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Should the NFL eliminate the onside kick?


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Since the onside kick has become a near impossibility for the kicking team to recover, unless it's a surprise onside. They need to put in a rule that eliminates the onside kick and replace it with a 4th and 15. If a team scores they would have the option of kicking the ball off or having a 4th and 15 at their own 35 yard line. If they get the first down the drive keeps going like normal. If they fall short, the other team takes over where they missed from. They can even make it more interesting and make it to where each team only gets two 4th and 15's a game. This would be way better than doing an onside kick which has become nearly impossible for the kicking team to recover. Would anyone be on board with this? It's actually something Steve Tasker said that the NFL Competition committee has had discussions about in the past

Edited by Buffalo03
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Absolutely needs to happen. The onside kick is completely pointless now. It has been completely neutered by the NFL. You are better off kicking it deep and hoping to force a fumble. In light of that, the NFL must adopt a new policy to keep games somewhat interesting in the end. This is that policy, this is the solution. Only a matter of time before it passes IMO. 

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Get rid of kickoffs. Get rid of punting. Get rid of divisions. 16 team conferences with the best 6 records from each going to the playoffs. 

 

I’m ready for my commissioner’s check now.

Edited by Bangarang
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Just now, Bills2ref said:

Because the onside kick has become a near 0% proposition and it is bad for business to not have some late game comebacks. 

Maybe I’m in the minority, but I’m not buying it. 

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2 minutes ago, klos63 said:

I could only imagine the nightmare that would occur when the officials make crappy calls on the 4th and 15's. 

Well they could just simply make it a do over instead of penalizing for the yardage on that one play. Or move them to the spot of the foul if it's a pass interference but they still only have one chance to get a first down after the call is made

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To elaborate more on why this has to happen. The historical fumble rate for kickoffs is 3.1%. Last year onside kicks were converted at a 7.5% success rate. Down from a 21.7% success rate the year before. Right now, it is nearly a better proposition to kick it deep and try to force a fumble! 

 

4th and 10 conversion percentages hover around 20-30%. 4th and 15 conversion percentage is 10-20%. Therefore, by eliminating the onside kick and allowing a 4th and 15 try you are really just going back to pre-neutered onside kick numbers. Albeit a much safer alternative. 

4 minutes ago, Augie said:

Maybe I’m in the minority, but I’m not buying it. 

 

5 minutes ago, frostbitmic said:

Restore the onsides kick to the way it used to be.

Unfortunately I don’t think the NFL will consider that with today’s emphasis on player safety. Hence the alternatives start to fly. This one is actually a good alternative. 

Edited by Bills2ref
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From a quick search here are some numbers I found.

 

Onside kick success % prior to rule changes in 2018 - 12% (10 year sample)

Onside kick success % in 2018 - 7.7%

 

Cant find distinction between surprise ones and expected ones though, so I think those numbers include both.

 

Success rate of 4th and 15 (from 2014 study) - 19%.

 

So, from these limited resources, it seems a 4th and 15 option would be too much of a jump in success rate IMO.  Not sure how to get it closer to the 10-15% range, but IMO that's where the success rate should lie.

Edited by Mark80
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10 minutes ago, Bills2ref said:

Because the onside kick has become a near 0% proposition and it is bad for business to not have some late game comebacks. 

 

I think 7.5% is a lot more than zero, and doesn’t seem too unreasonable to me. It’s supposed to be a long shot. 

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Here's my idea:

 

Make every NFL player sign a piece of paper that states, "I will not sue the NFL if I am injured while playing, or suffer any long-term negative health-related effects of playing after I exit the league."

 

Then let them play the ***** game if they so choose.  The way it's supposed to be played.

 

 

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3 minutes ago, Augie said:

Is the surprise onside kick eliminated? I like that that is an option. Even in a Super Bowl! That was a classic and ballsy moment. 

No a surprise onside could still apply with this option but it would eliminate onside kicks in the obvious situations and replace them with a 4th and 15 instead

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2 minutes ago, Gugny said:

Here's my idea:

 

Make every NFL player sign a piece of paper that states, "I will not sue the NFL if I am injured while playing, or suffer any long-term negative health-related effects of playing after I exit the league."

 

Then let them play the ***** game if they so choose.  The way it's supposed to be played.

 

 

 

Despite what one would expect, it is very difficult to sign away completely your rights to sue.  Especially in a situation where you would be forced to sign something in order to retain your livelihood. 

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1 minute ago, Augie said:

 

I think 7.5% is a lot more than zero, and doesn’t seem too unreasonable to me. It’s supposed to be a long shot. 

The 7.5% is somewhat misleading because of how little it was attempted. There were a grand total of 4 successful attempts last season. That number is far too low. By my calculation 256 regular season games were played. That means an onside kick was converted in 1.5% of NFL games last season. 

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6 minutes ago, Augie said:

 

I think 7.5% is a lot more than zero, and doesn’t seem too unreasonable to me. It’s supposed to be a long shot. 

A 4th and 15 while not as hard to convert as an onside kick, is pretty much a long shot also

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4 minutes ago, Buffalo03 said:

No a surprise onside could still apply with this option but it would eliminate onside kicks in the obvious situations and replace them with a 4th and 15 instead

I would think it would be the teams option. They are allowed to line up for a traditional kick (and do a surprise onside) or go for the 4th and 15 option. 

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9 minutes ago, Gugny said:

Here's my idea:

 

Make every NFL player sign a piece of paper that states, "I will not sue the NFL if I am injured while playing, or suffer any long-term negative health-related effects of playing after I exit the league."

 

Then let them play the ***** game if they so choose.  The way it's supposed to be played.

 

 

You would have no shortage of men risking their body for millions of dollars a year. That’s the opportunity cost that they can weigh. If they don’t want to risk it they are more than welcome to go work anywhere else they can secure employment. It’s completely up to them. With all the studies and medical information available today it is pretty easy to make an informed decision. 

Edited by Bills2ref
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19 minutes ago, Bills2ref said:

Because the onside kick has become a near 0% proposition and it is bad for business to not have some late game comebacks. 

If you want late game comebacks, the NFL should adopt the college rule where the clock stops on first downs until the chains are moved.

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27 minutes ago, Bills2ref said:

Because the onside kick has become a near 0% proposition and it is bad for business to not have some late game comebacks. 

never a fan of teams winning on gimmick plays.

 

on-sides kicks suck.

hail mary's suck.

lateral plays on end of game kickoffs/punt returns suck. (and the massaging of the rules allowing multiple fumble recoveries advancement not allowed in real play)

 

any team that clearly outplayed/dominated an opponent should not be subject to losing by some super low % gimmick play.

 

I know many like the chance to see that, and the drama/entertainment value it provides, but it rewards luck over skill IMO. Not a fan at all. It is the equivalent to those trivia games where each successive round is worth so many more points then the previous round that in almost all cases the last question answered correctly determines the winner. Stupid as *****.

Edited by cba fan
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8 minutes ago, Augie said:

I already see 4th and long (or 3rd and long). The onside kick is different and provides a bit of variety. It’s just more interesting, because it is rare. 

But how often are 4th and longs converted? Who cares if people already see it. It's better option than the onside kick now

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34 minutes ago, Bills2ref said:

Absolutely needs to happen. The onside kick is completely pointless now. It has been completely neutered by the NFL. You are better off kicking it deep and hoping to force a fumble. In light of that, the NFL must adopt a new policy to keep games somewhat interesting in the end. This is that policy, this is the solution. Only a matter of time before it passes IMO. 

They should revert to the old onside kick rules only for that play. 

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25 minutes ago, Augie said:

Is the surprise onside kick eliminated? I like that that is an option. Even in a Super Bowl! That was a classic and ballsy moment. 

Agreed, and the recovery rate on surprise onside kicks is relatively high (I think it used to be as high as 50%, but maybe that's down after the rule change.)  The one situation where teams should almost onside kick is after the other team is hit with a 15-yard penalty that's enforced on the kickoff.  That means you're kicking off from midfield and an unsuccessful onside kick really doesn't change field position more than 10 or 15 yards.  Why not take a chance on a recovery instead of mindlessly blasting the kickoff through the endzone?  And yet I never see it done and I've never heard an announcer mention it.   

Edited by mannc
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2 minutes ago, Buffalo03 said:

But how often are 4th and longs converted? Who cares if people already see it. It's better option than the onside kick now

 

Kicking to the opposing team after a score is a basic football rule.

Changing it by having a team being "forced" to put their defense back out goes against that basic concept.

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13 minutes ago, cba fan said:

never a fan of teams winning on gimmick plays.

 

on-sides kicks suck.

hail mary's suck.

lateral plays on end of game kickoffs/punt returns suck. (and the massaging of the rules allowing multiple fumble recoveries advancement not allowed in real play)

 

any team that clearly outplayed/dominated an opponent should not be subject to losing by some super low % gimmick play.

 

I know many like the chance to see that, and the drama/entertainment value it provides, but it rewards luck over skill IMO. Not a fan at all. It is the equivalent to those trivia games where each successive round is worth so many more points then the previous round that in almost all cases the last question answered correctly determines the winner. Stupid as *****.

I dont think a team clearly dominated/outplayed a team so much that they deserve to win a game if the other team can win by converting an onside kick or even a hail Mary play. That means the game was pretty close....

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3 minutes ago, ColoradoBills said:

 

Kicking to the opposing team after a score is a basic football rule.

Changing it by having a team being "forced" to put their defense back out goes against that basic concept.

That team is more than welcome to put their kick return team out for the play. I just don’t think it would go very well ?

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On 3/22/2019 at 12:11 PM, Buffalo03 said:

But how often are 4th and longs converted? Who cares if people already see it. It's better option than the onside kick now

 

Again.....why? Because you declared it to be true?  I’m not convinced, and it’s OK to disagree. Maybe giving teams the option is OK, but as always - beware of unintended consequences. 

 

.

Edited by Augie
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