The Importance of Kick Returns

You get that a strong KO return is way more about the other 10 guys than the one running with the ball in his hands right?

Looking at Wisconsin's season stats they have tried to run back 16 kickoffs and with the one exception most of them have netted them no more than 20 yards on average.

Nobody would argue that a KO return TD is a huge play when it happens....but they don't happen very often, even for teams that like to try and return kicks.

Many teams are just fair catching kickoffs and taking the ball at the 25 these days.
And many teams do run them back from in front of goal line. Are you suggesting we don't have 10 other guys on the field? That they have never been taught to set up a return and blocking assignments? (I might agree with that). Or maybe we just don't have good enough athletes? Or good enough coaching?

I suggest it all comes down to HC's philosophy. Where most coaches see opportunity, he sees danger. All part of prevent offense.
 

And many teams do run them back from in front of goal line. Are you suggesting we don't have 10 other guys on the field? That they have never been taught to set up a return and blocking assignments? (I might agree with that). Or maybe we just don't have good enough athletes? Or good enough coaching?

I suggest it all comes down to HC's philosophy. Where most coaches see opportunity, he sees danger. All part of prevent offense.
You sound deeply invested in this. Have you reached out to Fleck or Coyle about your concerns and your suggestions? This could be something they could benefit from hearing
 

You sound deeply invested in this. Have you reached out to Fleck or Coyle about your concerns and your suggestions? This could be something they could benefit from hearing
No, unlike apparently you, I just post opinions on a message board based on what I see on the field. But if I decide to call and wish coach a Merry Christmas can you give me his number?

I's sure September 3 and the OSU game are still clear in your mind. OSU had only one apparent weakness. Their guy couldn't kick it anywhere near the goal line. We fair caught kickoffs at the five, the ten, and a couple at the 15. We have at least 20 guys who could trot past the 25 fielding a kick at the 15. With a return it can be brought out to the 35 or 40. The game plan simply said no kickoff returns.
 

And many teams do run them back from in front of goal line. Are you suggesting we don't have 10 other guys on the field? That they have never been taught to set up a return and blocking assignments? (I might agree with that). Or maybe we just don't have good enough athletes? Or good enough coaching?

I suggest it all comes down to HC's philosophy. Where most coaches see opportunity, he sees danger. All part of prevent offense.
Are you sure it's "most" coaches? Seems like I see a lot of teams fair catch these days. It's really changed in the last 2 years.
 

And many teams do run them back from in front of goal line. Are you suggesting we don't have 10 other guys on the field? That they have never been taught to set up a return and blocking assignments? (I might agree with that). Or maybe we just don't have good enough athletes? Or good enough coaching?

I suggest it all comes down to HC's philosophy. Where most coaches see opportunity, he sees danger. All part of prevent offense.
Well apparently we have the same philosophy as Wisconsin, Nebraska, and Indiana as we have all returned 9 kicks through 8 conference games. Penn State and Illinois have less than that. Ohio State has 11, Purdue has 14 and has averaged a whopping 11 yard average. Only Ohio State (30) and Iowa (26.5) have managed an average over 25 yards per return.

10 of the 14 teams in the conference average less than 20 yards per return.

The KO return has been largely eliminated from the game with the KO specialists, and the ability to call the fair catch. Lots of teams opt to fair catch it and take it at the 25 as opposed to risking injury, a penalty, a fumble, or getting pinned inside the 20.

In conference games there have been 181 kicks returned. Of those 181 there have been a whopping 3 brought back for a TD. So 98.5% of the time when you run a kickoff back it isn't going for a TD. Sure that 1.5% is huge when it happens but clearly it doesn't happen very often.

 


No, unlike apparently you, I just post opinions on a message board based on what I see on the field. But if I decide to call and wish coach a Merry Christmas can you give me his number?
Well of course I have to run it by him first. I'll get back to you on that, but I wouldn't be too hopeful
 

So for the fair catch everything guys…so you get mad when the other teams fair catch it instead of returning it? I’d rather go for a return and risk a bad thing happening. A fumble is on the player not the play. Yes penalties can happen, so what, other team can commit a penalty also. Yes injuries can happen, same as any play. Might not reach the 25, who cares. How many times will you get past the 25? How many times will you get WAY past the 25? Usually you don’t get stuffed WAY inside the 25.
 

Well apparently we have the same philosophy as Wisconsin, Nebraska, and Indiana as we have all returned 9 kicks through 8 conference games. Penn State and Illinois have less than that. Ohio State has 11, Purdue has 14 and has averaged a whopping 11 yard average. Only Ohio State (30) and Iowa (26.5) have managed an average over 25 yards per return.

10 of the 14 teams in the conference average less than 20 yards per return.

The KO return has been largely eliminated from the game with the KO specialists, and the ability to call the fair catch. Lots of teams opt to fair catch it and take it at the 25 as opposed to risking injury, a penalty, a fumble, or getting pinned inside the 20.

In conference games there have been 181 kicks returned. Of those 181 there have been a whopping 3 brought back for a TD. So 98.5% of the time when you run a kickoff back it isn't going for a TD. Sure that 1.5% is huge when it happens but clearly it doesn't happen very often.

27.8 for Bucko
 

So for the fair catch everything guys…so you get mad when the other teams fair catch it instead of returning it? I’d rather go for a return and risk a bad thing happening. A fumble is on the player not the play. Yes penalties can happen, so what, other team can commit a penalty also. Yes injuries can happen, same as any play. Might not reach the 25, who cares. How many times will you get past the 25? How many times will you get WAY past the 25? Usually you don’t get stuffed WAY inside the 25.
I prefer when the opponent returns kicks because it seems like usually it doesn't end up well for them and they get tackled inside the 20.

The kicking team can commit a penalty.....really.....how often does the kicking team get called for a penalty during a return? Don't have any data but it almost never happens.

Crazy thought, lots of coaches are electing to fair catch kickoffs these days. I am going to guess they have probably looked that the odds and decided that this is the better way to go. Avoid getting a skill player lit up, guarantee the field position you are starting at, avoid the chance for a turnover....lots of reasons to fair catch.

And again. We have tried to return a kick the exact same number of times that Wisconsin has in conference games. Just over 1 time per game on average.
 



27.8 for Bucko
Bucko is pretty good at Kick Returns. Of course we can't use him back there right now given that we are down to 2 healthy running backs. Looks like Williams also brought back 5 with much less success than Bucko did.

Look, it is fair to not like the philosophy of not trying to return kickoffs, but don't act like this is a Minnesota thing. The KO return is being gradually removed from the game. It won't surprise me at some point if they just eliminate it all together or give teams the choice whether they want to have the other team kickoff or just take the ball at the 25.
 

And here we have yet another area in which a bunch of second-guessing anonymous joes on an opinion board make the claim that they see things far more clearly than the professional coaching staff does.

You guys are seriously under-utilized. My goodness! You should all be sharing your football genius with the world by actually getting into football coaching as a profession. If you did, every football fan in the world would benefit from watching the results of your sage wisdom played out on the gridiron.

I'm sure it would be amazing to see. Revolutionary.
 

Are you sure it's "most" coaches? Seems like I see a lot of teams fair catch these days. It's really changed in the last 2 years.
I think most, as in a majority, is safe to say. Certainly on kicks not past the five yard line.
 

I think most, as in a majority, is safe to say. Certainly on kicks not past the five yard line.
I actually think the percentage of fair catches probably goes up the shorter the kickoff goes. The guys lined up in those areas are not going to be the guys you want running with the football. They are out there for their ability to block.
 



I actually think the percentage of fair catches probably goes up the shorter the kickoff goes. The guys lined up in those areas are not going to be the guys you want running with the football. They are out there for their ability to block.
And those kicks are usually higher and give the return team more time to cover.
 

Well apparently we have the same philosophy as Wisconsin, Nebraska, and Indiana as we have all returned 9 kicks through 8 conference games. Penn State and Illinois have less than that. Ohio State has 11, Purdue has 14 and has averaged a whopping 11 yard average. Only Ohio State (30) and Iowa (26.5) have managed an average over 25 yards per return.

10 of the 14 teams in the conference average less than 20 yards per return.

The KO return has been largely eliminated from the game with the KO specialists, and the ability to call the fair catch. Lots of teams opt to fair catch it and take it at the 25 as opposed to risking injury, a penalty, a fumble, or getting pinned inside the 20.

In conference games there have been 181 kicks returned. Of those 181 there have been a whopping 3 brought back for a TD. So 98.5% of the time when you run a kickoff back it isn't going for a TD. Sure that 1.5% is huge when it happens but clearly it doesn't happen very often.

If you have looked up those stats to post, I will accept them. But they do show that it was tried 181 times. I recall Bucky returning one for us. There might have been another one somewhere.

I have never suggested the point was to not miss out on scoring a TD. That has always been extremely rare. And I don't say return from the goal line or even a couple yards inside. I do suggest it would be prudent and productive to be prepared and willing to return a short kickoff around the ten. Every time. That can only be called an opportunity.
 

I actually think the percentage of fair catches probably goes up the shorter the kickoff goes. The guys lined up in those areas are not going to be the guys you want running with the football. They are out there for their ability to block.
Anything traveling to the 15 or beyond is going to be caught by the supposed return man, not a blocker.
 

Well apparently we have the same philosophy as Wisconsin, Nebraska, and Indiana as we have all returned 9 kicks through 8 conference games. Penn State and Illinois have less than that. Ohio State has 11, Purdue has 14 and has averaged a whopping 11 yard average. Only Ohio State (30) and Iowa (26.5) have managed an average over 25 yards per return.

10 of the 14 teams in the conference average less than 20 yards per return.

The KO return has been largely eliminated from the game with the KO specialists, and the ability to call the fair catch. Lots of teams opt to fair catch it and take it at the 25 as opposed to risking injury, a penalty, a fumble, or getting pinned inside the 20.

In conference games there have been 181 kicks returned. Of those 181 there have been a whopping 3 brought back for a TD. So 98.5% of the time when you run a kickoff back it isn't going for a TD. Sure that 1.5% is huge when it happens but clearly it doesn't happen very often.

By the way, when you cite the average return (example Purdue 11 yards) are you saying they averaged starting from their 11 yard line or did they catch it at the 10 or 12 and get out to the 21-23?
 

Bucko is pretty good at Kick Returns. Of course we can't use him back there right now given that we are down to 2 healthy running backs. Looks like Williams also brought back 5 with much less success than Bucko did.

Look, it is fair to not like the philosophy of not trying to return kickoffs, but don't act like this is a Minnesota thing. The KO return is being gradually removed from the game. It won't surprise me at some point if they just eliminate it all together or give teams the choice whether they want to have the other team kickoff or just take the ball at the 25.
No, not only a Minnesota thing. But clearly fits a risk aversion coaching philosophy. Do you think the time will come when punts are eliminated and you just get 40 yards of field position. There is actually a lot more risk in receiving a punt than in the kickoff game.
 

No, not only a Minnesota thing. But clearly fits a risk aversion coaching philosophy. Do you think the time will come when punts are eliminated and you just get 40 yards of field position. There is actually a lot more risk in receiving a punt than in the kickoff game.
Kickoffs are more dangerous for injuries per return. Total injuries for kickoffs are down because of so many touchbacks and fair catches.
 

And here we have yet another area in which a bunch of second-guessing anonymous joes on an opinion board make the claim that they see things far more clearly than the professional coaching staff does.

You guys are seriously under-utilized. My goodness! You should all be sharing your football genius with the world by actually getting into football coaching as a profession. If you did, every football fan in the world would benefit from watching the results of your sage wisdom played out on the gridiron.

I'm sure it would be amazing to see. Revolutionary.
Murr, you didn't get back to me on some easy questions I asked you.
If nobody returns kickoffs why do teams so desparately look for a guy who can kick into the end zone? And why did we give up such horrible field position in 2019 and part of 2020 when we had no decent kicker? Shouldn't that all of worked to our advantage?
 

Kickoffs are more dangerous for injuries per return. Total injuries for kickoffs are down because of so many touchbacks and fair catches.
Wasn't referring to injury. Muffed punts, fumbles, trying to circle backwards and losing yardage ... that kind of danger.
 

Kickoffs are more dangerous for injuries per return. Total injuries for kickoffs are down because of so many touchbacks and fair catches.
Yup. This has just been a dumb argument from the beginning. When they were giving you the 20, maybe you have a little more of an argument but if they're giving you the 25, for doing nothing, you take it. Unless you have some kind of elite returner, which is a whole other discussion.

Granted the NFL is not the same as college but I sat in the stadium watching the Raiders-Bengals game earlier today and watched the KR field KO's around the 1-2 yd line and get nailed short of making the 15 on I think at least 3 occasions, and I think there was at least one penalty on one of them and at least one injury on another.

And now that I think about it, in one of the other NFL games, the KR fumbled and the kicking team took over on the 2-yd line after a short return.

Dumb, dumb, dumb if you're going to get the 25-yd line with a fair catch for the most part
 

Wasn't referring to injury. Muffed punts, fumbles, trying to circle backwards and losing yardage ... that kind of danger.
I think a lot more teams are fair catching punts too for similar reasons as kickoffs. Don't have stats though just my perception from watching lots of college football.
 

Murr, you didn't get back to me on some easy questions I asked you.
If nobody returns kickoffs why do teams so desparately look for a guy who can kick into the end zone? And why did we give up such horrible field position in 2019 and part of 2020 when we had no decent kicker? Shouldn't that all of worked to our advantage?

Gee, I don't have the answers to your very simple questions, Dak. But that's probably because I'm not a football savant, as you obviously are.

Please drop your current occupation, and take up football coaching, and supplant the current incompetent Gopher staff. You are the one guy who could save Minnesota football. All of us long-suffering Gopher fans are begging you.

Your first action as head coach would (obviously) be to return all kickoffs, rather than fair catch them.

I'm already super excited about the inherent possibilities. Rose Bowl or bust, baby.
 
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Yup. This has just been a dumb argument from the beginning. When they were giving you the 20, maybe you have a little more of an argument but if they're giving you the 25, for doing nothing, you take it. Unless you have some kind of elite returner, which is a whole other discussion.

Granted the NFL is not the same as college but I sat in the stadium watching the Raiders-Bengals game earlier today and watched the KR field KO's around the 1-2 yd line and get nailed short of making the 15 on I think at least 3 occasions, and I think there was at least one penalty on one of them and at least one injury on another.

And now that I think about it, in one of the other NFL games, the KR fumbled and the kicking team took over on the 2-yd line after a short return.

Dumb, dumb, dumb if you're going to get the 25-yd line with a fair catch for the most part
Does the 25 vs the 20 really give you much of an advantage?
 

Just looked up some return stats. A guy for Arkansas state has 51 returns and double the yardage of the second guy who has only 32 returns. Only like 17 guys have more than 20 returns. So no one is really returning much, other than the Arkie st guy.
 

Well apparently we have the same philosophy as Wisconsin, Nebraska, and Indiana as we have all returned 9 kicks through 8 conference games. Penn State and Illinois have less than that. Ohio State has 11, Purdue has 14 and has averaged a whopping 11 yard average. Only Ohio State (30) and Iowa (26.5) have managed an average over 25 yards per return.

10 of the 14 teams in the conference average less than 20 yards per return.

The KO return has been largely eliminated from the game with the KO specialists, and the ability to call the fair catch. Lots of teams opt to fair catch it and take it at the 25 as opposed to risking injury, a penalty, a fumble, or getting pinned inside the 20.

In conference games there have been 181 kicks returned. Of those 181 there have been a whopping 3 brought back for a TD. So 98.5% of the time when you run a kickoff back it isn't going for a TD. Sure that 1.5% is huge when it happens but clearly it doesn't happen very often.

And Penn State has 1 kickoff return against them. For 11 yards. In 11 games.
 

I think a lot more teams are fair catching punts too for similar reasons as kickoffs. Don't have stats though just my perception from watching lots of college football.
You fair catch punts because they are high and you have guys bearing down on you. Not the case for kickoffs.
 

Gee, I don't have the answers to your very simple questions, Dak. But that's probably because I'm not a football savant, as you obviously are.

Please drop your current occupation, and take up football coaching, and supplant the current incompetent Gopher staff. You are the one guy who could save Minnesota football. All of us long-suffering Gopher fans are begging you.

Your first action as head coach would (obviously) be to return all kickoffs, rather than fair catch them.

I'm already super excited about the inherent possibilities. Rose Bowl or bust, baby.
Murr, why do teams try to kick in the end zone?
 

And Penn State has 1 kickoff return against them. For 11 yards. In 11 games.
So in 11 games did every team fair catch 3-7 kickoffs or do you think Penn St has a kicker who puts it in the end zone, as in unreturnable?
 




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