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Sports>Does "Icing" the kicker really work?
Justinphilly 11:19 PM 09-30-2012
Tonight the Eagles beat the Giants in a nail biter. But, with 15 seconds left the Giants had a chance to take the lead but missed the kick. BUT WAIT, Andy Ried called a timeout. He missed the first, and the second attempt.

The question is. "Isn't this whole concept bush-league, and shouldn't it be stopped?"
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NeuRon 11:55 PM 09-30-2012
I think its one of the stupidest strategies in all of sports; not just football..

Besides the fact that it doesnt really work, it is kind of common sense. In most cases, your giving the kicker a practice kick anyways..
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bobarian 12:11 AM 10-01-2012
Originally Posted by Justinphilly:
Tonight the Eagles beat the Giants in a nail biter. But, with 15 seconds left the Giants had a chance to take the lead but missed the kick. BUT WAIT, Andy Ried called a timeout. He missed the first, and the second attempt.

The question is. "Isn't this whole concept bush-league, and shouldn't it be stopped?"
How is it "bush league" to use a timeout that would otherwise go to waste?
It doesnt matter if it works or not. :-)

Originally Posted by NeuRon:
I think its one of the stupidest strategies in all of sports; not just football..

What other sport is it used to make a kicker delay a kick?

Besides the fact that it doesnt really work, it is kind of common sense. In most cases, your giving the kicker a practice kick anyways..
If it worked once in the history of football, then it works. Your statement is just silly.
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NeuRon 12:15 AM 10-01-2012
All sports involve niche strategies.. And out of all of them, i believe this to be the dumbest..

BTW, This is a thread based on opinion, is it not? So to me, YOUR statement is silly..
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NeuRon 12:17 AM 10-01-2012
So by your submission, doing something once (out of a million tries) successfully means it will work (yes), but does that make it smart? (nope)

Alot of people have tried to rob banks.. Sure its worked plenty of times, and people get away with it.. does that make it a gleaming idea?
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bobarian 12:48 AM 10-01-2012
Your statements are completely void of facts. If a team has a timeout why not use it before the game ends? Please give me a viable reason or something based upon fact that would show this to be a flawed strategy and a waste of time?

Please cite another sports example of such a "niche" strategy? Maybe a batter stepping out the box to get the pitcher out of his rhythm? "The Shift"?
A golfer using his putter as a plumb bob? Deferring a winning coin toss to the second half? Spiking the ball to stop the clock? :-)
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NeuRon 12:56 AM 10-01-2012
http://espn.go.com/blog/statsinfo/po...ctive-practice

http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/...ng-kicker-work
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NeuRon 12:58 AM 10-01-2012
Originally Posted by bobarian:
Your statements are completely void of facts.
Thats because it was my opinion.... :-)

Originally Posted by bobarian:
Please cite another sports example of such a "niche" strategy? Maybe a batter stepping out the box to get the pitcher out of his rhythm? "The Shift"?
A golfer using his putter as a plumb bob? Deferring a winning coin toss to the second half? Spiking the ball to stop the clock?
Oh, and you forgot Hack a Shaq :-)
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elderboy02 06:04 AM 10-01-2012
Icing doesn't work. I have read many articles where in fact, not icing the kicker usually works in favor of the team who didn't call a time out.
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Blak Smyth 06:08 AM 10-01-2012
Depends on the kicker and situation, it works occasionaly. If I was a kicker, I would hate it. As a fan I don't care as long as it doesn't work against my team :-)
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BlkDrew 07:35 AM 10-01-2012
The packers and saints game last night was a great example. In the last 3 minutes of the game.
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NeuRon 07:46 AM 10-01-2012
^^guys we are gonna need more evidence and facts!! Opinion doesnt matter!! :-) :-)
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Blak Smyth 07:52 AM 10-01-2012
From wiki:
"A study was undertaken by Scott Berry, a statistician and the former chairman of the Statistics in Sports section of the American Statistical Association, and Craig Wood, a biostatistician and the Henry Hood Center for Health Research Pillar Award winner, which was published in 2004 in the journal Chance. Berry and Wood looked at every field-goal attempt made in the 2002 and 2003 NFL seasons, including playoffs, and concluded that, for "pressure kicks" – those made with 3 minutes or less remaining in the game or overtime period which would tie the game up or put the kicking team in the lead – in the 40-55 yard range, icing the kicker caused the percentage of successful attempts to drop by about ten percent for an average kicker on a sunny day. On shorter kicks, the effect was found to be negligible. However, the statistical signficance of the difference found – which amounted to four kicks out of 39 attempts – has been questioned, and an examination by Nick Stamms of STATS, Inc. found that "pressure kicks" (defined as above except within two minutes, not three) in the NFL regular season from 1991 to 2005 showed an insignificant difference between non-iced kicks (457 out of 637, or 71.7%) and iced kicks (152 out of 211 or 72%)."

Take it for what it is worth.
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Stephen 08:18 AM 10-01-2012
Originally Posted by bobarian:
Please cite another sports example of such a "niche" strategy?
As dumb as, "icing" the kicker? That's easy. Sliding into first base.
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forgop 08:53 AM 10-01-2012
What does work is getting the timeout called only for the kicker to miss and be granted the timeout, only then to go on and kick the game winning FG.
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MajorCaptSilly 09:09 AM 10-01-2012
Some teams have an invisible guy who whispers lines from Chinatown to the kicker during the timeout. It works better when he sounds like Jack.

MCS
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Bigsam 09:41 AM 10-01-2012
These guys are pro's they are use to pressure. I think it does work part of the time but for the most part I think there either going to miss or make it by how the kick is executed not by being iced. But even if there's a slight chance I think I would want to ice him. I don't like how they do it a milisecond before the kick is made Ice him when they line up. It almost blew up in Andy Reids face if he had a toch more on it Giants win but then again Giants fault I thought there was some terrible play calling on that last drive I would have tried picking up 5 to seven yards to give my kicker a chance but then again they probably forgot more football hen I will ever know.
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fhrblig 11:21 AM 10-01-2012
It only works when Mike Shanahan does it.
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smitty81 11:41 AM 10-01-2012
What gets me is that they were IN field goal range after being given a Defensive pass interference call. Why not just run the ball for a few more yards with 1:15 left on the clock and 2-3 downs. Why pass the ball and risk the penalty or interception. They got an offensive pass interference call and moved them out of range. They also had 15 seconds left and 2 more downs. I would have tried a pass and a spike at that point knowing your kickers range. That passing play came back to bite them in the butt.

I just don't get the play calling in the end.
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CigarNut 12:11 PM 10-01-2012
Originally Posted by Blak Smyth:
From wiki:
"A study was undertaken by Scott Berry, a statistician and the former chairman of the Statistics in Sports section of the American Statistical Association, and Craig Wood, a biostatistician and the Henry Hood Center for Health Research Pillar Award winner, which was published in 2004 in the journal Chance. Berry and Wood looked at every field-goal attempt made in the 2002 and 2003 NFL seasons, including playoffs, and concluded that, for "pressure kicks" – those made with 3 minutes or less remaining in the game or overtime period which would tie the game up or put the kicking team in the lead – in the 40-55 yard range, icing the kicker caused the percentage of successful attempts to drop by about ten percent for an average kicker on a sunny day. On shorter kicks, the effect was found to be negligible. However, the statistical signficance of the difference found – which amounted to four kicks out of 39 attempts – has been questioned, and an examination by Nick Stamms of STATS, Inc. found that "pressure kicks" (defined as above except within two minutes, not three) in the NFL regular season from 1991 to 2005 showed an insignificant difference between non-iced kicks (457 out of 637, or 71.7%) and iced kicks (152 out of 211 or 72%)."

Take it for what it is worth.
Thanks for siting factual information Shane!
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