The “Tush Push” play has been successful for the Philadelphia Eagles, but there is one downfall according to center Jason Kelce.
Essentially, getting smushed.
“Man, all the weight and everything lying up on top of you,” Kelce told NBC’s Devin McCourty. “And you’ve got to wait for everybody else to get up before you can get up. It’s a grueling play, for sure. And, you know, if you do it right, you’re at the bottom … “If, if you’re not at the bottom, it usually didn’t go well.”
Ouch.
The Tush Push is essentially a play where the offense is pushed by the rest of the team in hopes of a first down or touchdown.
It’s caused a lot of controversy.
The NFL Competition Committee is looking into seeing if this is a legal play with more research to be conducted after spending the offseason studying it.
NBC’s Peter King called the play an “abomination” that should be taken out of the league. Kelce himself responded to those claims in an episode of New Heights.
“First of all, abomination is a strong word. You usually here that with like serial killers or like … that’s like against the lord. What’s the definition of abomination, ungodly? That’s a strong word for a quarterback sneak play.”
Kelce doesn’t appear to want to make the play stop. Despite what others say, and how his body responds.
About Jessica Kleinschmidt
Jess is a baseball fan with Reno, Nev. roots residing in the Bay Area. She is the host of "Short and to the Point" and is also a broadcaster with the Oakland A's Radio Network. She previously worked for MLB.com and NBC Sports Bay Area.
Recent Posts
Articles
Daniel Jones and the Colts Still Have a Super Bowl Window
Articles
Patriots Fatigue Blinds You: Drake Maye Is a Super Bowl Threat
Eagles getting tired of Jalen Hurts
The Philadelphia Eagles are growing impatient
Bryce Young shatters Cam Newton record
Bryce Young is ascending
The pressure is on New York Giants ownership to pick the right coach
President, CEO, and co-owner John Mara can't afford another bad hire.
Edgar Wright’s ‘The Running Man’ is both better and worse than the original
The 2025 reboot is a vast improvement in terms of filmmaking, but the 1987 version is more fun.