New NFL overtime proposal

Deeringfish

All-Conference
Jun 23, 2008
21,310
1,450
63
I just read about a new proposal being considered by the NFL for tie breakers.
If I understand it correctly, the winner of the coin toss would get to choose where the ball is placed and the loser of the coin toss would get to choose offense or defense. Then I guess it would be a sudden death ending.

It sounds like a fun idea but I'm having a hard time getting my head around what choice would be made. NU has played a lot of OT games. If this were a college rule how do you think the Cats might play this?
 

TheC

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
19,243
1,342
62
Wouldn't this plan ultimately lead to the exact same starting scenario every single time? At some point, some analytics pro would determine it makes the most sense to, for example, start at the far 25 yard line and give your opponent the ball.
 

Deeringfish

All-Conference
Jun 23, 2008
21,310
1,450
63
Wouldn't this plan ultimately lead to the exact same starting scenario every single time? At some point, some analytics pro would determine it makes the most sense to, for example, start at the far 25 yard line and give your opponent the ball.
If they start at the far 25 yard line the opponent can choose defense and you have to drive 75 yards or they can choose offense and essentially win on the first play with a 42 yard FG.

I think?
 

TheC

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
19,243
1,342
62
If they start at the far 25 yard line the opponent can choose defense and you have to drive 75 yards or they can choose offense and essentially win on the first play with a 42 yard FG.

I think?
Yeah.... I wasn't sure how it would work. I assumed you could choose the 25 yard line of whomever gets the ball. But if you just picked a number and then the other team gets to decide, then this wouldn't even be worth discussing. One team would always pick the 50 yard line and the other team would always choose the ball.
 

willycat

Junior
Jan 11, 2005
21,448
318
0
I think that too sometimes. What is so evil about a tie? Besides the more tired the guys get the higher the likelihood of injury becomes.
Remembering that one of the most talked about games was a tie between MSU and ND.
 
Aug 31, 2003
15,071
506
113
I think that too sometimes. What is so evil about a tie? Besides the more tired the guys get the higher the likelihood of injury becomes.
I remember, after I attended (yes, I was there) that miserable multi-overtime loss at TCU when neither team could kick a field goal, that I wish that the game had ended in a tie. Then @Gladeskat chastised me for it. (I wonder if he remembers that.)
 
Oct 15, 2007
634
11
18
Yeah.... I wasn't sure how it would work. I assumed you could choose the 25 yard line of whomever gets the ball. But if you just picked a number and then the other team gets to decide, then this wouldn't even be worth discussing. One team would always pick the 50 yard line and the other team would always choose the ball.

It wouldn't be that simple.

Since the second team gets to choose whether to play O or D, the first team will try to choose a yardage that they believe is "fair" for both its offense and defense. I'm guessing teams that have stronger O will pick a line farther away from scoring, and vice versa. Should be at least more interesting, some game theory involved.
 

Gladeskat

All-Conference
Feb 16, 2004
116,629
1,824
113
I remember, after I attended (yes, I was there) that miserable multi-overtime loss at TCU when neither team could kick a field goal, that I wish that the game had ended in a tie. Then @Gladeskat chastised me for it. (I wonder if he remembers that.)

No, but it sounds like something I'd do during that time period.

Always play to win the game. I have respect for Dennis Green and Northwestern for playing for the win in 1981 against Indiana when they could have settled for a tie and ended the long losing streak at 20 games.
 
Aug 31, 2003
15,071
506
113
No, but it sounds like something I'd do during that time period.

Always play to win the game. I have respect for Dennis Green and Northwestern for playing for the win in 1981 against Indiana when they could have settled for a tie and ended the long losing streak at 20 games.
Heh, part of my reasoning at the time was that, sitting through those miserable overtimes, it didn't seem like either team deserved to win. Baz put in a heroic performance to bring the 'Cats back from a large deficit, but they just couldn't finish. Part of my reasoning, which I think is why you chastised me, was also that I had this nagging feeling that Northwestern would have a better chance of making a bowl game if that game had ended in a tie. Indeed, they would have been bowl-eligible if that game had been a tie; instead, they got to sit home after the big choke at Hawaii.

(What a waste of a season to beat The Ohio State.)
 

Gladeskat

All-Conference
Feb 16, 2004
116,629
1,824
113
That Hawaii game was the first game I've seen that was clearly and deliberately thrown by the referees.

The same thing happened in the MSU vs Hawaii game the following week.
 
Aug 31, 2003
15,071
506
113
That Hawaii game was the first game I've seen that was clearly and deliberately thrown by the referees.

The same thing happened in the MSU vs Hawaii game the following week.
I don't disagree. But NU's terrible pass defense definitely had a part in that by spotting Hawaii a big lead. The MSU game the following week was even more blatantly stolen.
 
Aug 31, 2003
15,071
506
113
No, but it sounds like something I'd do during that time period.

Always play to win the game. I have respect for Dennis Green and Northwestern for playing for the win in 1981 against Indiana when they could have settled for a tie and ended the long losing streak at 20 games.
Upon further review, the 'Cats had three other overtime games that season, all of which they won. So if all of those games had instead ended in a tie, NU's record would have been worse and they definitely would not have been bowl eligible. So I guess you were right; it's better to play for the win.

Certainly, NU has won their share of overtime games over the years.
 

CappyNU

Senior
Mar 2, 2004
5,302
583
113
Upon further review, the 'Cats had three other overtime games that season, all of which they won. So if all of those games had instead ended in a tie, NU's record would have been worse and they definitely would not have been bowl eligible. So I guess you were right; it's better to play for the win.

Certainly, NU has won their share of overtime games over the years.
It prompted the memorable marketing campaign the following year:

 

timbfischer

Redshirt
Oct 22, 2009
1,185
6
0
If they start at the far 25 yard line the opponent can choose defense and you have to drive 75 yards or they can choose offense and essentially win on the first play with a 42 yard FG.

I think?
I think if one team chose the 25, it would be the Offense's 25 not matter what.
 

TheC

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
19,243
1,342
62
Why not choose the 1 yard line?
Because then the other team would almost certainly pick defense and put you in a terrible spot. I just guessed the 25 might be best. Maybe somewhere between the 25 and the 40 would be the zone of least risk. You go further back, your opponent picks defense and you're in trouble. You go further out and your opponent picks offense and you're also in trouble.

In the end, I guess my point was ... this system wouldn't change much except that losing the coin toss is now probably better. Under the current rules, you win the toss and you basically get the ball on the 25 because the other team kicks it to you for a touchback. Under the new rules, I would argue you get penalized for winning the coin toss because now the other team could pick the ball and it would still probably start around the 25.
 

Deeringfish

All-Conference
Jun 23, 2008
21,310
1,450
63
I remember, after I attended (yes, I was there) that miserable multi-overtime loss at TCU when neither team could kick a field goal, that I wish that the game had ended in a tie. Then @Gladeskat chastised me for it. (I wonder if he remembers that.)
Are you kidding? Glades would never forget a good chastising.
 

phatcat_rivals223240

All-Conference
Nov 5, 2001
18,963
1,114
113
Remembering that one of the most talked about games was a tie between MSU and ND.
And possibly the worst game ever, our 0-0 game. Nobody deserved to win
And the famous Bobby Bowden quote "dadgum good win..uh..tie"
John Cooper said OSU fans are behind you, "win or tie"
Superior teams that d**k around for 55 minutes deserve half a loss rather than a chance in OT. They'd be forced to play for the win.
Ties are awesome. So unsatisfying.
 

Hungry Jack

All-Conference
Nov 17, 2008
38,123
4,149
67
Always play to win the game. I have respect for Dennis Green and Northwestern for playing for the win in 1981 against Indiana when they could have settled for a tie and ended the long losing streak at 20 games.
Green was Herm Edwards before Herm Edwards