During the past two seasons, according to Pro Football Focus, NFL place-kickers converted 97.6 percent of all kicks between 30-35 yards when lined up in the middle of the field. In 2014 season at 97.6 percent accuracy, we would have seen 1,200 of 1,230 extra points converted. Instead of eight misses, there would have been 30.
The ball being placed in the middle of the filed is a variable I had not considered and it will certainly make a positive impact on the conversion rate. I do not believe it will translate to a 97.6% accuracy rate, however. That percentage is based on a very small sample as well- of approximately 90 attempts from that range between the hashmarks... This year, assuming the same ration of 1pt/2pt attempts, each NFL kicker will attempt 40 from that spot on the field. If the pro football focus numbers are representative, the average NFL kicker will make 39 of 40. (I simply can not imagine that will happen, but I don't have the statistical evidence to defend this belief)
I am just excited that the NFL has done something to make more plays more competitive and also add a strategic element to the game without disrupting the way football is played. I really don't understand the criticism that I most often hear- that this will lead to more injuries. I heard Jay Feely complain about it and say that offensive linemen will suffer more injuries because of increased effort at the snap on extra points. He is acknowledging that the extra point kick is regularly approached by teams with a lack of effort. As a fan, that is not what I want to watch. I am not willing to trade competitiveness and effort as a means to limit injuries. If I did, I would watch the Probowl!
Looking at 2 point attempts the past 4 years, here are some interesting observations:
1. The success rate for individual teams, and for the entire NFL, seems to go up in years where the attempts are up. It's a small sample, but here are the NFL numbers 2011-14:
* 23/50 in 2011 = 46%
* 28/59 in 2012 = 47.5%
* 27/59 in 2013 = 46%
* 33/69 in 2014 = 47.9%
More interesting is that the best offensive teams tend to convert at a much, much higher percentage than the worst offensive teams. In 2011, for example, the top 10 NFL offenses converted 16/22 (over 70%)... The rest of the NFL was 7/28 (25%)- The worst offenders were Tampa Bay, Oakland, Arizona (combined 2/11)
Last season, the Jets, Chiefs, Titans, Redskins, Browns (combined 0/10). The rest of the NFL was 27/49 (55% success rate).
The other trend of significance is illustrated by the following anomalies:
Chicago has converted 12 out of 13 2pt tries the past 4 years (92%)
St. Louis converted 9/11 attempts between 2012-14 (81%)
*Do they practice and game plan more for these situations? They lead in attempts and in conversation rate during the period. Can we extrapolate that offenses will convert a higher percentage of 2 pt conversions because they do it more often... and/or spend more time during the week in preparation for it? If that is true, then teams who begin utilizing the 2pt attempt as part of their weekly game plan will have a distinct advantage over the rest of the NFL until teams begin to contribute more practice time defensively to account for it. Over the course of 1 season, a top 10 scoring team (60 TDs), who traditional only attempted 1 2pt try per year could hypothetically attempt 30 2pt/ 30 1pt... Let's assume that their focus creates a proficiency that is one standard deviation from the norm (about 65%). Second, assume an NFL average of 95% success on extra points.
Team A (new philosophy) would total
67 extra points on 60 TDs, vs.
57 points on 60TDs that would represent an average kicker on a team that always kicked the 1 pt. That is 10 extra points, which is quite significant, particularly since Team A is not randomly selecting to go for 2 instead of 1, but it is making those decisions based on matchups, game situation, weather, score differential, and other factors.
I believe the rule change will force teams to look at these numbers and begin to change their models based on the risk /reward. Some teams will proactively do this over the summer. Others will be reactive after learning the hard way. I doubt these changes will alter how the 4th quarter decisions are made, but it should impact extra point decisions earlier in the game.