Coin flip that can leave only one team possessing the ball is inherently unfair. Length of extra period is not critical.
I'm fed up with the Manning bias. To me hes a choking dog in the biggest moments, his *lucky * TD drive notwithstanding....
Long Time Fan wrote:Bingo. Coin flip that can leave only one team possessing the ball is inherently unfair. Length of extra period is not critical.
Now PTI is questioning the issue. F it. We won.
Long Time Fan wrote:
Drivel. In both the NBA and MLB overtime or extra innings ensure each team has offensive opportunities.
Hawktown wrote:Excuse me here if I have missed something and I hear exactly what you are saying HC, about defense matters. The defense needs more than ever to make a big stop (though in a pass happy league, darn that Manning guy). But, what is wrong with playing an extra quarter and end it in a tie if the teams fail to score. This way would allow both teams to have, possibly, multiple shots with the ball.
I do personally think that I would feel better with some way of letting both teams actually POSSESS the ball but I could live with the outcome either way. Heck, I was fine with the first score wins in OT.
c_hawkbob wrote:Well in this case the 2 point conversion earned them the tie, but I do agree that O/T is superfluous in the regular season. Ties work just fine in the standings. They are better than a loss, not as good as a win and can be the difference maker getting a team into the playoffs. Obviously once in the playoffs there has to be a winner and a loser, but if player safety is your concern, do away with regular season O/T.
burrrton wrote:I don't think your idea is bananas, but it's not bullet-proof, either.
RiverDog wrote:If the coin flip is so inherently unfair, then why not pick a stat, say like total first downs, and use it to determine who gets to choose whether they want the ball or not?
NorthHawk wrote:As well, if the first team took more than 8 minutes of the 10 minute O/T, there would be cries of unfair just like the coin toss.
HumanCockroach wrote:And you DO realise that the team that gets the ball first only wins 36% of the time right? So Seattle was actually statistically at the DISADVANTAGE and won anyway. You grasp that right?
kalibane wrote: I guess you just know better than the administrators of organized football all over the country for the past 100 years or so?
I am heartened by the suggestion that I'm not bananas
so long as both teams get an opportunity to possess the ball.
furthering the argument for a set period of overtime extended enough to level all early possession advantages.
HumanCockroach wrote:LTF, if you want "fair" wouldn't you simply return to the original format? The team that won the coin toss when all it took was FG to win won only 52% of the games in the history of the NFL, I'm no genius, but 52% seems awfully "fair" to me. The only reason it is set up this way in the first place is the whining following Favre's pick/loss game in the playoffs.
That was an over reaction, and this is one as well.
burrrton wrote:I'm typically fairly adept at using the words I intend to use (although often too verbose), so I'd like you to notice my correct use of "your" as an attributive adjective modifying "idea" before "bananas", rather than "you're", which, being short for "you are", might indicate my assessment of "not bananas" applied to you personally rather than the idea you proposed.
For all I know, you could be bat-sht bananas.
My ultimate criticism of your proposal is that it's nothing more than change for change's sake. It would simply replace one set of gripes with another, and there is nothing inherently "unfair" about a coin flip deciding which unit on each team has to step up first.
We don't keep separate scores and standings for a team's defense and a team's offense- when the defense failed, the team failed, and I see no compelling argument to give a team some kind of 'do over' if they fail the first challenge of OT.
I thought that's what a defense was for.
Defense has a disadvantage regardless if the Stats say 52% or whatever.
I question the validity of an outcome where only one team's offense was allowed to take part.
Hawktown wrote:Not trying to argue here or anything Kal but does it not make sense that there would be 15 minutes for both teams to battle back as many times as necessary until the clock expires leaving the one on top the winner or just end in a tie? If that is your theory against 15 minute OT then all teams should have equal possessions in the WHOLE game to begin with because it is now a battle for time of possession as it is.
that is not what i want, i want an OT that gives both teams a shot and time to fight to win the game, just like regulation is set up now. Sudden death with one team possessing the ball is no good, getting a TD for the uncontested win is no good. 15 minutes is a good chunk of time to have a 3 and out happen to give ample opportunities to both sides.
To me if baseball were like this, you would just flip a coin and see who wants to be on O or D. Whoever chooses to bat would be able to hit in a run and game over without giving the other team an at bat. the excuse would in this case here we are having would be that the pitching team should have stopped them. Really?
I don't claim to be a genius or even know what i am talking about, i am just joining the conversation with my opinion!
mykc14 wrote:The baseball analogy holds no water the sports are to different. In your baseball scenario there is no advantage to be gained by the defense for not allowing them to score a run, at the bottom of the inning everything is equal again. In football there is the potential for a huge advantage if the D stops the O i.e. field position, turnover, etc. In baseball there is no way the Defensive team can win the game, but in football it can happen.
versus one team having potentially, by rule, no opportunities.
kalibane wrote:First LTF... you don't need to warn me about anything. I don't particularly care how you come at me.
burrrton wrote:
It's that team's failure that results in loss of opportunities.
Long Time Fan wrote:The team that got the first opportunity (coin flip) didn't "earn" it.
Long Time Fan wrote:Why must the second team be forced to "earn" their opportunity?
burrrton wrote:
You're still looking at it wrong. The "opportunity" went to both teams- a coin flip simply decided which unit for each team was up.
Unless you want to guarantee equal possession, why *shouldn't* they?
one team can not have a possession.
let the game play within an extended period determine how many possessions each team gets.
burrrton wrote:
Argh. They *can* have possession, though, if they don't fail first!
.
Long Time Fan wrote:
The team that got the first opportunity (coin flip) didn't "earn" it. Why must the second team be forced to "earn" their opportunity?
Long Time Fan wrote:Argh back at you matey. That is a huge "if" in your sentence. The first team gets possession without any "if"; thus not fair.
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