ucantdoitdoggieSTyle2 wrote:Let's talk about 1st and 10 from the NO 33 with 1:06 left to play. Coming out of NO's calling their final TO.
Run the ball up the middle once. Run the ball up the middle twice.
Now you have 3rd and 10 from the NO 33 with 19 seconds left.
That's it? Sure, Favre should have not have thrown that last ball. Sure, he could have tucked and run and called his last TO.
However... I think Brad Childress totally choked this game away by playing it so fucking close to the vest instead of trying to advance the ball. It seemed like he was fine with attempting a 50 yard FG with no time left and then going to OT if need be. Just awful play calling. You have 1:06 left, 2 TO's in your pocket, the Saints are on their heels and you call 2 fucking runs up the gut? That's your plan?
Pathetic.
You left out their real undoing -- the 5-yard penalty for having 12 men in the huddle. That is what took them out of FG range (and a FG was all they needed). It forced them into a passing situation, just to try to make up the yardage.
Agreed that they got too conservative at the point you mentioned, but at least they still have a chance to win the game in regulation at that juncture. It's the penalty that really killed that chance, though.
Van wrote:Here's a novel idea: Both teams should have to play offense and defense in O.T. That's how it works during regulation play, so why change it for O.T.?
Turning that argument on its heels ever so slightly . . .
As pertains to college OT, here's a novel idea: both teams should have to be concerned with field position, the game clock and special teams play. That's how it works for regulation play, so why change it for OT?
As for how to do OT, my suggestion is relatively simple: keep the NFL rule, but with a minor twist. Sudden death isn't invoked until one team has scored at least six points in the OT period. If you have to play defense first, you know you'll get at least one crack at the ball so long as you keep your opponents out of the end zone. And if you kick a FG on your opening drive, you have a chance to win the game outright on your next drive so long as you keep your opponents out of the end zone.
If a TD is necessary to win the game in OT (on the opening drive, anyway), you'll see a lot more wide-open play-calling in OT than is currently the case. Meanwhile, a team that has to go on defense first but keeps its opponents out of the end zone gets at least one shot at winning the game.
The only potential drawback I see is the possibility of more tie games as a result of such a rule change. Then again, the NFL OT rule clearly was never designed to eliminate all possibility of a game ending in a tie.
Btw, fwiw, according to Fox teams winning the coin toss in OT were 7-6 in OT games this regular season. Winning the coin toss is an advantage, of course, but it's not quite the insurmountable advantage you make it out to be.