NFL owners are worried about HBO’s Hard Knocks series getting stale, and it’s hard to blame them. The show has been on the air for nearly two decades now, and it’s impossible to keep things fresh for that long. But the team owners have a solution, and unlike their typical ideas, this one is actually pretty good.

Via Sports Illustrated:

“One idea mirrored the ‘All-Access’ series that Showtime has done, where NHL teams have been featured in preparation for the Winter Classic and boxers have been spotlighted ahead of big fights. The NFL concept would be to give NFL Films access to two teams going into a big game a few times over the course of the season, with the episodes airing later in the year. And that, as far as I can tell, would be in addition to the training camp series, which could undergo changes as well. My sense is that the concern would be ‘Hard Knocks’ getting stale after all these years—and as all of you well know, the league likes to get in front of those sorts of things. And another thing that was discussed (that I’m sure coaches will love) was the potential elimination of parameters around who the league can mandate to do ‘Hard Knocks,’ which allow the NFL to make anyone do it.”

So, no, the league won’t do anything to tweak the training camp version of Hard Knocks, but we could soon get an in-season version chronicling teams’ preparation for a big game. I think I speak for all NFL fans when I say: YES PLEASE.

The truth is, the training camp Hard Knocks doesn’t need any tweaks. The entertainment value of a particular season is tied directly to the team that is featured. If the team is boring, like the 2015 Texans, the show will be boring. Nobody was psyched to see J.J. Watt listen to Fort Minor for 30 minutes every week. But if the team is interesting, the show is invariably good. This past season with the Browns was excellent. And there’s no way the upcoming Raiders season will be anything less than amazing.

But the one thing lacking from Hard Knocks is a look at how players and coaches interact when the games start to matter. In training camp, we get some drama with no-name players trying to make the team, but it would be even better to see that drama unfold with players we actually know and care about.

Similar content has already been available, but on platforms with less reach. Amazon’s All or Nothing series has followed the Cardinals (2015), Rams (2016), Cowboys (2017) for full seasons, and those series have been quite good. They’d be even better if we got a more in-depth look at how teams prepare for a particular opponent rather than a 10,000-foot view of how a team gets through a full 16-game season.

So here’s my unsolicited advice to NFL owners: Make this show happen and put it on HBO. Football fans love cursing! At the same time, do nothing to tweak the training camp show. Just pick more interesting teams.