Receive or defer to the second half?
tydog;556508 said:
Receive or defer to the second half?
MinotStateBeav;556615 said:
If you have a good defense...defer.

Cal_Fan2;556593 said:
LOL...check this one out...if has been already posted, sorry..but this gay guy does a great honey badger... by the way, a Wolverine would kick the $hit out of a honey badger, but they come in 2nd
liverflukes;556637 said:
Still funny a second time on a different thread :p
liverflukes;556643 said:
so much for bedtime sweetie...
Cal_Fan2;556642 said:
LOL...he has equally funny ones
run2win;556610 said:
Take the ball. Try and get your new QB as comfortable as possible as soon as possible.
MinotStateBeav;556615 said:
If you have a good defense...defer.
ColoradoBear1;556959 said:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/columns/story?columnist=clayton_john&id=6322587
It's funny that Clayton argues against deferring, but the only stat he uses to support receiving the kick is that the team that receives more often than not scores first. no kidding?
Unit2Sucks;556983 said:
You're presenting these stats in a vacuum and you've left some critical information out. The most important one is that in the NFL 70% of teams elected to receive the ball in 2010. That should tell you all you need to hear about what the best coaches in football think you should do.
Unit2Sucks;556983 said:
Also, he doesn't just say "more often than not scores first" - he says that teams receiving the ball score 34.8% of the time on that first possession and 59% of the time score first in the game. He attributes that to offensive scripting which won't be applicable in the second half.
Unit2Sucks;556983 said:
I think there is some missing data here that would be helpful. What percentage of the time do teams score on the first possession of the 2nd half? For teams that defer and win 55.8% of their games, what percentage do they win when they receive first?
ColoradoBear1;557012 said:
Stats are better than a wishy washy no proof statement like " Try and put this game out of reach so that by the time you get to the second half kickoff the game is no longer in doubt. If we expected to be in a dogfight, I would be inclined to defer. " Sorry, isn't it always the proper strategy to put the game out of reach? (On the flip side, I'll admit my saying that our d is better than our O as a justification to kick is just as off the cuff... which is why I tried to look for some stats).
ColoradoBear1;557012 said:
Teams don't script in the second half because they think they know more about the opponent and game situation that they did opening the game. If scripting makes the offense harder to stop, maybe teams should do it in the second half. But you can script your first drive after the defense was on the field. So the stat that the team receiving the kick scores 34.8% of the time is also presented 'in a vacuum'. One needs to know if the kicking team scores just as often on their first possession.
Here's something interesting though using just those stats presented above- If Team A is the receiving team, they score 34.8% of the time on the first possession. So 65.2% of the time they don't score on their possession. Team B scores first 41% of the time. So from the point team B gets the ball from team A in a scoreless game, there is a 41/65.2= 62.9% chance Team B will score first. So the kicking team's offense is slight more effective is scoring (compare to 59% of team A). There could be a lot of reasons for this and it's not a huge statistical difference, but it could be because team B is likely to have better field position.
Unit2Sucks;556983 said:
You're presenting these stats in a vacuum and you've left some critical information out. The most important one is that in the NFL 70% of teams elected to receive the ball in 2010. That should tell you all you need to hear about what the best coaches in football think you should do.
Also, he doesn't just say "more often than not scores first" - he says that teams receiving the ball score 34.8% of the time on that first possession and 59% of the time score first in the game. He attributes that to offensive scripting which won't be applicable in the second half.