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The Start of a Football Game: The Kickoff

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2016-03-26 20:16:34
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For American football fans, the opening kickoff is an exhilarating start to any game. They see the two-sided thrill of one team attempting to block the other, helping its returner run through, over, and past 11 fast-charging players of the kicking team. (Well, make that ten players. The kicker usually stands around the 50-yard line, hoping he doesn’t have to make a tackle.) And the kicking team wants to make a statement by stopping the returner inside his own 20-yard line. This is the object on every level of football, from peewee to college to the NFL.

Deciding whether to kick or to receive

At the coin toss, when captains from both teams meet the referee in the center of the field, the captain who correctly calls the flip of the referee’s coin decides whether his team is to receive or to defend a particular goal. Most teams elect to receive the kickoff because they want the ball for their offense.

On some occasions, a team may allow its opponent to receive after winning the coin toss, meaning it defers its right to kick off:

  • The head coach may believe that his defensive unit is stronger than the opposition’s offense and wants to pin the offense deep in its own territory, force a turnover, or make it punt after three downs.

  • Adverse weather conditions may jeopardize the players’ ability to field the kick cleanly, and some kickers have difficulty achieving adequate distances against a strong wind.

Setting up for the kickoff

For kickoffs, NFL and college kickers are allowed to use a 1-inch tee to support the ball. High school kickers may use a 2-inch tee. The kicker can angle the ball in any way that he prefers while using the tee, but most kickers prefer to have the ball sit in the tee at a 75-degree angle rather than have it perpendicular to the ground.

During some games, strong winds prevent the ball from remaining in the tee. In those instances, a teammate holds the ball steady for the kicker by placing his index finger on top of the ball and applying the necessary downward pressure to keep it steady.

Here’s how the kickoff team lines up:

  • Five players on either side of the kicker. These ten players line up in a straight line about 8 yards from where the ball is placed on the kicking tee.

  • If the kicker is a soccer-style kicker, he lines up 7 yards back and off to one side (to the left if he’s a right-footed kicker, or vice versa).

As the kicker strides forward to kick the ball, the ten players move forward in unison, hoping to be in full stride when the kicker makes contact with the ball.

Kicking the ball

After special teams get set up and ready to play, it’s time to actually kick the ball:

  1. When the referee blows his whistle, the kicker approaches the ball.

    His objective is to hit the ball squarely in the lower quarter in order to get the proper loft and distance.

  2. As soon as the kicker’s foot makes contact with the ball, his ten teammates are allowed to cross the line of scrimmage and run downfield to cover the kick.

    Basically, they want to tackle the player who catches the ball and attempts to return it back toward the kicking team.

The ideal kickoff travels about 70 yards and hangs in the air for over 4.5 seconds. Maximizing hang time (the length of time the football is in the air) is important because it enables players on the kicking team to run down the field and cover the kick, thus tackling the return man closer to his own end zone.

The kicking team’s objective in a kickoff is to place the ball as close to its opponent’s end zone as possible for a number of reasons:

  • It’s better for your opponent to have to travel 99 yards to score a touchdown than it is for them to have to move the ball only, say, 60 yards.

  • If you can keep the ball close to your opponent’s end zone, your defense has a better chance of scoring a touchdown if it recovers a fumble or intercepts an errant pass.

  • By pinning the opposition deep in its own territory and possibly forcing a punt, a team can expect to put its offense in better field position when it receives a punt.

To keep the kick returner from making many return yards, kickers may attempt to kick the ball to a specific side of the field (known as directional kicking) to force the return man to field the kick. In this situation, the returner is often restricted, and the defense can pin him against the sidelines and force him out of bounds.

The kickoff formation shown in this figure typifies directional kicking. Instead of simply kicking the ball straight down the middle of the field, the kicker angles the ball to the left side.

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This style is ideal against a team that lines up with only one kick returner. The directional kick forces the returner to move laterally and take his eyes off the ball. The kicking team’s purpose is to focus its coverage to one side of the field, where it hopes to have more tacklers than the return team has blockers.

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