Posted by Michael David Smith on Pro Football Talk of NBC Sports
Does the +NFL's new rule moving extra point kicks back 13 yards make much of a difference to how teams assemble their rosters?
It does according to Denver Broncos coach Gary Kubiak, who sees NFL teams signing players specifically for their ability to score on two-point conversions.
“I think there [are] going to be two-point specialists from the standpoint of how you go about doing it. Coaching, those are things that you work on,” Kubiak said, via +Lindsay H. Jones of +USA TODAY Sports. “You probably practice those things during camp. It’s not very much and, all of a sudden, it becomes part of the game. That’s a big part of practice. It’s going to change the way you go about doing things. I know that.”
The player most often named as a potential two-point specialist is Tim Tebow, whose presence on the +Philadelphia Eagles' roster has some thinking that Chip Kelly must have some two-point conversion tricks up his sleeve.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for contacting Sports CR3W Inc. (App). All rights reserved on the logo and intellectual property of "CR3W." Any misuse or republication without written consent and full, legal, and proper attribution will be susceptible to the full extent of the law on license/copyright infringement.
We are available via twitter @SportsCR3W, G+ page name & community (page response is faster) and also on facebook.com/sportsCR3W... Please allow 48 hours to respond via email or get your message. If you would like a quicker one, twitter and G+ will probably yield a quicker result.
Aside from that, pop up a comment or two and get the discussion running where 7 or 8 out of 10 posters are just trolling. This is for passionate, even opinionated sports aficianados, but it is also for those that know better than to troll along and be a rough and tough one on a keyboard. Enjoy things instead of negativity all the time. LIFE'S GOOD 'BRUH!
Thank you,
Dedicated members from Sports CR3W, affiliation with myCR3W Inc (Apps), a registered trademark and all right reserved.