• Square-facebook

Protecting QBs From Violent Late Hits Won’t Be Easy

Time to read
1 minute
Read so far

Protecting QBs From Violent Late Hits Won’t Be Easy

Posted in:

FANSIDED - No one wants to see any player take a vicious hit like the one that knocked Trevor Lawrence out of the game.

It’s easy to agree on that point. Eliminating violent shots is the hard part.

The NFL has instituted several rules to protect quarterbacks but football is a physical sport and players have to react instantly and make split-second decisions going at high speeds so injuries keep occurring.

Lawrence was carted off the field in the first half of Jacksonville’s 23-20 loss to Houston on Sunday after Azeez Al-Shaair leveled the defenseless quarterback with a forearm to the facemask.

The late hit put Lawrence in the fencing position — both fists clenched — and he stayed on the ground for several minutes, while a brawl ensued. Lawrence didn’t require hospitalization for his concussion but it’s unknown when he’ll return.

“Thank you to everyone who has reached out/been praying for me,” Lawrence wrote on X.

“I’m home and feeling better. Means a lot, thank you all.”

Al-Shaair was ejected from the game and faces a fine and potential suspension after his latest unsportsmanlike penalty. The Texans’ linebacker was flagged and later fined $11,255 for a late hit out of bounds on Titans running back Tony Pollard last week.

He was fined earlier this year after he punched Bears running back Roschon Johnson on the sideline in Week 2. That occurred during a scuffle that started after his hard shot on quarterback Caleb Williams near the sideline that wasn’t flagged.

Al-Shaair once got away with grabbing Tom Brady by the throat on a pass rush in a game between the 49ers and Buccaneers.

The NFL rulebook states: “A defender must pull up when a runner begins a feet-first slide.”

But defensive players aren’t automatically penalized if they make contact with a sliding quarterback if they already committed and the contact is unavoidable.

The rules state it’s a foul when “the defender makes forcible contact into the head or neck area of the runner with the helmet, shoulder, or forearm, or commits some other act that is unnecessary roughness.”

Al-Shaair did that so he was penalized and will face other repercussions.

Still, given the hard-hitting nature of the sport, it won’t be the last time this happens.