Five NFL players who look strange with single-digit numbers
Which NFL players look strange with their new numbers?This past offseason, the National Football League - much to the chagrin of Bill Belichick and Tom Brady - elected to ease some of the restrictions on what numbers players are able to wear based on the position they play.
Perhaps the most notable change has been that you no longer have to be a quarterback, kicker or punter to wear a single-digit number.

It's been relatively easy to get used to some players wearing single-digit numbers. Philadelphia Eagles rookie wide receiver DeVonta Smith wears No. 6, the same number that he donned at the University of Alabama a year ago when he won the Heisman Trophy. Even Leonard Fournette switching from No. 28 to No. 7 for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers has been pretty simple to process, because it's the number that he wore at LSU.
With that said, there's quite a few players who are now wearing single-digit numbers, and frankly, it hasn't been aesthetically pleasing: