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The 2017 Pro Bowl (branded as the 2017 Pro Bowl presented by Aquafina for sponsorship reasons) was the National Football League's all-star game for the 2016 season, which was played at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida on January 29, 2017. Feb 06, 2017 People lost it when former president George H.W. Bush took the field to flip the coin before the Super Bowl. EXTRA MUSTARD NFL NCAAF MLB NBA FANTASY SOCCER HOCKEY NCAAB Subscribe.
MINNEAPOLIS -- You remember Matt Hasselbeck in the 2004 NFC wild-card round, don't you? When the Seattle Seahawks won the overtime coin toss at Lambeau Field, and Hasselbeck -- full of excitement after Seattle's fourth-quarter comeback -- chirped into the official's microphone and told the 71,457 in attendance, 'We want the ball and we're gonna score'?
John montagu 1330. If Minnesota Vikings coach Mike Zimmer were given the opportunity to turn the game's opening coin toss into a chance for a public statement, his mantra might be, 'We don't want the ball, and you're not going to score.'
Zimmer is among the legion of head coaches that has turned kicking off after winning the opening coin toss from strategic novelty to something approaching standard practice. When the league first gave NFL teams the option to defer their choice until the second half in 2008, only 7.8 percent of coin toss winners took the option. That number has grown every season, according to ESPN Stats and Information, and this year, teams that won the coin toss have deferred their decision in 91 of 119 games, or 76.4 percent of the time. (The New England Patriots, one of the pioneers of deferring, chose to be unconventional in Week 3 when they opted to defend the north goal after winning the coin toss at home against the Jacksonville Jaguars).
It's working, too; according to ESPN Stats and Information, teams who defer are winning 54.9 percent of their games this year, compared to teams that win 51.9 percent of the time who take the ball after winning the toss.
'You have a chance to score at the end of the half and then get the ball back again,' said Zimmer, who has instructed his captains to defer on nine of the 10 coin tosses the Vikings have won since he became head coach. 'You have a chance to get an extra possession somewhere in there.'
That's the biggest reason teams choose to defer; Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers has often said how fond he is of the chance to 'double up' by scoring at the end of the first half and getting points on the opening drive in the second. Browns coach Mike Pettine said last year that the first possession of the second half is more valuable because of how much more information coaches have about an opponent's game plan by then, adding, 'It would take an extreme circumstance for us not to defer.' And even Cowboys coach Jason Garrett -- who has taken the ball on 10 of the 13 coin tosses the Cowboys have won this year -- has deferred the past two weeks, pointing out the chance to steal a possession on the road when fans are still in concession or restroom lines after halftime, rather than at full throat after the opening kickoff.
'All the factors that you would think would go into it, go into it,' Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. 'Sometimes we withhold that decision until we actually see what the field conditions are for that particular game, like Thursday night [against Miami], a game like that. Obviously if you’re playing in a dome in Indianapolis, we don’t need to get that information. But games that are weather games, that could affect that decision, too. How you want to start the game, what your offensive or defensive game plan is -- here’s how we want to try to start the game -- maybe that affects it. There could be a lot of factors, so we try to consider them all and do what we think is best.'
There are still a few take-the-ball-and-go proponents, like the Pittsburgh Steelers and New Orleans Saints, teams with Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks who have taken the ball 81 and 71 percent of the time, respectively, the past two years. Arizona Cardinals coach Bruce Arians has taken the ball on 14 of the 15 coin tosses Arizona has won the past two years. 'I’m an offensive coach,' Arians said. 'A defensive coach is going to put his defense out there or defer. We want the ball. We want the ball to start every game. We take pride in scoring points with our first possession.”
But the chance to score in back-to-back possessions in the middle of the game has been too tantalizing for most coaches to pass up, and for teams like the Vikings -- who are breaking in a young quarterback while building their identity around Zimmer's physical defense -- the chance to steal momentum with an early stop is appealing, too. In the nine games in which the Vikings have deferred under Zimmer, they've come away with seven stops on those opening possessions.
History suggests they'll put their defense on to start the game if they win the coin toss in Sunday's key matchup with the St. Louis Rams. Increasingly around the league, the prized possession is the one that comes later in the game.
'To defer, there's a couple elements to it,' Packers coach Mike McCarthy said in 2013. 'No. 1, you obviously look at the first drive but hopefully have the opportunity to score going [into halftime] and you obviously have the ball coming out [for the second half].'
ESPN Cowboys reporter Todd Archer, Packers reporter Rob Demovsky, Browns reporter Pat McManamon, Chiefs reporter Adam Teicher, Patriots reporter Mike Reiss and Cardinals reporter Josh Weinfuss contributed to this report.
The use of the coin toss in professional football dates back to 1892. The current NFL rule dictates that both team captains meet at the 50-yard line three minutes before kickoff to determine which team will have possession of the ball first.
The away team captain calls heads or tails as the referee tosses the coin in the air. The winner of the toss has the option to kick or receive. Prior to 2008, teams would elect to receive 99% of the time. A decade later and things have drastically changed.
Winning teams chose to receive
It made sense for the winning team of the coin toss to receive. If they chose to kick, the opposing team would have possession of the ball at the start of the game and again at the start of the second half.
There were only eight games from 1999 to 2007 where winning teams of the coin toss chose to kick. The NFL took notice of this trend and decided to make a rule change.
Why NFL teams defer the coin toss
To level the playing field, the NFL changed the coin toss rules. Starting in 2008, the winning teams could now choose to kick, receive, or defer. This was previously only allowed at the college level. If a team deferred, they had the option of receiving at the start of the second half.
Once the new coin-toss defer rule was implemented, teams started to select this option 39% of the time. Ten years later, winners of the coin toss now defer 92% of the time. According to ESPN, five out of six coaches will choose to defer even though there is little statistical evidence that this gives them an advantage.
Since an extra possession is more beneficial in the second half, it could be possible that coaches are banking on gaining momentum toward the end of the game.
The coaching strategy behind the coin toss
When the New England Patriots win the coin toss, head coach Bill Belichick chooses to defer 95% of the time. The Dallas Cowboys, on the other hand, elect to defer only 26% of the time. With the Patriots’ successful track record, other coaches may think deferring is the way to go.
Some believe coaches are waiting until the second half to get a better feel for how the opposing team is performing. Others think it could be a matter of “herd mentality.” It’s possible that weather is a factor in decision-making. Or, maybe it’s just the thing to do these days. Regardless, it seems like everyone is doing it.
When asked why so many coaches are choosing to defer, the Houston Texans’ special teams coach Brad Seely explained that it “comes down to the chance to pair a score at the end of the first half with one at the start of the second. It’s the only opportunity a team has for two straight possessions and can be a chance to instantly put the game out of reach.”
Seely explained that every coach would love to see their team get the ball at the start of the second half after a two-minute drive at the end of the first half. It’s a perfect game-winning scenario.
Nfl Coin Toss Results 2008
Super Bowl coin tosses
Nfl Coin Toss Results 2017 Results
The coin toss rule change of 2008 has affected the Super Bowl as well. Since the rule was implemented, nine out of the 10 teams chose to defer and take possession in the second half. The only team not to select this option was the New Orleans Saints in 2009.