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Jones isn't the only member of the NFC East to make the decision. Both the New York Giants and Washington Commanders reportedly voted to ban the play. All three of those clubs have to play the Eagles twice in the regular season, and have likely seen their fair share of tush pushes over the years.
In the same vein as the play itself, the "Tush Push" barrels forward. On Wednesday, NFL owners voted at the spring league meeting to keep the play made famous by the Philadelphia Eagles, rejecting a proposal put forward by the Green Bay Packers to ban it.
NFL owners have voted against banning the "Tush Push," the signature short-yardage play of the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles.
The Packers submitted a revised proposal to ban the tush push play ahead of the spring meetings, and NFL owners did not receive enough votes
19hon MSN
The play the Philadelphia Eagles have essentially perfected went to a vote at the NFL owners meetings Wednesday on whether it
The NFL failed to ban the "Tush Push" at the league meetings, meaning the controversial play made famous by the Philadelphia Eagles is here to stay.
The NFL has voted to keep the Philadelphia Eagles’ controversial "tush push," or as fans call it, the "brotherly shove," after a proposal to ban the play fell just two votes short.
The ban on offensive players from pushing, pulling, lifting, grasping or encircling a runner was reportedly supported by a 22-10 vote among team owners, two short of the three-quarters majority
The Philadelphia Eagles' offense has become synonymous with the Tush Push for years, but their time running it appears to be over.
ESPN's Adam Schefter later reported that the 10 teams who voted to keep the Tush Push were the Eagles, Baltimore Ravens, Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lions, Jacksonville Jaguars, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, New Orleans Saints, New York Jets and Tennessee Titans.
Those league sources told The Athletic that 10 teams — including the Ravens, Patriots, Lions and Jets — voted against that proposal, put forth by the Green Bay Packers. A majority of the league ultimately voted for a ban, but the Packers’ proposal fell two votes shy of the required 24-vote threshold.