Author:
An Observer
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Date Posted: 15:08:35 09/22/24 Sun
Northbounder, thank you very much for your post. I love this kind of analysis, though your particular example still makes me uncomfortable.
As context, I've said for many years that, when a team has particularly effective short-yardage personnel, it needs to go for two points much more often. I've posted here in the past about two specific examples: Yale with Varga and Princeton with Lovett.
With those two exceptional weapons, the probability of converting the two-point attempt is so high that it gives you an entirely new offensive weapon: turning the "extra point" into an "extra score."
I've said many times that, if I were Yale or Princeton in this circumstance, I would go for two ANY TIME I scored a touchdown to go up by thirteen or more points. You're already up by two touchdowns; tacking on two more points forces your opponent to then start matching you two-pointer for two-pointer. Meanwhile, you've got Varga or Lovett and they don't. That wins for you, both in the short term and in the long run.
But going for two when you've just scored to be DOWN fifteen? I don't know. I love your mathematical approach and, if that's what Surace was thinking, I can respect his analytic approach to the game. More than any other Ivy football coach, Surace plays to win, as opposed to not to lose, a common attitude among football coaches at all levels, including the NFL, where it is epidemic. That's why guys like Dan Campbell immediately get our attention. He and Surace are out there trying to WIN with every decision they make.
Having said that, I think you need to consider a few other things. First, you'd better be damn sure that you're at least 50% to convert the two-pointer. Secondly, you've got to know your guys. Will they be discouraged if the try is unsuccessful? They've just scored a touchdown and losing momentum immediately afterward can be a kick in the shin.
Northbounder, the logical extrapolation to your thinking is that teams should go for two almost any time that they score a touchdown. As I've pointed out above, that makes particular sense when a coach expects a high-scoring game and he's got Tyler Varga or John Lovett standing next to him. But in a game where three touchdowns might win it?
I would love to hear Bob Surace or Dan Campbell walk me through their logic. The Lions of course were burned by their aggressiveness against the 49ers in last year's NFC championship game, and Princeton did not cover itself in glory yesterday. I want to hear the explanation after a BAD day, not a good one.
Thank you for your take, Northbounder.
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