conference is notified, and any possible disciplinary action can be made by the conference office.

The impetus for recommending this change is to provide an in-game mechanism that can curtail the faking of injuries because committee members think these actions negatively affect the overall perception of the game.

"The committee identified the time period after the ball has been spotted as the most egregious violations of the injury timeout rule and is addressing the issue this way," said Kirby Smart, co-chair of the committee and coach at Georgia. "Having a set time frame of when the game is stopped for an injured player should hopefully help curtail the strategy of having players fake injuries."

Overtime timeouts

Committee members also proposed that if a game reaches a third overtime, each team would have one timeout to use until the game is concluded.

Currently, teams are allotted one timeout for each overtime period. At the start of the third overtime, teams alternate running 2-point plays until a winner is decided.

Committee members don't think the game should be stopped for timeouts when there are only two plays per extra period if a game reaches a third overtime.

Other rule proposals

The Football Rules Committee:

Targeting

The committee had a thorough discussion about player health and safety, including the targeting rule. The committee will seek conference commissioner feedback and further discussion on player safety rules.