Uniform number (American football)
In American football, uniform numbers are displayed on both the front and back of the jersey, and in many cases the sleeves, shoulder pad, or occasionally helmets. The numbers on the front and back are very large, covering most of the jersey. Certain numbers may only be worn by players in specific positions, thus assisting the officials in determining penalties.
In all three levels of American football (high school football, college football and professional football), players must wear a number from 1 to 99.
Players who wear numbers from 50 to 79 are, by rule, prohibited from catching or touching forward passes if their team is in possession of the ball and may not line up in a position that allows them to do so, unless explicitly indicated to the referee during a tackle-eligible play. Other than this, the correspondence between jersey numbers and player positions is largely a matter of style, tradition and semantics.
Canadian football follows a similar numbering scheme to that of American football, except that the ineligible numbers span only 50 to 69 and numbers 0 and 00 are available for use.
Professional football
The National Football League numbering system dates from a large-scale change of their rules in 1973, subsequently amended in various minor ways. As of 2021, players are generally required to wear numbers within ranges based on their positions as shown in the following table.[1]
Number range | QB | RB | WR | TE | OL | DL | LB | DB | K / P |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1–9 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
10–19 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
20–29 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | No |
30–39 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | No |
40–49 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | No |
50–59 | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
60–69 | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
70–79 | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
80–89 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No | No |
90–99 | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Exceptions to this system do exist, including during the National Football League preseason with associated larger team rosters. The numbers used relate to the player's primary position when they are first assigned a number. If they later change positions, they can keep their prior number, unless it conflicts with the eligible receiver rule; that is only players that change positions from an eligible position (such as receiver or back) to an ineligible position (such as an offensive lineman) are required to change numbers if they change position. Additionally, during a game a player may play out-of-position, but only after reporting in to the referees, who will announce to the stadium that a specific player number has reported in (for example "Number 61 has reported as an eligible receiver") to alert the opposing team, other officials, and the audience that a player is legally out-of-position.[1]
Although the NFL does allow teams to retire jersey numbers, the league officially discourages the practice for fear of teams running out of numbers; the rule book requires teams to make available retired numbers for new players should they exhaust all available numbers at a particular position.[1]
In the XFL, the NFL numbering conventions were followed with a slight exception being that wide-receivers are allowed to wear single-digit numbers (i.e. 1–9); the NFL added that allowance themselves, starting in 2021.
NCAA
According to NCAA rule book, Rule 1 Section 4 Article 1 "strongly recommends" numbering as follows for offensive players:[2]
Otherwise all players can be numbered 1–99; the NCAA makes no stipulation on defensive players. Two players may also share the same number, although they may not play during the same down.
Starting in the 2020 NCAA football season, the use of duplicate numbers will be restricted to only two players on a team, and players will be allowed to wear No. 0.[3]
Two players, both placekickers, have worn No. 100 in NCAA history. Both did so as part of centennial celebrations in the 1960s, with special dispensation from the NCAA: West Virginia's Chuck Kinder (not the writer of the same name), who did so in 1963 to commemorate the state of West Virginia's 100th anniversary, and Kansas' Bill Bell, who did so in 1969 to commemorate 100 years since the first organized college football contest.[4]
High school
On high school and other lower youth teams, jerseys with different number ranges are different sizes, and since many of these teams do not reorder jerseys every year, players are often assigned numbers based more on jerseys that fit them rather than specific position. Odessa Permian High School (of Friday Night Lights fame) plays in Texas, where NCAA rules are used; yet Permian's tradition is that quarterbacks will wear numbers in the 20s unlike most schools in college or high school.[5]
Although previous editions of the National Federation of State High School Associations rule book indicated a recommended numbering system nearly identical to the NCAA's, later editions from approximately 2000 onward only indicate the bare minimum requirements: offensive linemen must be numbered from 50 to 79, while all other positions including backs and ends must wear numbers either from 0 to 49 or 80 to 99.
In forms of the game that have fewer than 11 men (most notably eight-man football and six-man football) a player can wear any number. In eight-man, there are only three ineligible receivers and in six-man, all players are eligible receivers.
In popular culture
Unusual uniform numbers have been used in comedy films, including:
- Three Little Pigskins (1934) – The Three Stooges wore "numbers" H2O2, 1/2, and ? (a question mark)
- Gus (1976) – the title character, a placekicking mule, wore No. 00
- The Longest Yard (2005) – Joey "Battle" Battaglio (played by Bill Goldberg) wears the number 10 but represented by the Roman numeral X.
References
- ^ a b c "2018 Official Playing Rules of the National Football League" (PDF). operations.nfl.com.
- ^ "Football: 2016 and 2017 Rules and Interpretations" (PDF). NCAA. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2016. Retrieved May 23, 2019.
- ^ Barnett, Zach (April 21, 2020). "NCAA makes 0 an eligible number, other rule tweaks". NBC Sports. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
- ^ Stallard, Mark (2004). Tales from the Jayhawk Gridiron. Sports Publishing. The anecdote featuring Bell's number 100, with a picture of Bell's number 100 jersey and straight-toe kicking shoe, can be found on pages 94–96.
- ^ "Permian blasts Timon (NY)". September 16, 2006. Retrieved November 12, 2017.