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Tackling changes for football

IT'S CRUNCH TIME in several prep football league this week (Shutterstock).

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FOOTBALL is popular, but there are a few changes might help preserve its appeal and make for safer, more exciting contests (Shutterstock).

American football, as it is played now, is the grandchild of the original “association football,” and may soon be headed back to its roots.

Although games involving kicking spheroids have been around for centuries and perhaps longer, it became soccer in the 1820s in England. As popular as it was and is, it had an offspring called rugby. As with baseball – incorrectly credited to Abner Doubleday – the sport of rugby’s origins are based on myth.

According to the story, in 1823 during a soccer game at Rugby School in Warwickshire, a player – frustrated with not being able to use his hands in the game – picked up the ball and ran with it.

That’s almost certainly a fib, but rugby is considered the father of American football, as well as variants in Ireland, Australia and Canada.

Despite its huge popularity and cultural influence, all is not well in the world of the pigskin. NFL TV ratings are showing slight reductions, after years of steady rises. Concerns about safety, especially brain injuries, have led to a sharp decline in kids playing tackle football, and most colleges in Southern California don’t even have a football team.

Football may not be broke – yet – but it could probably use a tuck here and there.

Here are some of the ideas that have been promoted, and in some cases, actually tried at one level or another.

Some even more radical proposals include:

Some of these proposed changes may seem gimmicky, but football has always been a game in flux. The forward pass, numbered uniforms, faceguards, and two-platoon teams were once considered new and suspicious departures from the traditional game.

Heed the words of that old football genius, Charles Darwin. Adapt or get fired.

“Wild World of Sports” is posted on Mondays.

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