One thing annoying me about the emphasis on contact past 5 yards is the overreacting from DBs and defensive coaches. Here is a sample of their cries (emphasis mine):
So these guys are complaining because Marvin is such a good route runner that they can't cover him without clawing, grabbing and mauling? Oh, they're lives are so hard because Randy Moss is 6'4", blazing fast, can jump out the roof and catch whatever floats his way? Well, tough luck. If you can't cover Marvin's precise routes, then study more film and work on your technique. Or double team him. But it is ridiculous to depend upon rule bending and "grey areas" as the basis of your coverage technique.
The reason this new emphasis was made is because these guys were abusing these grey areas instead of just becomming better technicians or the coaches becomming better schemers. The NFL is basically reversing what were de facto interpretation changes favoring DBs due to bigger, faster, stronger receivers like Moss, Owens, Boston, Andre Johnson, etc. The problem is that what was once allowed to deal with athletic freaks like Moss was allowed to be use against technicians like Harrisson. Not every CB is Deion, so just shut up and get some double team help.
I think the Miami DBs have the best take on this so far (from same article):
"It's so unfair," Poole said. "If you're an aggressive corner, or an aggressive defense, it's going to be an adjustment. To me, they're just trying to get more points on the board. They want to take away the edge from the defense. Why not just tie our hands behind our backs?"
All of the corners interviewed for this story said that the one player who would benefit most from the change is the Colts' Marvin Harrison. The Patriots mugged him in the title game, holding him to four catches.
Harrison is thin and frail, with the book on him that he can be beaten up. Now that the contact is strictly limited to inside 5 yards, Harrison should be free to run in the secondary. As a precise route runner, that's trouble for the team trying to shut him down.
"Marvin's going to go wild," Bryant said. "This change was made for him."
http://www.sportsline.com/nfl/story/7605181/2
So these guys are complaining because Marvin is such a good route runner that they can't cover him without clawing, grabbing and mauling? Oh, they're lives are so hard because Randy Moss is 6'4", blazing fast, can jump out the roof and catch whatever floats his way? Well, tough luck. If you can't cover Marvin's precise routes, then study more film and work on your technique. Or double team him. But it is ridiculous to depend upon rule bending and "grey areas" as the basis of your coverage technique.
The reason this new emphasis was made is because these guys were abusing these grey areas instead of just becomming better technicians or the coaches becomming better schemers. The NFL is basically reversing what were de facto interpretation changes favoring DBs due to bigger, faster, stronger receivers like Moss, Owens, Boston, Andre Johnson, etc. The problem is that what was once allowed to deal with athletic freaks like Moss was allowed to be use against technicians like Harrisson. Not every CB is Deion, so just shut up and get some double team help.
I think the Miami DBs have the best take on this so far (from same article):
In other words, corners who have real talent and technique will still play tight man coverage, all the pretenders are just gonna have to get saftey help.The rule will be especially tough for teams that play their corners off. In Miami, where Surtain and fellow starting corner Sam Madison play a lot of press man -- meaning up at the line of scrimmage -- the thinking is the rule won't affect them as much.
Madison and Surtain are terrific at redirecting a receiver off his route near the line using their hands. Inside 5 yards, that's legal, and they excel at it. That won't change.
"We're allowed to jam inside 5 yards, so we'll be fine," Surtain said. "It's the guys who play off that will have the trouble. We'll play our same style. ... The coaches are preaching if we play our style, use the same technique, it shouldn't be a problem for us."