The Philadelphia Eagles continue to celebrate their victory this offseason in not having their famous "Tush Push" play banned by the league.
The 22-10 vote was two shy of getting a majority of league owners to vote to eradicate the variation of the quarterback sneak. Philadelphia, the architect of the play, got nine other teams to vote to keep the rule as is.
Not everyone came away impressed with the vote, though.
Hall-of-Fame head coach Tony Dungy, a former defensive mind in the league for decades, spoke out against the Tush Push play - and voiced his displeasure for the vote to ban it failing.
"Well, I thought it was going to stay in place because it helps scoring and it's an offensive play and we tend to go for that," Dungy said on NBC. "When I came into the league...there was rules against assisting the runner. You could block for the runner, that's how you helped them, but you couldn't pull the runner or push the runner and now for some reason we think that's okay.
"I just think it's not fair football and I was disappointed but I wasn't surprised..."
Dungy isn't alone. Many coaches, both current and from league's past have spoken out against the Tush Push due to the edge it gives the Eagles.
But with most teams being unable to stop it, or replicate it for themselves, the proposal to remove it looked more like sour grapes than anything else. And it left Philadelphia as victors once again.