One question lingers - after scoring that late TD against Ithaca, why go for the 2 points after the TD instead of the almost certain PAT kick to tie and hope to take the game that meant so much to OT??
Whenever I discuss end-of-game decisions in sports, I always remind people that we never know exactly how it would have played out with a different decision, unless what happened is so late there were very few courses of action. My big example: If Bill Buckner had gotten that out, the game would have continued (it was tied) with no guarantee the Red Sox win. Odds would still have been in the Mets' favor (being the home team in extra-innings).
With that out of the way, I did ask Coach Isernia about the decision when I interviewed him prior to the Union game. A summation:
They had the chance to take the lead. Going for two in football is generally considered a 50/50 shot, but they felt the play they ran had better odds than 50/50. RPI also had two timeouts, so if they failed, they could stop the clock and get the ball back if they stopped Ithaca in three plays (which they did). Additionally, they had a kick blocked earlier and were concerned about a repeat of that.
When RPI went for the two (and the lead) in 2021 against Union, the situation was worse. Less time on the clock, there was no expectation of getting the ball back if it did not work (onside kick was successful). You take chances, sometimes they work, sometimes they do not. No guarantees in a game or in life. Make a choice and live with it.
Here are the scenarios. I asked AI to run estimates on previous football games to generate approximate odds for victory:
1. RPI goes for 2, makes it, now leads by 1
Ithaca is down 1 with the ball; any field goal or touchdown wins it. If they do not score, RPI wins; there is no overtime risk.
RPI win estimate: ~60%
2. RPI kicks the extra point, ties the game, then kicks off
Ithaca gets the ball. Any Ithaca score likely wins in regulation. If Ithaca does not score, probably overtime, which is close to 50–50 overall with only a small bias based on overtime choice order (defense first has the advantage). Both teams are making different clock choices. RPI is no longer immediately using timeouts as they give Ithaca an advantage, so even if Ithaca does not score there will be less time on the clock if RPI gets a stop (RPI got the ball with 40 seconds left in reality). Ithaca can afford to use the clock so long as they are moving the ball, they can dial back the offense if they feel they will not get close enough to score but do not want RPI to get the ball with time left.
RPI win estimate: ~35%
This is noticeably worse than being up 1, because in the "no score" scenario here RPI only gets a coin-flip, not an automatic win.
3. RPI goes for 2 and misses OR goes for 1 and misses, still trail by 1, then kicks off
Ithaca can:
* Run clock and punt, leaving RPI with little time/too much field to win. NOTE: This happened.
* Get a first down and essentially kill the game.
RPI's path to victory is "get a quick stop or turnover then execute a scoring drive" – both things that must happen.
RPI win estimate: ~15%
At the end of the game, with two timeouts still available, 1:53 is a lot of time left for Ithaca. Once Ithaca gets the ball on the kickoff, the teams make different choices depending on the score being tied or Ithaca up by 1. I do not believe Ithaca would have executed three rushing plays by the QB if the game were tied (that is what they did). Those plays were called to get RPI to use its timeouts. A tied game would see different plays. Maybe they would have fumbled or been intercepted. We will never know.
But there are two things that are always true in football:
1. At any point, being in the lead is better than being tied, which is still better than trailing.
2. Having the ball is better than not having the ball.
At the end game, if the score is tied, the team with the ball has a better chance of winning. That is what RPI was looking at if they kicked and tied it. They rolled the dice and lost. It happens.