The first week of joint practices at NFL training camps included one player getting carted off the field and two teams getting fined $200,000 each for excessive fighting.
Those events have lent credence to the notion that joint practice sessions don't need to last longer than one day, an idea growing in popularity. After nearly 80% of the 2023 joint practices lasted two days, over two-thirds of the sessions this year are one-day affairs.
''One, to me, is plenty,'' New York Jets coach Robert Saleh said.
The argument against two-day joint practices is that the second day often is chippier and increases the possibility of injuries.
Atlanta wide receiver Rondale Moore was carted off the field with a season-ending knee injury Wednesday as the Falcons practiced against the Miami Dolphins for a second straight day. Also Wednesday, the NFL fined the New York Giants and Detroit Lions $200,000 each for multiple fights that stretched across their two days of practicing against each other.
The NFL sent out a memo last month stating fights and unprofessional conduct at joint practices wouldn't be tolerated. Packers coach Matt LaFleur noted earlier in this offseason that ''sometimes it becomes a wrestling match out there or an MMA fight'' when joint practices extend to a second day.
''Every time I've ever had a joint practice, the first day will be a little rough and then the second one ends in a fight,'' Packers running back Josh Jacobs said.
The problems with this week's Falcons-Dolphins and Giants-Lions joint practices didn't necessarily result from both lasting two days.