Once there, however, only Mahomes got to control the ball. Why?
Is that fair? A lot of fans believe that both teams should get the ball at least once in overtime like in college football. Indeed, a look at the statistics indicates that college football, especially in the playoffs, likely has a more equitable system for deciding overtime outcomes.
The team that wins the toss usually decides to go on defense first because they can know if the other team scored a touchdown or a field goal or failed to score. Based on that, the team that goes second can choose to be more or less aggressive when they get on offense.
The team that has received the ball second has won 49.7% of the time since 2013, or right about 50% of the time. In other words, there has not been an advantage to going second.
I actually agreed with these folks before I looked at the most recent data. What seems to have happened is that there may have been a slight advantage to going second in earlier data.
Wilson in an email told me that “there is no statistical significant difference (i.e. advantage) to choosing to go on defense first in college football OT.” A better predictor of whether you win or lose in overtime is whether you have the more talented team.
The NFL system is quite different. A team can win the overtime coin toss, receive the opening kickoff and win with a touchdown without the other team getting an offensive possession. If the receiving team does not score a touchdown on its first possession (or if the kicking team does not score a touchdown on a turnover), the game continues.
In other words, there has been about an 11 percentage point advantage in getting the ball first in the current NFL overtime system. Since 2017, when the overtime period was shrunk to 10 minutes in the regular season, the advantage in regular season games has been about 15 percentage points (54% to 39%).
To be clear, the advantage of the team that gets the ball first in NFL overtime isn’t dominating. I was surprised by how small it is. If you were to run statistical tests, it’s right on the edge of statistical significance.
Put another way, a great team is still likely to beat a bad team in overtime. But when the teams are fairly evenly matched, getting the ball first probably matters.
The playoffs is such a time when the teams are usually fairly evenly matched. Although the sample size is just 11 games, the team that has gotten the ball first in overtime since 2011 has won 10 times — a small sample size but a pretty big statistical departure.
There’s a reason many Falcons fans cried foul after that Super Bowl. Today, many Bills fans know the pain.