‘No team has offered a proposal’: Tush Push survives and Steelers keep their Spartan edge

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 Tush Push survives and Steelers keep their Spartan edge

Pittsburgh Steelers players huddle during a short-yardage situation in the 2025 season. (Image via Getty)

The Tush Push is not going anywhere. NFL competition committee chairman Rich McKay told reporters this week there has been no push inside the league to outlaw the quarterback push sneak that the Philadelphia Eagles turned into a brand.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter summed it up on X: "No team has offered a proposal to ban the Tush Push and there has been no recent discussion about changing the rule, Rich McKay told reporters today." For anyone who wanted the play erased from the rulebook, that is the ballgame for this offseason.

Rich McKay makes it clear there is no current movement to ban the Tush Push

This is a sharp turn from last year. The Green Bay Packers formally proposed banning the play in Feb. 2025, and the Tush Push became one of the dominant storylines at the annual league meeting in March as owners complained about everything from player safety to aesthetics.That noise is gone now. McKay told ESPN there is nothing on the table at the moment: "There's no team proposal that I've seen from it," McKay said via ESPN. "So, I wouldn't envision it. But you never know."

Eagles-focused outlets have already called the whole saga a witch hunt, and the league’s own numbers undercut the safety argument. ESPN reported that the Tush Push and similar sneaks were actually less efficient in 2025.

The play was used more often across the NFL, but the league-wide success rate dropped from the low 80s to the mid-70s as defenses finally adjusted.Philadelphia still leaned on it more than anyone, running it 27 times in 2025, but their conversion rate slid to around 68% after peaking near 93% in 2022. One of the lowest moments came when Chicago Bears cornerback Nahshon Wright stripped Jalen Hurts on a Tush Push attempt in the Eagles’ Black Friday loss.

Once the play stopped looking automatic, the outrage dried up. Owners stopped screaming. Proposals stopped coming in.

Why the Steelers’ Spartan sneak quietly become one of the biggest winners of this decision

All of that matters in Pittsburgh because Mike Tomlin’s staff built its own version of the play and leaned into it hard in 2025. The Steelers rolled out a twist called the Spartan, named after Connor Heyward’s ties to Michigan State. Instead of the quarterback, Heyward lines up under center on short yardage and gets shoved from behind behind the interior line.Pittsburgh even added a trick wrinkle off it. On one variation, running back Kenneth Gainwell takes a handoff off the same look, a play the staff nicknamed Yazoo after his Mississippi hometown. That kind of deception only works if defenses still have to respect the straight-ahead shove and if the league lets the formation live.With no team willing to put a fresh ban on paper, the Steelers keep all of it. Nothing in McKay’s comments suggests a late surprise, and the lack of proposals means the Spartan and every other copycat version will remain legal for at least another year.League-wide, the trend is clear. Defenses are solving the play on their own, and officials have tightened up on alignments and early movement. That is exactly how football is supposed to work. The play was never declared illegal. It just went from an almost guaranteed conversion to another situational tool that smart teams can still weaponize.For the moment, that reality suits the Steelers and the Eagles just fine. The rest of the league had its chance to kill the Tush Push. Instead, it blinked, and now Pittsburgh walks into 2026 with a short-yardage package the rulebook still fully allows.

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