I haven't posted in over ten years and it took this topic to pull me out of the shadows.
I'm dumbfounded that so many people don't understand the two point conversion rationale. I haven't heard Fitz's press conference answers so maybe I'm way off here but what I'm about to say makes sense to me.
When we scored the first touchdown we were on our third string quarterback and unable to move the ball all day. Overtime was likely not going to go well for us. If by some good fortune we were able to score two more touchdowns Fitz had already decided we weren't going to play for overtime. So rather than go for two at the end of the game down 24-23 with all the pressure on our offense he chose to do it at 24-9 when maybe Wisconsin wouldn't be as feisty defensively. Then if we make it and score twice more we kick two PAT's to win 25-24.
So what about the decision on the second two? Well if we intended to tie the game and force overtime we needed a two at some point. Option 1 was to kick the PAT to make it 24-16 and hope we get the two after the next touchdown to tie it. Option 2 was to go for 2 since we needed it at some point anyway, and if we didn't make it ok now we know we need two scores while we still have time to do something about it, as opposed to putting all our eggs in the basket of that final two point conversation at the end of the game when there may not be any time left.
But remember Fitz already established we were not playing for overtime anyway. I guarantee you if we had made that second two point conversion to make it 24-17 and scored again he would have gone for two and the win down 24-23. 24-24 was never the goal-- 25-24 was, and a PAT down 24-15 doesn't get you there.
My wife and I figured this out within 5 seconds of that first two point conversion. I'm not surprised the announcers and probably a good portion of the general public were befuddled but there was a method to Fitz's madness. You don't get any brownie points for "making it a one score game." You either win the game or you don't. Fitz was playing to win.
Unorthodox for sure, but not stupid.
I'm dumbfounded that so many people don't understand the two point conversion rationale. I haven't heard Fitz's press conference answers so maybe I'm way off here but what I'm about to say makes sense to me.
When we scored the first touchdown we were on our third string quarterback and unable to move the ball all day. Overtime was likely not going to go well for us. If by some good fortune we were able to score two more touchdowns Fitz had already decided we weren't going to play for overtime. So rather than go for two at the end of the game down 24-23 with all the pressure on our offense he chose to do it at 24-9 when maybe Wisconsin wouldn't be as feisty defensively. Then if we make it and score twice more we kick two PAT's to win 25-24.
So what about the decision on the second two? Well if we intended to tie the game and force overtime we needed a two at some point. Option 1 was to kick the PAT to make it 24-16 and hope we get the two after the next touchdown to tie it. Option 2 was to go for 2 since we needed it at some point anyway, and if we didn't make it ok now we know we need two scores while we still have time to do something about it, as opposed to putting all our eggs in the basket of that final two point conversation at the end of the game when there may not be any time left.
But remember Fitz already established we were not playing for overtime anyway. I guarantee you if we had made that second two point conversion to make it 24-17 and scored again he would have gone for two and the win down 24-23. 24-24 was never the goal-- 25-24 was, and a PAT down 24-15 doesn't get you there.
My wife and I figured this out within 5 seconds of that first two point conversion. I'm not surprised the announcers and probably a good portion of the general public were befuddled but there was a method to Fitz's madness. You don't get any brownie points for "making it a one score game." You either win the game or you don't. Fitz was playing to win.
Unorthodox for sure, but not stupid.