Canadian Football League introduces dramatic rule shake-up with ties scrapped from 2026 season - sportnewstrends
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Canadian Football League introduces dramatic rule shake-up with ties scrapped from 2026 season

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Canadian Football League has officially approved a series of rule changes for the 2026 season, with the headline decision confirming that tie games will no longer exist in the league.

The CFL’s board of governors ratified the changes on Tuesday, bringing an end to a format that previously allowed regular-season games to finish level if the score remained tied after two overtime mini-games.

Under the new rules, games that remain deadlocked after overtime will now continue with alternating two-point conversion attempts from the three-yard line until a winner is decided. All attempts will take place at the same end of the field.

Although ties have become relatively uncommon in recent years, they have still caused frustration among fans and teams. Since 2016, four regular-season CFL games have ended level, including two during the 2024 campaign. There were no ties recorded in 2025.

The change was first recommended earlier this year by the league’s rules committee, which includes representatives from head coaches, team presidents, the Canadian Professional Football Officials Association, and the CFL Players’ Association.

Another major adjustment approved for 2026 involves late-game timing procedures. While the CFL will introduce a new 35-second play clock next season, the league will revert to a 20-second official-controlled play clock during the final three minutes of each half. The shorter clock must be restarted by an official’s whistle.

As part of that shift, the league has also issued updated guidance to the replay centre. During normal play with the 35-second clock, replay officials have been instructed to avoid unnecessary delays unless a critical ruling is involved. During the final three minutes, however, replay staff will have greater freedom to assist on-field officials during natural stoppages, including penalties and automatic reviews.

The board of governors also approved several additional rule tweaks for next season, including:

  • Automatic replay reviews for turnover-on-downs decisions
  • New field position rules after certain kicks through the end zone or missed field goals that hit the goalpost, with possession now beginning at the 40-yard line
  • Allowing teams to register a third ineligible jersey number that can report as eligible before games
  • Expanding defensive options on ineligible receiver penalties to include an incomplete pass result

The changes represent one of the more significant offseason rule overhauls in recent CFL history, with the league aiming to improve game flow, reduce controversy, and ensure every contest produces a definitive winner.

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