The NFL's new extra point sucks.
The season has begun, and 10 out of 10 Houston Texans kickers agree with me. The NFL's new extra point setup sucks.
Okay, it doesn't suck, it's just not the best option out there.
The story all starts with the NFL competition committee's meeting in the offseason which had three proposals. The ultimate selection was what we saw instituted this year. One of the other proposals was very similar to the accepted proposal, but it put the line of scrimmage for the two point conversion at the one yard line in place of the two. For those who have missed Week 1 in the NFL, the PAT was moved back to become a 33 yard try (snapped from the 15 yard line) instead of being placed at the 2.
"But that's good, I'm sick of extra points being automatic!" you may be screaming from behind your computer screen (but hopefully you're not because you're a well adjusted human being who can function perfectly normal while reading a nobody's blog on the internet). I certainly don't disagree that the PAT being automatic is boring, but let's look at why the NFL's new setup sucks.
Okay, it doesn't suck, it's just not the best option out there.
The story all starts with the NFL competition committee's meeting in the offseason which had three proposals. The ultimate selection was what we saw instituted this year. One of the other proposals was very similar to the accepted proposal, but it put the line of scrimmage for the two point conversion at the one yard line in place of the two. For those who have missed Week 1 in the NFL, the PAT was moved back to become a 33 yard try (snapped from the 15 yard line) instead of being placed at the 2.
"But that's good, I'm sick of extra points being automatic!" you may be screaming from behind your computer screen (but hopefully you're not because you're a well adjusted human being who can function perfectly normal while reading a nobody's blog on the internet). I certainly don't disagree that the PAT being automatic is boring, but let's look at why the NFL's new setup sucks.
- It eliminates the opportunity for a fake PAT on a 2 point conversion attempt. If you want to try to surprise the defense any more, you'll end up having to line up on the 2 (side note: I suppose you could fake a PAT from the 15, and that would be
ballsyamazing to watch. I'm looking in your direction, Chip Kelly. - Essentially all it does is penalize kickers, who lose value in this setup. A kick from the 23 yard line in Green Bay in December is more or less a crapshoot. With long field goals unlikely and PATs now more challenging, will teams in northern climates eschew carrying a kicker past November 15? I doubt it, since the NFL is, after all, an institution of tradition, but it certainly could be the case.
- Much to the chagrin of Doug Flutie, the drop kick PAT is probably now out of the question. Sure, the Flutie PAT was a gimmick, or a polite headnod to a man who gave the city of Boston the football spirit before the Patriots (insert verb of your choice from the following: cheated, fairly conquered) their way to 4 Super Bowls in a decade. However, the drop kick, if applied in the right environment, could have turned into a sort of Zone Read Option for PATs. Scene: QB is in (a deep) shotgun. Spread offense. Not ready for the 2 point conversion, the defense scurries. If a receiver is open, the snap and the throw. Boom, 2 points. If not, progress with the drop kick. Boom, 1 point.