CV Griz Fan
Well-known member
PlayerRep said:Potomac Griz said:PlayerRep said:UM had 15 pass completions over 11 yards. UM converted 3d and long 4 of 10 times. UM converted 4th and long 2 of 4 times. UM had momentum. I still say the odds of getting a TD from 11 at that point of the game, with our receivers, was over 50%. Most of you guys apparently would just throw away that freebie chance, which, if successfully, would have eliminated the risk of having to stop NDSU and score a TD within a few minutes.
4th and 6 from the NDSU 36 and 4th and 10 from the NDSU 44 are a hell of a lot different than 4th and goal from the 11. Much more room for our WRs and offense to do something in the other two situation.
GrizUp said:I still don't understand how you think a 4th and goal from the 11 is a "freebie"...
Yep, it certainly wasn't a given or likely even 50%. 4th and goal from the 11 with the defense not having to worry about getting beat deep & just having to keep the Griz out of the endzone is going to be VERY difficult to convert. Hell, we were marching backwards which led to that 4th and 11... Sure we converted 4th and long (6yds and 10yds) earlier in the game, but those were done at the NDSU 36 and NDSU 44.
1. I don't necessarily agree that 4th and 6 or 10 from midfield is easier to convert than 4th 11/goal. In the midfield situations, while there is much more room on the field, the vast majority of the time the pass is going to be shorter and with 20 yards of the line of scrimmage.
2. The 4th and 11 was a freebie chance to score a TD, whether the chance of success was 50%, 25% or whatever. If successful, UM has tied the game, converted for 2 and gone ahead, or gone for 2 and been down 1. If unsuccessful, UM is in essentially the same situation that it was in after the FG. It had to hold NDSU and drive the length of the field in little time for a TD. In the unsuccessful TD attempt situation, the ball would have been on the 11 or closer to the goal line. Time would not have run off the clock for a kickoff, and there would have been no risk of a long kickoff. Stopping NDSU quickly and driving (80) for a TD with 1:39 on the clock, was a very unlikely scenario. I still think that the chances of scoring a TD on 4th and 11 were greater than stopping NDSU and scoring a TD in the remaining minutes. But that really wasn't the choice. UM could have chosen to do both. The only positive of the FG was that with the unlikely holding NDSU quickly and going 80 yards for a TD scenario, UM didn't have to go for the tie and try to win on OT, or go for 2 to win. I don't know why anyone would trade a 25%-50% chance of getting a TD now against not having to win in OT or win with a 2-pt conversion. And it seems it would be a big positive to just score a TD now rather than betting that the team could hold NDSU right away and come all the way down the field for a TD. Why not take both of those chances to get a TD? It wasn't an either-or situation, we could have done both.
If UM hadn't gotten the ball back and scored a TD, wouldn't most everyone been saying that taking the FG was wrong?
I do get your point PR. And maybe you're saying that Stitt's "gut feelings" are not as solid as going with a probability type analysis like the one in your proposal. Maybe Stitt did lose confidence in the Griz O during that Red Zone possession and you're saying he shouldn't have. Either way, this guy goes with his gut. Get used to it because that is who this coach is......