I just spent three minutes banging out a post that essentially said this.jf wrote:I have to agree with you here. I actually think Belicheck schooled Carrol by not calling time out . I think Carrol was expecting Belicheck to call time out after the first down run . Then when the clock started to run down Carrol panicked. Bellicheck had the proper run defense in and for Carrol to change , he would have had to use his last time out with 26 seconds left. Wilson screwed up too , because all he had to do was throw the ball through the uprights and he would still have had two plays left . In the end , the better coached team won .MWB wrote:The 538 article defending it gets the timing wrong. I really don't think they would have had to throw at all. They let quite a bit of time run off between first and second down that they didn't need to.

Belechick and the Pats had two timeouts of their own left in their pocket. Traditionally, you'd expect the defense to call a TO after the 1st down run, or to just stand aside and let SEA score asap. Preserves the most amount of clock, right? Well, the Pats did not call a timeout. And I think that forced SEA's hand and compromised their play calling ability. If the Pats call TO after the 1st down run, that leaves SEA the opportunity to run the ball three times with Beast. But by letting the clock continue to run, that pretty much forced the issue on SEA that at least one of their plays was going to be a pass. Wasn't necessarily going to be 2d down, but at least one of the three had to be a throw. And I think that put the advantage in the Pats' hands.
And the ball placement on Wilson's throw was monstrously terrible. He threw it to the one spot where a defender could make a play; that ball goes to the receiver's trail hip, or at his knees. Of course, in the latter case there's no possibility of a score, and it essentially becomes a wasted play that only take six seconds off the clock. But at least you don't throw a pick.
I'd say the odds of a pick were far lower than the odds of a Lynch fumble. Across the NFL in 2014 there were 110 pass attempts from the 1 yd line, and that was the first and only interception thrown.shmenguin wrote:-the odds of an interception happening were probably comparable to the odds of lynch fumbling