Of course, when you add in that the kick was 56 yards and that it was kicked from that crazy angle all the way from the left, the block seems less like an unlikely event. It certainly didn't surprise me when it happened. I think people underestimate the chances of getting a field goal blocked, especially when it's a long, difficult one.Claytone wrote:The context of this play is nearly as mind-boggling as the play itself. Florida State was #9 in the country and had not lost a regular season game since 2012. Their kicker had never had a kick blocked, nor had he ever missed one in the fourth quarter. Meanwhile, Tech was, as my previous post bemoaned, 2-5 and on a historically poor run. So in the face of all those odds, our boys blocked that kick and ran it back for the walk-off victory, and Bobby Dodd Stadium was instantly a madhouse. Unreal. Easily the best home game of my undergraduate career, and on homecoming weekend, no less. A sports memory I'll cherish forever!
Moments like these are *precisely* why I'll always prefer college football to pro. That, and the fact that there's something just slightly more special about cheering for students of one's alma mater than a bunch of randoms from all over the country paid to play ball in my city
It actually was a play that one could contrast the college game from the pro game though in the sense that because the hash marks are so wide, you can end up kicking field goals from angles far to the right or left of the goal posts. Not too many people care about hash marks, but it makes a big difference when hash marks are 18.5 feet apart(NFL) versus 40 feet like it is in college. In this scenario for the FSU kicker, at the start of the play he's standing, I don't know, about 15 feet say to the left of the nearest goal post. That's going to decrease your chances of making the field goal. You not only have to kick it more than 56 yards and high enough so that it's not blocked, and to angle it in between the goal posts, but you also to have to get the ball to travel a good distance to the right as well. Chances are the Florida State play callers weren't paying too much attention to hash marks either, otherwise they probably could have avoided the situation without having too much limitation on the types of plays they could call. The management of that final drive in general by Florida State wasn't great.
Also odd that FSU had a bunch of offensive lineman blocking there. That's usually not who teams have out there on Special Teams. I can't recall recently seeing that ever in the pro game. Putting those guys out there didn't appear to help the protection, and it certainly hurt on the pursuit of the Georgia Tech player once he recovered the blocked kick.
There's plenty to learn from on that one play. But such is the case with the sport in general. You could spend all day studying all the ins and outs of a single play in American football.