Time to Eliminate Kickoffs in College Football?

JonDMiller

Publisher/Founder
Rutgers coach Greg Schiano recently offered up an idea that may at first seem crazy but after deeper consideration might make some sense: Eliminating kickoffs from college football.

As you can read at that link, Schiano began to contemplate this notion while spending some time at the beside of a paralyzed player. Such incidents make you evaluate everything in your life, and for Schiano, football is a big part of it as is mentoring young men.

Here is Schiano's idea, from the article linked above:

-Replace all kickoffs with a punting situation, including after the opening coin toss and to start the second half. So, as an example, when Team A scores a touchdown, it immediately gets the ball back on a fourth and 15 from its own 30-yard line.

-It can punt it back to Team B — the most likely outcome and a safer play since the bigger collisions usually happen on kickoffs.

-Or it can line up and go for the first down, essentially replacing an onside kick with an offensive play that would require more skill than luck.


I intentionally stopped reading the article after getting to this point with the intent that the thoughts from here on out would be my own and not influenced by anything else I have read...so if my thoughts line up with some expressed in the article, it's coincidental; I ain't going out like Woody Paige.

This is an intriguing notion within notions...let's start with replacing the kickoff team with the punt team...

Ever since I began playing tackle football in the 7th grade in 1984, members of the kickoff team had a nickname; The Suicide Squad. Most of the 'insane in the membrane' members of every team I played on were a part of the kickoff team, which was more the case at the high school level than in junior high due to numbers. Once we got to high school, many of the 'nut jobs' were on the Suicide Squad because they played fearlessly and without regard for their person.

That's because even at the high school level, the most violent contact plays came on kickoff returns...you have people running near full speed down the field to tackle the player with the football...you have people running near full speed down the field with the sole job of 'blowing up the wedge', also called wedge busters. Then you had guys like me that were not muscle bound at that age who had the wimpy role of outside containment...which was the safest place to be.

Bad things can happen anywhere and at any time on a football field, but if you eliminated the kickoff aspect, you would exponentially decrease the likelihood of serious injury.

Punting situations are not as violent, especially at the collegiate level..they might be worse at the high school level because you don't often have punters that can create great hang time and therefore induce more fair catches.

Last year, Iowa's opponents had just 21 punt returns with the rest being touchbacks, fair catches or punts out of bounds. By comparison, Iowa's Suicide Squad took the field 75 times, with 58 kicks returned..and there can still be serious contact at the wedge when there are touchbacks.

Wisconsin scored a lot of points last year, which meant more kickoffs...their Suicide Squad took the field 96 times!

The other aspects of Schiano's ideas are interesting as well...not many teams are going to go for the 4th and 15 at your own 30 yard line option, unless its late in the game and you are behind...it would add some spice in circumstances like that, replacing the onside kick. I would have to take a look at some situational conversion stats, but you don't have to play a prevent defense in that situation and who knows if the conversion rate would be similar to that of onside kicks. In other portions of the game, the risk is probably not worth the reward.

I do agree that the onside kick quotient is mostly luck...if it were a repeatable skill, there would be a higher rate of conversion for onside kicks than what we see. The vast majority don't work but we certainly remember the ones that do work.

Some will argue that this is some wussification of the game of football. I can understand that, but we don't watch the games to see people get seriously injured. I am not sure if punting the ball from the 30, and having it be a free kick, is going to lessen collisions however...you can't have it be a free kick. Perhaps line up at the 40, with the other team having a chance to rush the punter as a normal punting situation, and punt away. Then you have the aspect of fake punts to take into account, etc...lot's of parameters here.

However, the spirit of a rule change related to the kickoff team is understandable and worth considering, at least in my opinion...and Schiano's.
 
Football is a violent sport as there is always a threat of getting hurt, but this is crazy talk. Is the number of serious number that great?
 
Last edited:
I'll start off with the obligatory "Why don't they just start playing flag football?"

I once got cussed out for blowing up a wedge on a kickoff in a flag football game. My thought was "why have a big league blocking scheme if you can't make a big league block?"

I know. Cool story, bro.
 
Like the Hawks' chances much more with respect to covering an on-side kick than stopping 4th and 15. This plan would radically favor spread teams over pro-style teams. Why not just have teams punt the kickoff. They could drop kick to on-side. Actually, might work better.

Seems pretty simple.
 
Like the Hawks' chances much more with respect to covering an on-side kick than stopping 4th and 15.

Yeah, with the way Ferentz's defenses typically collapse in the 4th quarter and the way Ferentz makes O'Keefe put the brakes on with any size lead in the second half, you could safely assume no Iowa lead would ever be safe under the 4th and 15 scenario.
 
I would ban kickoffs, including on-side kicks.

Banning kickoffs would eliminate hundreds of serious injuries. It would also de-emphasize the kicker, which is a good thing, IMO.

Banning on-side kicks would eliminate the dumbest, luckiest play in college football.

The rule would be simple: After a score (TD or FG) the other team gets the ball on its own thirty yard line. Simple. Elegant. Better for the players.
 
I think a punt is a fine alternative. Don't care for the 4th and 15 though. If they want to run an onside, they have to line up and do it, that only takes away the surprise onside kick which is bullsh*t anyway.
 
You anti onsiders are jaded by the 2005 Northwestern and 2010 Minnesota games, maybe the Florida Outback Bowl game, too.
 
The onside kick is a BS play. But I have to admit, I like it. So I would still want it to be possible and it would be if the punter just dropped the ball to the ground before kicking it. This is how guys used to kick field goals in the old days and is still a legal field goal now.

That would still retain the element of surprise and you can actually drive the ball better off a bounce.

It would challenge the guys on the front line. They would have to know to get out of the way of a laser shot and also beware of a drop shot.

Actually I am like the idea more and more.
 
Last edited:
That is one of the worst ideas I have ever heard. I am certain it will never see the light of day. Its tragic what happened to the Rutgers player last year, but players have been hurt like that on pass plays, running plays, etc. So why focus on only one area? Horrible idea.
 
I think that we should have throw offs. You have to hold the ball with both hands and also keep both feet on the ground. Also the return teams can not use their hands. If during such play you feel somthing has gone wrong you start crying and fall to the ground until a flag is thrown.
 
Before even considering this (my first reaction is simply NO) I would want to see some stats showing all injuries in college football last year and on when they occured. Breaking it down to serious and nonserious injuries would be helpful as well. That way you could really evaluate whether or not injuries, and serious injuries, are significantly more likely to occur on kickoffs. If the number is significant than I would be open to the discussion of an alternative but still not sold.

Hey Jon - first you lobby for the championship game to be played indoors and now this? Grow a pair ;)
 
you want to "fix" football and eliminate many of the brain and spinal cord injuries ... get rid of hard plastic pads and helmets
 
Considering that this kind of talk has already been rumored as being discussed at the NFL level, it wouldn't surprise me if it comes to the college game first.
 
Top