Boomer Esiason delivered a strong message to Mike Vrabel and analytics folks while speaking at halftime of the Tennessee Titans-Cincinnati Bengals AFC divisional round playoff game on Saturday.
The Titans were down 6-0 in the second quarter to the Bengals, who had kicked a pair of field goals early in the game. Tennessee tied it up with a Derrick Henry touchdown run in the second quarter.
Rather than attempt an extra point to take a 7-6 lead, the Titans went for two. Henry’s rush attempt fell short, leaving the game tied at six.
The Titans went into halftime trailing 9-6 and lost 19-16.
At halftime, Esiason took a shot at analytics folks while criticizing the Titans for their decision.
“This goes to all coaches out there. And I don’t want to upset people from MIT, Harvard or Yale. Don’t go for two until you have to. That’s my algorithm, and I’m sticking to it,” Esiason said.
During the CBS Halftime Report, Boomer Esiason, holder of the highest QB effectiveness score for a single season (1988) (cet. par.), outrageously suggested that a Harvard graduate would have backed Vrabel’s decision try for 2. My classmates and I all recognized a FG was in order. pic.twitter.com/GkU2LGUHoN
— NFL Data Analyst | Harrison P. Kent IV (@harrisonpkent) January 22, 2022
There really was no reason to go for two at that point. Maybe Vrabel thought there was an opportunity to steal one more point by going for two, and if the Titans didn’t make it, at worst the game would be tied.
Would it have made much of a difference had they converted? Probably not. The Bengals were the better team and came out hotter. Tennessee’s offense was flat, beginning and ending with Ryan Tannehill’s three interceptions, which cost his team the game.
The failed two-point conversion was emblematic of bigger problems, such as Tennessee's inability to execute, rather than a reflection of multiple poor coaching decisions.
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