NFL changes OT for playoff games


Associated Press

ORLANDO, Fla.

Sudden death has gotten a little less sudden in the NFL playoffs.

The league on Tuesday changed its overtime rules for postseason games. Starting next season, if a team wins the coin toss and then kicks a field goal, the other team gets the ball. If that next series ends with another field goal, play will continue under the current sudden-death rules.

If the team winning the toss scores a touchdown, however, the game is over.

Team owners voted 28-4 in favor of the proposal at the NFL meetings. Minnesota, Buffalo, Cincinnati and Baltimore opposed the change.

Passage was helped by commissioner Roger Goodell’s support and by statistics indicating the coin toss had become too prominent in determining OT winners.

Minnesota lost last season’s NFC championship game in overtime to New Orleans. The Saints won the toss, drove downfield and kicked a field goal to win.

“Modified sudden death is an opportunity to make a pretty good rule even better,” said Falcons president Rich McKay, co-chairman of the competition committee. “Statistically, it needed to change. It wasn’t producing the ‘fairest result.’ ”

Those statistics showed that since 1994, the team that won the overtime coin toss won the game on the first possession 34 percent of the time.

Overall, the team that correctly called the coin toss won overtime games nearly 60 percent of the time in the last 15 years, or since kickoffs were moved to the 30.

“Plenty of people on the committee, myself included, are so-called traditionalists,” Colts president Bill Polian said. “I am proud to be one. But once you saw the statistics, it became obvious we had to do something.”

The new rule applies only to postseason games. But McKay said that could change, and several owners expressed interest in further discussions at their May meetings in Dallas.

“There was a lot of sentiment in the room to change this rule for the regular season,” McKay said, adding he doesn’t expect that to happen this year. “Our thought is to take our time and study it a bit and make sure everyone understands the implications there would be for that.”

McKay and Polian said the Vikings-Saints game had little role in the vote to modify the rule.

“That’s interesting,” McKay said. “One of the teams that voted against was in the game and, last I checked, I don’t think they won.”

Vikings owner Zygi Wilf said Monday he was inclined to vote no.

“You need consistency of the regular season and the postseason,” Wilf said.