This week in his mailbag, John Clayton addressed the issue of low hits and the possibility that the league might take steps to eliminate such hits.
Tackling isn't an exact science. Defenders are coming at full speed trying to figure out where to make a tackle on a player who might be bigger. Ward was playing safety in the middle of the field. Had he let Gronkowski get behind him, the Patriots would have scored a touchdown.
He made the choice to hit low knowing he would be fined if he hit high. Unfortunately, Gronkowski became a victim of a physical sport.
The elimination of the low hit to go with the elimination of the high hit would be an injustice to defenders. Such a change would be the equivalent of adjusting the strike zone of a pitcher in baseball so he would throw balls instead of strikes 60 to 70 percent of the time.
John makes a good point -- creating this "strike zone" would make the jobs of defensive players even harder, and often these guys are moving at such high speed that they don't really have the ability to choose where they are going to make contact with an opponent in order to bring him down. Especially when the size differential is enormous, as with Ward and Gronk, the defensive player just wants to do what is necessary to bring the other guy down.
Clayton can say that "football is a violent" sport, and he's right, but football in its current state is
too violent. A major culprit for that is the practice of defensive players not to tackle, using their arms, but rather to launch themselves like javelins at offensive players, felling them like deer. To me, that is what was so dangerous about what T.J. Ward did on Sunday.
Regardless of where the defensive player is aiming, running at full speed and launching oneself into the opponent is dangerous for everybody involved. Defensive players should be required to either make plays on the ball, preventing the catch or stripping it from the offensive player, or else get in position to actually wrap up or otherwise bring the opponent to the ground.
Sure, a catastrophic knee injury like the one Gronk suffered could still happen if a defensive player grabs a guy by the ankles or around the knees and the player's leg gets wrenched the wrong way. But it would be much harder for that to happen while the player is in mid-air, taken completely unaware and totally unable to make any adjustments to avoid injury, like shifting direction or slowing down, as Gronkowski was.
Maybe the NFL doesn't care about an increase in knee injuries because it won't result in law suits the way that head injuries will. But the NFL should care. The sport is more interesting when the best players are playing, and it would be more enjoyable to watch if the defensive emphasis were on technique, positioning, speed, and fundamentals rather than brutal, bone-jarring hits at full momentum.