Yeah college ot is like a bonus game complete with different strategy and everything, I would favor that one myself.
That would be why I hate it.
Honestly, were the NFL to implement it, my level of interest in the league would go down significantly. I don't want football games decided by a minigame. Shootouts suck ass in hockey and penalties are annoying as hell in soccer. Plus you'd have people setting yardage and TD records constantly, divorcing the league even further from its history. (You could get around that by not counting OT stats in the same category as regular stats, but college football isn't that bright, and I see no reason to believe the NFL would be either.)
Plus, to me, nothing is more exciting than sudden death. At any point, the game can be over in favor of either team... that's just cool.
At the same time, I don't know how anyone can argue that the current system is fine. The team that wins the flip is winning well over 50% of the games. A coin flip should never have that great an impact on the outcome of a game. And in the past, it didn't.
daves said:
Before the NFL moved kickoffs from the 35 yard line to the 30 to increase scoring, there was almost no advantage to being the receiving team. Historically up to that point, kicking and receiving teams had won almost the same number of games in overtime. Since the change, the team that receives the kick has had a significant advantage.
Moving the opening kickoff of each overtime period back to the 35 would be the simplest way to make things more fair again.
Yup. I say this all the time. Before that point, the split in regular season games was 50% won by the coin flip winner, 47% won by the coin flip loser, and 3% ties. Most people can live with that. But I'm not sure that just moving it up 5 yards would be enough now, given the higher levels of offense and the greater accuracy of modern FG kickers. But it'd be a simple fix that would make things a lot more fair.