Jump to content

Gutless Call to Punt


ChicagoRic

Recommended Posts

5 minutes ago, sven233 said:

The outcome of the game has nothing to do with whether the call to punt was correct or not.  Forget the outcome for a minute and let's just break the call down at the time it was made.  Put yourself in that situation, not knowing what the outcome of the game will be.

 

People supporting the punt are basically saying this: You were more confident in the defense forcing a punt, a WR playing QB leading us 60-70 yards down the field in a blizzard, & scoring (all in under 4 minutes) than you were in making 3 feet in 1 play.

 

People supporting the decision to go for it a saying this:  I like my chances of getting 3 feet in 1 play more than the odds of the defense forcing a punt, a WR playing QB leading us 60-70 yards down the field in a blizzard, & scoring (all in under 4 minutes)

 

That's basically it.  If you are more confident in all of those things happening than making 3 feet in 1 play, then that's fine. 

 

Me, I like my odds of getting 3 feet better.

 

 

PS.  Not only do you have to weigh these factors in this decision, but you also have to take into an account that a tie basically ends your season.  So, if all of these things don't happen in those 4 minutes, and you tie.....your season is over.

You also have to consider that going for it and not making it does not end the game; it just gives the Colts better field position.  So the downside is relatively small.

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Shaw66 said:

 

Punting on 4th and 1 was the right decision. 

 

Let me start by saying that I was watching the game at a sports bar.  The room was filled with the audio from another game, so I couldn’t hear the announcers for the Bills game.  Looking at the screen, it was impossible to know where the ball was because all the yard markings were obliterated.  The network only occasionally showed in writing where the ball was.  So when they got to 4th and 1, I thought punting was a good idea because I would have guessed the Bills hadn’t crossed the 50.

 

If I had known that they were at the Colts 41, I would have said go for it.  And that would have been the wrong decision.  Here’s why:

 

The objective is to make the playoffs.  For the coaches and players, that’s all that matters.  And when you get to this point of the season, it’s almost like you’re already in the playoffs. 

 

The over-riding rule in playoffs is “survive and advance.”  In other words, it doesn’t matter how you survive, it doesn’t matter how ugly or how beautiful or whatever.  Survive.  Giving yourself another game where you have a chance is what you need.   Whether you can win that next game is irrelevant; just getting to the next game is all you want – you’ll worry about how to win that game later. 

 

Survive and advance is where the Bills are now, along with all the other teams in the AFC hovering around .500 and trying to get to the postseason. 

 

And in this period when you’re fighting to get into the playoffs, there is a second important point:  Tie games are closer to wins than to losses.   Why?  Well, 9-6-1 gets you into the playoffs over every 9-7 team, so you don’t have to look to tie-breakers.  8-7-1 gets you in over every 8-8 team, and this is one of those years were 8-8 could actually be enough.  

 

In other words, a tie is not a neutral result.   A tie is a positive result.  Yes, a win is better.  But a tie is more like a win than like a loss.  Stated differently, until you absolutely MUST win, it’s more important not to lose than it is to win.

 

Okay, with that in mind, go back to 4th and 1 at the Colts 41.   I don’t know the exact probabilities, but looking just at winning or losing, I’d say that going for it on fourth down gave the Bills a 50-50 chance of winning or losing.  Why?   Because the chances of making the first down were around 50-50.  Whichever team had the ball on the next play would have had four minutes left and would have needed to move the ball about 25 yards to try a field goal.  The Bills would have needed 25 to get to the 15 to have a shot at 35-yard field goal into the wind, and the Colts would have need 25 to get to the Bills 35 to try a 50-yard field goal with the wind at their back.  We can argue about the percentages and how far they had to go, etc. but I think I’m in the ball park.

 

So in a two-outcome scenario, going for it is more or less a coin toss.   But it isn’t a two-outcome scenario; it’s three outcomes – win, lose or tie.  It isn’t 50-50; it’s more like 40-40-20. 

 

Given that the Bills are in the playoff hunt, and given that in the hunt ties are more like wins than losses, it’s easy to see why punting was the right call.  If the Bills punt, the chances that either the Bills or the Colts will win the game (if those are the only choices) are probably still 50-50.  The Colts have the ball, which is a plus for them, but they have a long way to go.  The Bills don’t have the ball but they have field position, but they also may run out of time.  

 

But those aren't the only choices; it’s a three outcome scenario.  Although if they punt the chances the Bills will win go down, probably pretty dramatically, the chances that they get a tie go way up.  I’d guess that punting with 4 minutes left reduces the chances of the Bills winning in those conditions to 20%, probably less.  But the chances of tying go UP from 20% to 60%. 

 

Remember, in the playoff hunt, winning is the objective, but not losing is more important than winning.  Going for it on 4th and 1 the Bills had a 60% chance of not losing.   Punting they had an 80% chance of not losing.  Punting was the right call.

 

Survive and advance. 

 

 

this is so amazingly wrong on so many levels, I'm completely stunned.

 

If you want to know why we haven't been to the playoffs in 18 years, it's because the organization thinks just like this. I am literally stunned there are so many otherwise intelligent posters on this site - who have apparently watched years of football without learning a damn thing - who can't understand basic math and probability.

 

It's astonishing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like the odds of field position better than 3 feet in a blizzard and everybody knowing where the play is going.  Don't even get me going on a possible spot and the Offense already moved 40 yards and O-Line freezing in.  4-1 advantage goes to D.

 

Patience in this situation wins out and it did. Get O off the field, keep D warmed up and O rewarmed... Slow and steady, even with 4 on the clock... Big chunks next drive. Don't worry about tie.

 

Balance... Don't run out of gas. Like climbing a mountain or tacking in sailing... It paid off.

 

Old Bull vs. Young Bull here.  Young Bull, wanted to do it all now!

 

If you don't know the joke:

 

"An old bull and a young bull stand on a hillside, overlooking a pasture. The young bull says to the old bull, “Hey, let’s run down and !@#$ one of those heifers.” The old bull replies, “let’s walk down and !@#$ ’em all.”

 

Patience my friends, patience in a snowstorm with 6" on the field!

Edited by ExiledInIllinois
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Domdab99 said:

 

this is the whole argument right here. 

 

I think the bigger argument is that we won the !@#$ing game and no one will ever know what would have happened had he chosen to go for it on 4th and 1.  And frankly, no one should care.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Domdab99 said:

 

this is so amazingly wrong on so many levels, I'm completely stunned.

 

If you want to know why we haven't been to the playoffs in 18 years, it's because the organization thinks just like this. I am literally stunned there are so many otherwise intelligent posters on this site - who have apparently watched years of football without learning a damn thing - who can't understand basic math and probability.

 

It's astonishing.

It's funny, because people on the other side of this argument can't believe others can't see the obvious.   A loss on Sunday and the Bills are essentially out of the playoffs.  A win or a tie, they're still in.   So you play for the win or tie, and that means you punt.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Shaw66 said:

It's funny, because people on the other side of this argument can't believe others can't see the obvious.   A loss on Sunday and the Bills are essentially out of the playoffs.  A win or a tie, they're still in.   So you play for the win or tie, and that means you punt.  

 

:lol: Blatantly and stubbornly wrong. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

It's funny, because people on the other side of this argument can't believe others can't see the obvious.   A loss on Sunday and the Bills are essentially out of the playoffs.  A win or a tie, they're still in.   So you play for the win or tie, and that means you punt.  

 

so if they go for it and don't make it, the game is over?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Going for it is high risk, high reward.  Plain and simple.  That's playing to lose more times than often.

 

And it was opening drive.  Colts could answer a FG or still win the game with TD.

 

My irrational gut tells me to go for it when the proper answer was to tack around the problem given the conditions.

 

This is so lost on people in this sterile football enviro of today: nuance.  Everybody plays win-win.  It was a gutsy and ballsy move to punt.  I am no fan of McD and conservative football... But this was the time for it!

 

A tie is better than loss.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 minutes ago, Gugny said:

 

I think the bigger argument is that we won the !@#$ing game and no one will ever know what would have happened had he chosen to go for it on 4th and 1.  And frankly, no one should care.

But at the time of the decision, you don't know that you are going to win the game, either.  That's the point.  If the game ends in a tie or loss, then everyone would say it was the wrong decision to punt.  You can't know the outcome at the time you make the decision.

 

In that moment where the decision is made it comes down to this:

 

People supporting the punt are basically saying this: You were more confident in the defense forcing a punt, a WR playing QB leading us 60-70 yards down the field in a blizzard, & scoring (all in under 4 minutes) than you were in making 3 feet in 1 play.

 

Forget the result of the game.  You don't know it when you are making the decision.  It is only about making the choice that gives you the best chance to win......because a tie kills your season.  You have to win.

 

So....

 

more confident in the defense forcing a punt, a WR playing QB leading us 60-70 yards down the field in a blizzard, & scoring (all in under 4 minutes) > 3 feet in 1 play

 

or

 

more confident in 3 feet in 1 play > defense forcing a punt, a WR playing QB leading us 60-70 yards down the field in a blizzard, & scoring (all in under 4 minutes)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Domdab99 said:

 

so if they go for it and don't make it, the game is over?

No.  It's all a matter of probabilities.   If they go for it and don't make it there's a higher probability that they lose.   

 

Just like by punting they reduced the probability that the Bills would win.  That's clearly true.  In neither case would the game be over. 

 

But the probabilities are what matter.  The Bills could afford not to win, but they couldn't afford to lose.  So the choice that gives you the higher probability of not losing is the better choice.   Punting gave them the higher probability of not losing.   

 

Turns out they had their cake and ate it too.  

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, Gugny said:

 

I think the bigger argument is that we won the !@#$ing game and no one will ever know what would have happened had he chosen to go for it on 4th and 1.  And frankly, no one should care.

 

I care because I want our new, young coach to use analytics and make proper "go-for-it" and two-point or PAT decisions. That gives the Bills a better chance to win games and, down the road, become elite. We are never going to become THAT TEAM if coaches make decisions based on fear instead of following the basic laws of probability.

 

Old time coaches would rather put off the likely loss a few more minutes than make the right decision now - possibly fail - and then have no shot of winning the game. 

 

Here's a situation almost all head coaches in the NFL get wrong:

 

Down by 15 with 5 minutes left. So you need one TD with an PAT and one TD with a 2 pt. conversion to tie, correct?

 

Your team scores a TD. Every NFL coach will kick the PAT, when analytics says you must go for two there. Why? Because it's better to know you have to score more than once more NOW if you happen to fail at the conversion, then if you kick the PAT, get the ball back, and score a TD with 30 seconds left. Yes, you're down by two now and you have to make the conversion to tie the game, correct? But it you don't make it, the game is effectively over. However, if you go for two after the first TD and fail, you're still down by 9 and you know you have to play differently to give yourself a better chance at a win - maybe an offsides KO, whatever. 

 

But most coaches are more comfortable kicking the PAT because now they know that if they score the 2nd TD, they must go for two - or most likely lose the game. But it's the wrong decision.

 

Same with the punt on 4th and 1. If they don't make, it yes, the Bills are not likely to win the game now. But if they punt it, they are LESS LIKELY to win the game than if they go for it. That's the whole point. 

 

Did it work out? Yes, and i'm glad it did. But it's so frustrating to see other teams with younger coaches - who still make mistakes - but who seem to get it. The game is changing, just like baseball did. Yes, there are more variables in football and those yes/no decisions are not as clear. But you still have to strive to make the right one.

 

And McD is not doing that. He'll be gone in three years and we will start over again. But I hope I'm wrong and I hope he learns from this. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

26 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

It's funny, because people on the other side of this argument can't believe others can't see the obvious.   A loss on Sunday and the Bills are essentially out of the playoffs.  A win or a tie, they're still in.   So you play for the win or tie, and that means you punt.  

A tie was basically the same as a loss.  We are only 25% to get in even with the win yesterday.  If we would have tied, the chances would have been like 3%.  So, a tie and a loss were essentially the same thing.  A tie wasn't an option yesterday.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Shaw66 said:

No.  It's all a matter of probabilities.   If they go for it and don't make it there's a higher probability that they lose.   

 

Just like by punting they reduced the probability that the Bills would win.  That's clearly true.  In neither case would the game be over. 

 

But the probabilities are what matter.  The Bills could afford not to win, but they couldn't afford to lose.  So the choice that gives you the higher probability of not losing is the better choice.   Punting gave them the higher probability of not losing.   

 

Turns out they had their cake and ate it too.  

You are right.  Won't get into the younger guys head... This sterile football we all watch is making them lose nuance.  Thank God we still play in the elements!

1 minute ago, sven233 said:

A tie was basically the same as a loss.  We are only 25% to get in even with the win yesterday.  If we would have tied, the chances would have been like 3%.  So, a tie and a loss were essentially the same thing.  A tie wasn't an option yesterday.

Yes it was an option.  Better than losing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, mannc said:

No, going for it there is low risk, high reward.

Going for it is HIGH RISK.   

 

The reward you're after is going to the playoffs.   Going for it risks losing the game, which means you don't make the playoffs.  So going for it is high risk. 

 

Punting is low risk, because the chances are good that you won't lose the game if you punt.   If you don't lose the game, you're still in the playoff hunt, so punting is low risk.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...