SAN FRANCISCO — Joe Flacco isn’t just happy to be at his first Pro Bowl; he’s using the platform to torch the NFL rulebook. The 41-year-old Cincinnati Bengals quarterback, currently making the rounds on Media Row ahead of Super Bowl LX, didn’t mince words when asked about the state of quarterback protection.
Appearing on Kevin Clark’s “This is Football” podcast, the Super Bowl XLVII MVP delivered a scathing critique of the league’s roughing the passer emphasis, effectively telling the NFL to stop babying the position he’s played for 18 seasons.
Old Guard vs. New Rules
Flacco, who earned a surprising Pro Bowl nod this season alongside Bengals teammates Joe Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase, and Tee Higgins, sat down with Clark and immediately targeted the league’s safety protocols. His message was blunt: football is violent, and the players know the risks.
“I don’t think it should be roughing the passer when they land on us. I don’t think being slapped on the head should be roughing the passer,” Flacco said, his frustration palpable. “It needs to get out of the game.”
For a quarterback who has absorbed 422 sacks over nearly two decades, Flacco’s perspective carries the weight of 209 regular-season games. He argued that the current officiating strips the game of its fundamental nature.
“It Is What It Is”
“It needs to get out of the game. It’s football, we signed up to play it… We signed up to get concussions. We signed up to get hurt. It is what it is. You might not like that, but that’s what we kind of did when we decided to play this game.” — Joe Flacco, via “This is Football”
Flacco’s comments land in a league environment drastically different from his rookie debut in 2008. While stars like Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen benefit from strict enforcement of body-weight tackles and contact to the helmet, Flacco remembers an era where the pocket was a far less hospitable place. He took a beating early in his career with the Ravens, yet he views those hits as part of the contract signed the moment a player puts on pads.
A Bizarre, Historic Season
The context of Flacco’s rant adds to the intrigue. His 2025 campaign was one of the strangest in recent memory. After starting the year with the Cleveland Browns, he was traded to the Bengals in October, where he stepped in to stabilize the ship. Despite a 2-8 record as a starter, his numbers were efficient enough—2,479 yards and 15 touchdowns—to earn him an alternate spot for the AFC roster.
Now, standing on the sidelines in San Francisco as the oldest player on the field, he’s watching a game he barely recognizes. His durability is undeniable, but his patience for the “over-officiating” of the sport has clearly run out.
What This Means for 2026
Flacco’s outburst highlights a growing divide between the league’s veteran class and its administrative direction. While the NFL continues to push for “safety first” to protect its marquee investments (the quarterbacks), players like Flacco argue that sanitizing the violence dilutes the product. Don’t expect the Competition Committee to roll back safety rules based on one podcast appearance, but Flacco’s voice adds serious volume to the “let them play” argument bubbling up from the locker rooms.

