The Mercury News

Many more ties could be coming for NFL

- By Barry Wilner

Two weeks, two ties. OK, let’s get this out of the way now: Yes, the NFL is fit to be tied.

In a slopfest of an opener, the Steelers and Browns drew 21-21. The first game of the season often can be messy and painful to watch, particular­ly when so many key players don’t take the field much, if at all, in the preseason. This one was all of that, even if a tie was a big step in the right direction for Cleveland, which lost 31 of 32 contests entering this season.

A week later, in a more artistic affair — minus the ugly kicking by the now-released Daniel Carlson for Minnesota — the Vikings and Packers finished 29-29. Like the other tie, it was a divisional game. Unlike the other one, both of these clubs should be in the playoff hunt.

So assessing a draw left them perplexed.

“I don’t know what to feel after a tie,” Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins said. “It’s a unique place to be and proud of the way that the whole team ... stayed in it and fought. There were times where we thought we should have won it, there were times the Packers feel like they should have won it. And it was a great game, and unfortunat­ely we didn’t get the win.”

Green Bay’s reactions were similar.

“It’s gross,” kicker Mason Crosby offered. “I don’t like it. Obviously, you hate losing. A tie is just weird. You just don’t get them a lot.”

Ah, but you just might this season. Two in two weeks could be a harbinger.

The NFL reduced the length of OT from 15 minutes to 10 before last season. There were no ties.

But the odds of more results without a winner are vastly increased. League executives understood that when they made the change.

“What it came down to was really a player safety discussion,” said Dean Blandino, head of the league’s officiatin­g department when the rule change was made in 2017 and now an NFL analyst for Fox. “The year prior to change, you had several games that went the full overtime periods and ended in a tie, or a game ended on a field goal at the last second. That’s an additional however many plays in that game. We had one instance when a team had to come back on Thursday night and play, so that’s a very short week for rest and then playing again.

“So we asked, ‘Are we pushing our players to play an extra quarter and having to come back, creating a chance for more injuries?’

“Yes the potential for more ties would be there in a shorter overtime, but the members of the (competitio­n) committee and the owners didn’t think a tie was necessaril­y a bad thing.”

The NFL could adopt the college rule (won’t ever happen), which detractors have said is like having a home run derby decide a tied baseball game; too much of the natural game is eliminated. So is the sudden death element, although even that has been diluted by the current NFL OT rule in which the team receiving the kickoff must score a TD for the game to end immediatel­y.

Not that we are advocating for getting rid of that and returning to the coin toss being even more instrument­al in deciding a game.

The option of continuing to play until there is a winner doesn’t work in the regular season for a variety of reasons. Player safety player exhaustion is the main reason, but there are broadcast considerat­ions on a busy Sunday afternoon, too. And fan comfort, particular­ly in Lambeau or Soldier Field or Gillette Stadium in December.

The NFL also senses that with the shorter OT, teams will attack more during the extra period. That seems to have been the case at Lambeau Field last Sunday.

“There were a lot of things discussed and on the table,” Blandino said of competitio­n committee meetings about overtime. “This goes back if you look prior to 2012, the coin toss was such a big part of OT. We had less ties under that system; just, look at the stats from 1994-2011, and there were only four ties. Since 2012 and the chance to have both teams getting possession ... we had five ties in that period.”

Get ready for more.

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