NEW ORLEANS — The NFL offseason won’t last long.

By the time the Eagles complete their Super Bowl victory parade on Friday, it will be less than two weeks until the scouting combine kicks off in Indianapolis.

Free agency follows on March 10 with the two-day negotiating period. The annual league meeting starts on March 30. The seven teams with new head coaches may open offseason workout programs on April 7 and the remaining 25 teams can follow two weeks later.

Then, it’s time for the NFL draft on April 24 in Green Bay, where Miami QB Cam Ward is expected to be the No. 1 pick.

Here are some of the league’s offseason priorities:

Player safety

“We’re going to talk about moving players to better-performing helmets. That’s a big one,” NFL executive Jeff Miller told The Associated Press.

In 2024, players suffered the fewest concussions in a season since the league began tracking data nine years ago, according to the NFL. The total decline from 2023 was 17%, including all practices and games in both the preseason and regular season.

Miller, the league’s executive vice president overseeing player health and safety, and NFL chief medical officer Dr. Allen Sills have cited several reasons for the drop-off, including safer equipment, enforcement of safety rules and broader efforts to foster a culture of safety regarding concussions.

“It’s not the end of the story. There are still opportunities to decrease those,” Miller said, pointing out the desire to have more players choose position-specific helmets designed to reduce the impact of hits. “But also we need to enforce some of the rules around head contact.”

Miller said the league will continue to work on ways to decrease lower-extremity injuries.

Dynamic kickoff

The league and its competition committee also will review kickoffs and decide whether to tweak the rules.

“It’s really going to be the headline for us in the offseason, how’d we do and what changes need to be made?” Miller said. “The story in Year 1 was a good one, 332 more returns than a year ago and a lower injury rate. We hit the mark on that and we got as many touchdowns as we did since 2020 and some long kickoffs past the 40. Is there more that we can do to create more incentive for more of those returns and yet keep the injury rate more like a run or pass play?”

Replay review

Replay assist will be a major topic, too. NFL executive Troy Vincent said in December that expanding replay assist to include face mask penalties and other plays is going to be considered.

Current rules only allowed replay assist to help officials pick up a flag incorrectly thrown on the field, or in assisting proper enforcement of a foul called on the field.

Hits on a defenseless player, tripping, the fair catch, an illegal batted ball, an illegal double-team block, illegal formations on kickoffs and taunting are other areas that warrant consideration for replay assist.