NFL insiders: Why we hate the NFL’s social media rules

Three weeks into the football season, the NFL put into effect a new social media policy for its 32 teams. The policy was met with widespread complaints and controversy, and the frustration has only grown since then, multiple sources at NFL teams tell Yahoo Finance.

The new rules threaten teams with hefty fines for posting “in-game” video footage (clips, GIFs, Vines) to their social media accounts before the league has first shared the clips to an internal server from which the teams’ social media folks pull content.

To explain further: When the Dallas Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant makes an incredible catch, the Cowboys cannot put video of the play on the team’s official Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook account until the NFL has made the clip available on its server.

The NFL has spun the change as a good thing for the teams: “The overall policy is evolving to allow teams to do much more than before,” NFL social media chief Tom Brady (no, not the player) told Yahoo Finance in October.

But two different people, who each head up social media for an NFL team, speaking to Yahoo Finance on condition of anonymity, say that the new policy limits what teams can do, rather than expands it. They say the league often takes too long to post a certain clip (which defeats the in-the-moment spirit of social media), or doesn’t post a certain clip at all. They complain that the league’s definition of the “in-game window,” which extends to an hour after a game has ended, is especially frustrating.

What changed about the NFL’s social media policy for teams

It’s important to note that the league limiting what can be posted while a game is airing is not new, and limiting the total number of clips a team can share per week is not new. What is new about the policy this season is that it explicitly cracks down on violations with a threat of up to $100,000 for posting in-game video footage independent of the league.

No team has been fined under the new policy yet, but many have been warned for violations, sources say.

On paper, one team social media manager says, the new policy does look better than the old one. The problem? “No team cared about the old policy, no one followed it, the limits were broken on everything and we got to do what we want,” he says. “Now they have these fines, so it’s more restrictive and threatening. We can’t provide the same level of access and content as we have provided in the past, and fans are going to wonder why that happened.”

The NFL says it’s unlikely it will miss any big moments, and says the reason it caps the volume of content teams can post is to keep quality high. “If we allowed the clubs, and ourselves, to put every single bit out there,” Brady says, “there could end up being a lot of noise.”