Bad Coaching Thread: Matt Eberflus canned like chunk light tuna
Here's the last line from the box score of yesterday's Loiusville - Kentucky game.
UK TD 0:28
STEVE JOHNSON 57 YD PASS FROM ANDRE' WOODSON
(LONES SEIBER KICK)
Drive info: 8 plays, 74 yards.
UL 34 UK 40
People in KC hated it when Mahomes never never touched the ball in OT, but the (Bristol-centric) national sports punditry barely brought it up. The Chiefs even proposed changing the rule after 2018, which the NFL shot down.
Fast forward to the :13 second game, the national media goes bananas screaming that it's not fair that Josh Allen never got to touch the ball, and the rule gets changed.
WE TRIED TO CHANGE THE RULE BEFORE MFERS!
ok so people did have a problem with KC not getting the ball. i was probably one of them. the "no one cared" is just annoying and so homerish.
Sorry, shorthand. We are assuming only the universe where the other team scores an answering TD.
well obviously i agree then
No one cared enough to change the rule. Is that better?
every single team getting to the Super Bowl would go for 2 after scoring the 2nd TD (because they have a brain) but not Andy Reid who has Mahomes and Kelce because........it's not in his DNA. absolutely amazing.
Analogy for going for 2 is this.
Old OT rules. Team wins toss and chooses to receive. Ref says "hey new rule. kicking team, you have the option to go for 2 right now. You win if you convert, but lose if don't"
Do you accept?
If my QB is Jared Goff, no.
If my QB is one of Josh, Lamar, or Mahomes, yes.
Everybody else is somewhere in between.
well it's a tad different from what you claimed.
and the Chiefs are going for 2 a million times out of a million if they score the 2nd TD.
"it's not in his DNA." christ.
Seriously.
They might go for 2 even if the game didn't become sudden death after and instead was each team gets another possession.
I like how we’re saying Kyle was lying about knowing the rules but taking Reid at his word that they’re going for 2 if they had to
Based on how reid called that game in any situation with a modicum of leverage i feel very confident calling bull****ingshit that they go for 2
Yup. I definitely don't believe they go for 2 automatically considering past history with Reid and KC's defense actually being good.
I like how we’re saying Kyle was lying about knowing the rules but taking Reid at his word that they’re going for 2 if they had to
Based on how reid called that game in any situation with a modicum of leverage i feel very confident calling bull****ingshit that they go for 2
Justin Reid said that they had talked in pregame meetings that the O would go for two in that situation.
Again, numbers are so lopsided in favor of going for 2, I can't believe there's a single playoff team that didn't come up with that. That's not one of those 4th down calls that swing the winning percentage by a couple percentage points. Not going for 2 there might be as bad as not going for 2 when trailing by 8 (pre TD) midway through the 4th quarter.
and the Chiefs are going for 2 a million times out of a million if they score the 2nd TD.
"it's not in his DNA." christ.
Yeah it sounds like I was wrong on that at least according to the team. Reid generally is on the conservative side and I hadn't really thought through that it's a slam dunk to go for it there when a FG vs. a gassed defense wins it for SF.
You don't have to be so angry about it though. :p
Yeah it sounds like I was wrong on that at least according to the team. Reid generally is on the conservative side and I hadn't really thought through that it's a slam dunk to go for it there when a FG vs. a gassed defense wins it for SF.
You don't have to be so angry about it though. :p
Apologies for being angry. None of it matters anyway. Congrats.
Any chance the NFL just says **** it and changes the playoff OT rules to just playing out a full 15:00 period, and then if still tied, the 2nd OT is a direct continuation (switch sides and team keeps ball where they left off) but it's now sudden death?
I wonder how that changes the calculus on taking the ball first. I'm not sure how many OT periods would play out like this one did, where both teams killed a lot of clock and there was basically just enough time for one possession each, but if that's the norm, taking it 2nd sounds about right.
Also the auto going for 2 in a TD-TD situation would become very time-dependent, doing it with <30s left would be basically the same as with current rules, but doing it with more time left just makes your opponent play optimally if they know they need a FG before the period ends; with say, 1:30 or so left, it might be better to kick the XP and hope your opponent goes with that sort of in-between semi-risk-averse play calling. Of course the problem with this is that in OT2 they can continue to leisurely drive for a FG and you're still toast.
Even if we use league average numbers the decision is super obvious.
Going for the PAT:
95% chance to hit (5% you lose immediately)
37.4% opponent scores on the next drive (so 62.6% they don't score)
37.4% you score after opponent didn't score
So close to 60% of the time you get the ball back and 22% of the time you win it on your ensuing possession.
Compared to 47.5% where you win it by going for two.
Now the real percentage that your opponent doesn't score on their next possession is way lower than 62.6% because defenses are tired. At that point all of the last 7 possessions ended in a score.
Also with those two kickers, starting from your own 25 you need to advance the ball only 40 yards to the other 35 for a high percentage FG attempt.
When Kyle Shanahan says that he elected to receive the OT kick in order to get the ball on the 3rd possession, that's a fair point considering KC didn't score a TD all game except for the short field on the muffed punt. (they also got to the 11 when they had to kick at the end of regulation). That also supports the decision to kick the FG in OT because there's a good chance KC has to settle for a FG, too. I highly doubt he thought he would get the ball back on a TD -TD sequence. Otherwise nobody over there did any OT preparations.
I came up with what I think is a much better way to do OT in the NFL. It's similar to College but I think this is much more exciting and fair to both teams.
Rules:
#1 - No kicking ****ing FGs or Extra Points! (Nobody wants the game to end because your idiot kicker shanked an extra point)
#2 - Coin Toss to determine who goes first. (This won't be that important in this system, but maybe a very slight edge to who goes first)
#3 - The first team gets the ball at the 10-yard line. It's 1st & goal. Normal rules apply. You have 4 downs to score. (NO KICKING A FUXKING FG!!)
#4 - The other team then gets the ball at the 10-yard line, etc
#5 - If only one team scores a TD they win.
#6 - If neither team scores a TD then repeat from the 10 in team reverse order.
#7 - If both teams score a TD, then move the ball back to the 20 and it's 1st & 10.
#8 - Rinse and repeat. If neither team scores then keep the ball at the previous yard mark. If both score then move back 10 yards. If one scores they win.
This is fair for both teams. Both teams always have 4 downs until they score. Who goes first or second is pretty even and there is little to no advantage going first or second. No team is going to lose because their idiot kicker shanked a 20-yard FG or because one kicker can make a 62-yard FG. This is football, not euroball. You have to score a TD to win.
You can also just trade throws with the LoS at midfield. If your QB doesn't have the arm to throw it for 60+ you don't deserve to win a SB. To make it even more interesting, turnover ends the game immediately to discourage laterals.
It's not terrible but I think the less the final product resembles regular football, the less the NFL would be willing to try it. Like I already kinda hate the college OT rules with the recurring 2PC after two OT possessions, which gives it more of the feel of soccer penalty kicks than anything.
Among other things, if the defenses are exhausted, you might wind up with final scores of like 58-52 which would feel like kind of a mockery.
Also, the longer it goes, the more injury potential etc. I think you would have a lot games going 5-10 OT periods.
I came up with what I think is a much better way to do OT in the NFL. It's similar to College but I think this is much more exciting and fair to both teams.
Rules:
#1 - No kicking ****ing FGs or Extra Points! (Nobody wants the game to end because your idiot kicker shanked an extra point)
#2 - Coin Toss to determine who goes first. (This won't be that important in this system, but maybe a very slight edge to who goes first)
#3 - The first team gets the ball at the 10-yard line. It's 1st & goal. Norm
awful. might as well have a free throw contest to end nba games.
How about this rule for the super bowl:
The team with the best record (so they get rewarded for a superior ref season) gets +.5 points.
Then we'd have no overtime to worry about.
Lost in all this, Reid let them run the clock down to the 2 minute warning after this:
(2:45) 2nd & 5 at KC 35: B.Purdy pass short right to G.Kittle to KC 35 for no gain.
If the Chiefs call timeout here, they get the ball back with a ton more time and don't have to kick a FG on 2nd down at the end of regulation.
How about this rule for the super bowl:
The team with the best record (so they get rewarded for a superior ref season) gets +.5 points.
Then we'd have no overtime to worry about.
There aren't many things the NFL prefers over having to worry about OT in a Superbowl. Everyone has their fingers crossed for that to happen.
Kyle Shanahan addressed the OT situation, basically saying the would have received in a high scoring game but decided to take the ball first in a low scoring game. That's obviously the correct approach, the question is just how low scoring the game has to be. 2011 #1 vs #2 LSU - Alabama went to OT at 6-6. If that's the game Sunday, I doubt many people argue with Shanahan's decision.
The other point they brought up: If KC gets the ball first, the 49ers D (that looked very tired on the last drive of regulation) stays on the field. OTOH, once they get the ball after the KC drive the Chiefs D had a lot of rest.
Lost in all this, Reid let them run the clock down to the 2 minute warning after this:
(2:45) 2nd & 5 at KC 35: B.Purdy pass short right to G.Kittle to KC 35 for no gain.
If the Chiefs call timeout here, they get the ball back with a ton more time and don't have to kick a FG on 2nd down at the end of regulation.
Nah this is an old school mentality. The chiefs had two minutes and two timeouts. That’s an eternity. It’s not just about maximizing the time left. You also have to consider scoring with too much time left. Offenses move the ball so easily in 2024 in endgame situations. I was fine with him not calling a timeout.