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Chain crew
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==Location== For games at all levels except the NFL, the chain crew operates on the side of the field opposite the press box (usually the visiting team's sideline). In the NFL, the chain crew switches sides at halftime; the referee determines their initial placement.{{refn|group="note"|In NFL games where both teams' benches were on the same side of the field (a practice that has not occurred since the 1994 season), the NFL specified that the chain crew operate on the opposite side for the entire game.}} In the NCAA, the chains are located opposite the press box for the entire game. In the first half, the line judge is located opposite the press box and supervises the chain crew, with the head linesman on the press box side of the field. In the second half, the head linesman and line judge swap sides of the field like in the NFL, with the linesman supervising the chain crew. This practice started in 2014. In the NFL and other venues where there is a zone behind the [[sidelines]], all three poles are placed somewhere along the back line of this zone. Otherwise, the poles are placed along the sideline. ===Auxiliary chain crew=== For professional and [[college football]] games, an ''auxiliary chain crew'' operates on the opposite side of the field, supervised by the line judge. Their presence lets players and officials look to either side of the field for information. The auxiliary chain crew also includes a member holding the ''drive start indicator'', which is placed at the beginning of a team's drive and stays there until the team loses possession. This indicator is only used for statistical purposes to calculate the distance of each drive. It looks similar to a "stick" and has an arrow (or occasionally a large "X") that points in the direction the offensive team is going. The NFL eliminated the drive start indicator in [[2018 NFL season|2018]].<ref name=chaininterview/>
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