Originally posted by Britrock
The NFL Should Revert to 1990s rules and expand by 32 teams
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Doesn't that girl know how to drink a bottle of water? She isn't going to get anything out of it like that.
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Originally posted by BritrockAnyone here read TMQ by Gregg Easterbrook over at espn.com? He's always talking about the pussification of coaches in the NFL. He's brought up endless research into how coaches should almost always go for it on 4th down instead of punting and is forever pointing out those coaches who kick field goals when down 30-0 just to keep the shutout off their records.
There's some great research into this here http://www.advancednflstats.com/2009...dy-part-1.html
The final conclusion:
Basically, in any situation underneath that line, the number crunching says that coaches should go for it (yes, even on 4th and 11 from the opponents 38) because it'll lead to more points in the course of the game than kicking a FG or punting the ball away.
Now that's revolutionising the game.
Interesting article. I've read a few articles on this topic, and they all conclude that NFL coaches should go for it on 4th down more often. I haven't read many articles that say NFL coaches should punt more often...although I did read an article that said NFL teams should "quick kick" more often on 3rd and longs in their own territory, since the chances of converting a 3rd and long is slim.
Anyway, I am a little suspicious of studies that depend on "expected points". These studies treat scoring in terms of averages and probabilities, when an actual NFL game does not deal with scoring averages. For instance, a 1st and 10 from your opponents 20 yard line gives you 4 "expected points", yet its impossible to score 4 points. On offense, you basically score points in amounts of 3 or 7. These numbers aren't rounded off into averages. "Expected points" might do well in assessing how things happened during a season in retrospect, but they aren't really going to help you in decision-making during a game. In reality, you are either going to kick a FG for 3 points or score a TD for 7 points. Your decision making-process isn't "if I go for it on 4th down now and get to the 20-yard-line, I score 4 points."
This is just my subjective opinion, but I think in the NFL its easy to kick a FG but its difficult to score a TD even when you get within an opponent's 10-yard line. Based on that, I think NFL coaches are more apt to settle for a FG than go for it, because even if you gain a first down in your opponent's territory, you still have to score a TD otherwise you haven't really gained anything.
On the other side of the coin, I think NFL coaches are loathe to go for it in their own territory because they know that a failure to convert a 4th down will, in the very least, give the other team 3 points because the kickers are so good in the NFL (for the most part).Comment
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Originally posted by BritrockThat's the thing, the numbers used in this research were taken from the 1st and 3rd quarter of every game from 2000-2008. These are how the numbers come up over a long period of time.
Plus regardless of how many years they took the data from that still doesn't change or disprove my point/idea......Last edited by FirstTimer; 01-12-2010, 04:11 PM.Comment
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I don't think its as black and white as saying every team should go for it more. If you have a good defense and are confident in their ability to stop the other team, punt it. No need to go for it and potentially give the other team the ball at the 40 and have them basically need to fall forward several yards and get 3 points.
If you have a shitty defense who is likely to let the other team score regardless of where the other team starts from, the Lions, then really there is no harm in going for it. Plus it might give the defense some false sense that the coaches believe in them.
This may sound like the opposite of what teams should do to some of you.Last edited by mgoblue2290; 01-12-2010, 04:29 PM.Comment
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On the other side of the coin, I think NFL coaches are loathe to go for it in their own territory because they know that a failure to convert a 4th down will, in the very least, give the other team 3 points because the kickers are so good in the NFL (for the most part).Comment
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I like T2B and adem's ideas. I don't need expansion, I need diversity.
Best case scenario this year: Urban Meyer goes to Oakland and Leach goes to Buffalo and they're both successful.
Worse case: Nothing happens and we see the same redundant shit for a few more years until somebody does something new and everyone else copies them.
Worst case: Leach goes to Oakland and two crazy people can't date each other, so naysayers actually have proof that the Texas spread can't succeed in teh NFL.Comment
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So, basically, incompetent defense = Great Game
while incompetent offense = Terrible game
Personally, I hate both.S.P.Q.A.
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I really would like to see Mike Leach in the NFL though. That would really be something.
I would also love to see Steve Spurrier get a second chance.Last edited by Aso; 01-12-2010, 10:39 PM.Comment
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rule changes, and regulations, will not change this. I agree with this, with one caveat: the NFL needs a few SUCCESSFUL renegades to spice things up. But renegades have failed. If i walk into my work tomorrow and say, okay guys, this is exactly how i want it to be, and it will work, they will all laugh at me. if i walk into work tomorrow, and do things completely differently, and make a fuckton of money, they will say "holy shit what did you do to be so successful."
this is professionalism. Same with my career and yours. it needs to be a success before people take it seriously.Comment
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when that time comes why would people even want to watch football that would basically be madden on rookie just putting a man deep and throwing a bomb eventually after the 3rd touchdown it just gets boringRIPComment
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The only reason it wouldnt work the same way for football, is the lack of quality QB's--which would be solved by more variety in the offenses team run. Your Kliff Kingbury's and Timmy Chang's who can't run a current NFL offense can step right in and run a June Jones Run 'N Shoot or a Leach spread, but nobody wants to run those systems. That's what adem is getting at.
RB's and LB's and DB's are a dime a dozen, and you could easily field 64 teams and see little or no drop off. The bottom 25% of every NFL roster (and the entire Rams roster) is littered with cheaper, inferior, "upside" talent--while guys who are better players (but higher on the pay scale) are cut every August.Comment
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What you are saying is true for teams that mix it in once or twice a game, but it definately works for Miami, who use it to win games with inferior offensive talent, and if you watched Cleveland towards the end of the season, it was a big part of the Browns finishing strong.
Media types scoffing at the Wildcat, because some random team only averaged 3.2 yards per play with limited use, is the prime reason this thread exists. Coaches fear the scrutiny, and refuse to think outside the box.
Everyone wants to use two HB's, the west coast short passing game, and mix in some 4 wide to exploit pass favoring rules. That's almost everyones offense in a nutshell. Why? Because that's the trend, and you wont be second guessed.
Meanwhile, Mike Martz cant get a job, Mike Leach is available, June Jones never gets a sniff, and supposedly the spread won't work despite no one ever trying it. The league needs a few renegades to spice things up.
The purpose of running offenses like the option and the spread option and the Air Raid and the Wildcat (and all of the shades of gray in between) in college is try and provide your team with some semblance in equality of talent (ie: accentuating your positives)...
In this day and age of football, the only real talent gap is at the QB position where you have the haves and the havenots, and you can't really offset that by having your team run a different scheme..linebackers and defenses in general are too big, too fast, and too good (even the NFL's worst defenses). The biggest difference comes on defense...if you dilute the league, you dilute the defenses, which then allows for offenses to be more creative and diverse.
The NFL being so boring, stale, etc has a lot to do with, as mentioned early, the lack of creativity, but also, the types of players in todays games...just superior athletes across the board with a very small talent gap between the best and the worst. The difference between 14-2 and 2-14 in the NFL isn't as large, as say, a 12-0 and a 0-12 college football team.
The rules, too, are killing defensive schemes, too. The level of physicality in the NFL is dropping insanely by the year. I understand the leagues need to keep the players healthy, but at some point we have to realize we are playing a game of football here.Last edited by LiquidLarry2GhostWF; 01-13-2010, 11:49 AM.Comment
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