Onside Kick Stays

if they want to get up to ~15% recovery rate or higher, they are going to have to do some serious limiting of the recieving team to skew the advantage...the way it is setup now i dont see it changing drastically....granted there arent a whole lot of them so it only takes a couple more to move the needle but still...
 
So they are not going to put dresses on the KO teams. QB dresses stay exclusive. Which is why they get paid more than ST's players. :lmao:

I am glad they left it alone. Rather they go back to KO from the 30, and allow overloading to one side. The receiving team can to the same in anticipation to where the kick is going.
 
Move the kickoffs back five yards, there's nothing more boring in the NFL than the constant endless touchbacks
This is the goal. Get people to complain about kick offs so they can take them out of the game entirely and just have the team start at the 25. "Player safety"
 
If they want to make the onside kick more successful then they also have to give the receiving team more chances at returning a kickoff for a TD.

The stats I found show only 3 successful onside kicks and only 6 kickoffs returned for a TD. If they want a 15% success rate for onside kicks then the receiving team needs about the same success rate at being able to score on the kickoff which is going to create the mess they were trying to avoid.
 
So they are not going to put dresses on the KO teams. QB dresses stay exclusive. Which is why they get paid more than ST's players. :lmao:

I am glad they left it alone. Rather they go back to KO from the 30, and allow overloading to one side. The receiving team can to the same in anticipation to where the kick is going.
This would be the most obvious solution. They broke it, now they're trying to fix it with patches or gimmicks. Because if they go back, someone in a dress will say they don't care about player safety.
 
Let them overload one side of the line if you want success rate up
That was the creative, exciting aspect\element of the onside kick.
Putting on the field unusual formations (within league rules) that increased the kicking team's chances of recovering the ball.
It's up to the receving team to be prepared, e.g. putting sure-handed players on the squad that won't panick, and will secure the trick kickoff.
 
i hope not. i like the success of them being closer to 0%.
Not me because we may need to recover one. One of the greatest comebacks in the history of the Cowboys was during the 2020 season against Atlanta with the aid of a recovered onside kick.
 
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