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The Coach Who Never Punts(and always onside kicks)


mattitude

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I love the math in this. Hopefully our new analytics department will have the same findings.

 

Coach Kevin Kelley of Pulaski Academy in Little Rock, Arkansas, instructs his players to never punt, never field punts, and only do onside kicks, and he claims that math backs up his innovative philosophy. Grantland spent some time with Kelley and his players to learn more about the coach behind the team that once scored 29 points before its opponent touched the ball.

 

http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/9970245/grantland-channel-coach-never-punts

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After we lost to the Patriots in 07, I thought we should be doing this when we play them as there is nothing to lose if the defense can't stop them. Only thing I would add is to blitz on every down as well.

Edited by Steve O
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I love the idea of never punting. Not sure about on side kicks every time...not sure if the math backs up on side kick %s of success and going on to score points vs giving good field position if you don't recover and points scored against.

 

I think too much "traditional football" logic can be dis proven with numbers but coaches are too afraid of change and taking risks

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I love the idea of never punting. Not sure about on side kicks every time...not sure if the math backs up on side kick %s of success and going on to score points vs giving good field position if you don't recover and points scored against.

 

I think too much "traditional football" logic can be dis proven with numbers but coaches are too afraid of change and taking risks

 

I agree. The onside kicks would definitely be different in the NFL now. I don't know the stat but there seems to be a huge increase in touchbacks this season......so his average start line of the 33 yard line(from the video) giving up only 14 yards would be changed to close to 27 yards given up in the NFL. Most likely the math wouldn't hold for such a large field position advantage.

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I agree. The onside kicks would definitely be different in the NFL now. I don't know the stat but there seems to be a huge increase in touchbacks this season......so his average start line of the 33 yard line(from the video) giving up only 14 yards would be changed to close to 27 yards given up in the NFL. Most likely the math wouldn't hold for such a large field position advantage.

Plus, they kick from the 40 in high school I think, so really giving up 33 yards in the NFL if average start is the 20

Edited by plenzmd1
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Since the kickoff is now a waste of time anyways, move the kickoffs to the 50 and give the coach the option of kicking out of the endzone or doing an onside kick.

 

If they keep the kickoff rules, my vote would be to at least move the line back in the 4th qtr so we can see some returns when the game is on the line.

 

Or, maybe a kickoff going through the back of the end zone should be a touchback to the 30, not the 20. This would not allow kickers to just kick it as far as they can.

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The spirit of what is being done here needs to be examined. I think you also have to factor in the score and time left in a game to make this realistic. In a very close game with very little time left you might make different decisions on either side of the ball.

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I've heard of the "never punt" philosophy being used in high school before. In the NFL I think it is a little dramatic, but Marrone sure could grow some balls after opting to punt last game when we were down in the 4th and in Pitt territory.

 

Agreed. Obviously you want to punt on 4th and long from your own end of the field, but the current NFL 'punt first' mentality is absurd. Punting from the 35? Punting on 4th and 1? That's nothing but coaches managing the risk of negative press.

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I like the never punt philosophy...for many reasons, but most of all because I believe you eventually open up the playbook more...if it's 3rd and 8, you don't have to pass...you could run for 3 yards and it be 4th and 5 and it put the onus on the Defense to decide on how to defend, against a draw, a screen, or a quick slant...the other thing it would do is open up 2nd down quite a bit...in the same scenario, if it's 2nd and 8, you could take a long shot down the field and still have 2 attempts to get 8 yards, or go back to back long attempts, get the safeties and DBs winded (if the protection holds up), and then still have 2 attempts at getting the 1st down...this helps in a hurry up Offense, two long attempts, and then hurry back to the line and down a stretch run to get the LBs and DBs moving again and still have another 4th down to make up whatever yardage you didn't gain...and yes, I know, the what "ifs" about giving up field position, but except in some rare cases, how field do you truly gain by punting? I know there's much room for debate, I just think in today's Offense friendly NFL, you gain more than you lose over the course of a game and season.

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I agree. The onside kicks would definitely be different in the NFL now. I don't know the stat but there seems to be a huge increase in touchbacks this season......so his average start line of the 33 yard line(from the video) giving up only 14 yards would be changed to close to 27 yards given up in the NFL. Most likely the math wouldn't hold for such a large field position advantage.

There is a huge difference in recovery rates for surprise onside kicks and desperation onside kicks, when everyone knows it's coming. I think surprise onside kicks are recovered more than 50 percent if the time, while expected ones are around 25 percent or less. I love the no punt philosophy. I think the numbers are different for the NFL than in high school, though. Seldom punting is probably a better idea on Sundays.
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It's an interesting idea in concept but this isn't high school. And the second you didn't punt and got killed by 30+ points, people would be running the coach out of town.

 

Obviously score and time dictate things, but once I cross the opponent's 40 yard line, I won't punt. I also won't punt inside the 5 yard line. If you have the mindset that you are going for it on 4th in those situations, it opens up your playbook.

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I've heard of the "never punt" philosophy being used in high school before. In the NFL I think it is a little dramatic, but Marrone sure could grow some balls after opting to punt last game when we were down in the 4th and in Pitt territory.

There was a game early last year when Chan failed to go for it on 4th down deep in someone's territory. It appeared that he quit on the team. Same thing for Marrone, when your coach quits trying to win the team quits trying to win. We are in for an ugly finish to this abysmal season.

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I definitely think that if you're at your 50 or beyond, you should almost never punt if you're facing less than 4th and 5. Punting from within the opponent's 30 with less than 10 yards to go is always stupid. Yet numerous Bills coaches have done it over the years, including last week.

 

My basic view: anything that takes the kicker off the field is good. I think they should do away with XPs altogether and simply have the current 2 PT conversion be an extra point. There is no reason to do an extra point given that it has 99.6 percent success rate.

 

Agreed. Obviously you want to punt on 4th and long from your own end of the field, but the current NFL 'punt first' mentality is absurd. Punting from the 35? Punting on 4th and 1? That's nothing but coaches managing the risk of negative press.

I agree 100 percent. It's coaching scared.

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I definitely think that if you're at your 50 or beyond, you should almost never punt if you're facing less than 4th and 5. Punting from within the opponent's 30 with less than 10 yards to go is always stupid. Yet numerous Bills coaches have done it over the years, including last week.

 

My basic view: anything that takes the kicker off the field is good. I think they should do away with XPs altogether and simply have the current 2 PT conversion be an extra point. There is no reason to do an extra point given that it has 99.6 percent success rate.

 

 

I agree 100 percent. It's coaching scared.

 

If it's between the 40 and 50, you should punt. The chance to make an opponent start inside their 10 is a huge win if you beleive in your defense. Anything inside the 40, obviously if it is reasonable distance and the score, should be almost 100% going for it on 4th. You also need to consider the matchup. You don't beat Manning and Brees by field goals and punting. But you can beat the Jets that way.

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If it's between the 40 and 50, you should punt. The chance to make an opponent start inside their 10 is a huge win if you beleive in your defense.

Really? Even on 4th and 1? What if your punter boots it into the end zone? Then you have surrendered possession in order to move your opponent back a full 20 yards. Do you know what the percentage of successful 4 and 1 or 4th and 2 conversions is from that part of the field?
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