Site icon American Football International

NFL cuts 2020 preseason in half

By Blake Schuster

The NFL is slashing the number of preseason games in 2020, dropping from four games to two games, per ProFootballTalk.

Week 1 and Week 4 of the previously released exhibition schedules have been cut.

This is the second amendment to the preseason schedule this year following the league’s cancellation of the annual Hall of Fame Game, which typically serves as the first exhibition game of the season. The NFL announced the matchup between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Dallas Cowboys would be moved to next year.

ProFootballTalk’s Mike Florio reports the cuts will become official Thursday:

“The move was driven by two primary factors. First, teams who will be playing preseason games on the road won’t want to move that many people. Second, given that no teams had on-field practice sessions in the offseason, coaches would rather have the extra time to work with their teams, and that will happen if they don’t have to worry about two extra preseason games.”

In recent years, the fourth preseason game has been largely ceremonial, with a number of starters typically on the sidelines to avoid the risk of injury a week before the season begins.

The first NFL contest of the season will now take place on Thursday, August 20, with the Carolina Panthers traveling to play the New England Patriots at 7:30 p.m. ET in the first game on NFL Network.

If there are no other setbacks or changes, that means fans will likely get to see quarterback Cam Newton take snaps for New England against his former club in Carolina. The Patriots signed Newton for a league minimum deal Sunday, though he can earn up to $7.5 million with incentives after two injury-plagued years saw his time with the Panthers come to an end.

The New York Jets will kick off at the Detroit Lions at 8:00 p.m. ET on ESPN later that evening.

Executives and fans alike have long called for a reduced preseason schedule. The risk of injury and the lack of interest in games has been the driving force behind the shift.

It is not clear if the move is permanent.

Read the original article in The Bleacher Report.

Exit mobile version