A regular analysis of strategy, decisions and calls that impacted the week of NFL play.

An NFL player was penalized Sunday for the grave offense of making a snow angel and, oh, the protests came howling. Social media lit up, the memes started flowing and the No Fun League once again was intruding on football consumption.

The moment -- more on it in a bit -- certainly was notable, but not for the reason you might think. In truth, it was a revival of a storyline that quietly has petered out over the past month and a half. Penalties for taunting and unsportsmanlike conduct have dropped dramatically since Week 7, and heavens to Betsy, the NFL even allowed more than 500 players to ignore its rules and wear custom cleats this week to commemorate charitable causes.

What in the world is happening? Has the NFL finally come to its senses on an unwinnable and unnecessarily stringent mindset?

I wouldn't go that far. The one-week shoe exception was planned before the season, and a reduction in penalties isn't entirely unusual when the NFL establishes a preseason point of emphasis. Sometimes players get the message and adjust accordingly. But the effect has been the same regardless: Fewer games are being delayed and affected by fouls that seem inconsequential to the competition and excessive relative to consumers' sensibilities.

NFL's No Fun League The NFL has quietly pulled back from the No Fun League approach, even if no one has noticed. Weeks 1-7 Weeks 8-13 Taunting 21 7 Unsportsmanlike conduct 50 22 Source: ESPN Stats & Information

NFL officials called 17 taunting fouls in the first three weeks of the season and an average of three per week through Week 7. That average has dropped by almost half, to 1.7 per week since the start of Week 8.

Overall, the average number of unsportsmanlike conduct penalties has fallen from 7.1 per week in Weeks 1-7 to 3.1 since. Heck, the NFL has gone three whole weeks without ejecting a player from a game after disqualifying 11 in the first 10.

Sunday, referee Pete Morelli's crew penalized San Francisco 49ers cornerback Rashard Robinson’s snow angel during a snowy game at Soldier Field, an act that technically violated the prohibition of celebrating while on the ground. But another snow angel in a different Midwest game escaped penalty.

Yes, Gene Steratore's crew didn't bother to call Green Bay Packers receiver Randall Cobb for his snow angel. To my knowledge, Lambeau Field didn't collapse from the gravity of the act and subsequent compassion. The Football Zebras website suggested that Cobb's celebration was legal because he already was on the ground after diving to make a touchdown catch. But I prefer to view it as an act of decency and pre-holiday charity.

Packers receiver Randall Cobb celebrates his touchdown catch with a snow angel in the end zone at Lambeau Field on Sunday. Mike Roemer/AP Photo

When you combine the reduction in fouls with the one-week footwear exception, you can envision a reasonably minded league focused on what actually matters. Both the level of competition and television ratings have taken a notable upswing over the period we're talking about. (Scheduling and the presidential election probably played a role as well.)

It's enough to make you wonder whether the NFL really needs to put itself through the tough love of No Fun to achieve its optimal product. The league would note that the early spate of penalties set a boundary that players are now observing. But it's fair to ask: Was it really necessary to spend half the season drilling it into their heads? Couldn't that standard be set via offseason communication rather than on-field discipline?

As a matter of public perception and psychology, after all, it's unlikely that most fans have caught the second-half pullback. The damage, to the extent that it occurred, is done. The Peak No Fun League aura will echo, for the most part, until the end of the season regardless of the numbers.

So will reports of fines in previous years for uniform violations related to charitable messages on shoes. The NFL has 409 words in its rulebook devoted to shoe etiquette, including detailed instructions on how to cut the athletic tape used to hide unapproved sponsors. (It must be "clean" and "the exact size of the logo or name.")

To the surprise of no one, the league was hardly damaged in Week 13 by the presence of charitable messages. Nor did chaos spontaneously erupt amid the decision in September to not fine players who wore cleats that commemorated the victims of 9/11. This week's temporary relaxation was greeted with unanimous approval, from what I can tell. Hopefully, it provided inspiration to relax some of the league's more draconian standards.

There are plenty of existential issues facing the NFL, problems with no easy answers. Why provide such low-hanging grist for criticism when the alternative seems so clear? It's something to ponder, if nothing else, here in the first week of December.

Jeff Fisher has an extension, but that doesn't necessarily mean his job with the Rams is safe. Christian Petersen/Getty Images

Despite extension, Fisher isn't a lock to return for Rams

The Los Angeles Rams on Sunday confirmed a long-rumored contract extension for coach Jeff Fisher, who is now signed through 2018. You should read absolutely nothing into it relative to Fisher's future with the team.

NFL teams usually prefer to avoid having coaches and other executives enter a season in the final year of a deal. Fisher's contract, along with that of Rams general manager Les Snead, was set to expire after this season. Even a token extension can head off season-long discussions, both inside and outside the building, about the future of a leadership group.

For that reason, it's a surprise the Rams didn't announce the deal when it occurred this summer. Still, no matter what they might be saying, it shouldn't be viewed as confirmation that Fisher will return in 2017.

The NFL's billionaire owners -- and the Rams' Stan Kroenke certainly qualifies -- sometimes view these extensions as severance if they decide to make a change. Occasionally, they have less lucrative buyouts and/or can be exercised or declined at the option of the team.

So it's not unusual for a coach with a fortified contract to be fired before the end of the next season. In the wake of Sunday's news, I thought of two examples off the top of my head that I have covered as a reporter.

In September 2000, the Minnesota Vikings signed coach Dennis Green to a four-year extension. The sides parted ways in December 2001 after completing buyout negotiations. Eight years later, the Vikings extended coach Brad Childress' contract in November 2009. He was fired almost exactly one year later, in November 2010, amid revelations that the new contract was not fully guaranteed.

The Rams are 4-8 and headed toward their fifth consecutive non-winning season under Fisher. Since his last playoff win -- in 2004 when he coached the Tennessee Titans -- 35 different coaches have won at least one playoff game, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

Kroenke has shown incredible patience, or perhaps an alarming level of inattention, and so there's no telling how he will react to the 2016 season. But Sunday's news provides no insight. It just means that if Fisher is fired, he'll take some cash with him as a parting gift.