Oh no! You are going to hurt my feelings. Oh wait, no you did not.
I posted "The first number your proved is not true and it is clear your "history" of the game probably begins with 1990. In the 1930s the XP % was in the 60% and range -"
So you are saying that the % did not drop to the 60% range in the 1930s? And the football gods did not move the goals posts? I want to make sure about what exactly I am talking out my ***.
Since you appear to like to use google, what was the % in 1932? What did the football gods do right after that?
So the claim I made that the football gods moved the goals posts back in the 70s (74?) is also wrong? You know why they moved it back? Because in the late 60s as you found using google kickers were hitting 95%. At that point it was too late because the specialist era had begin.
The point was that football has ****** with the XP plenty of times and they should again because it would make it more interesting. And seriously, don't get all butt hurt cause its bad for your blood pressure.
This is extremely incoherent rambling. What the **** is your point?
So the NFL made rule changes in the past to keep the XP at around 95% in the past? Doesn't that prove my point?
That if the NFL rules makers didn't like the 76 our of 113 (67.3%) conversion rate of XP's in 1932 and only SIX made field goals all season (back then they didn't kick FG's they just went for it on 4th down all the time) they made it EASIER on kickers? What a ******* surprise... that's my point!!!
The goalposts did move in 1974. And wouldn't you know it, XP% in 1973 was at an all-time high - 98% and most importantly, teams were trying WAY too many FG's - there were 861 attempts in 182 games played that year (5 per game) in an era that scoring was 19.5 points per game (which was steadily falling since the mid-60's).
The league wanted to match up with college (which had the goal posts in the back since 1927 or something) AND thought teams would attempt less FG's and go for TD's more (and increase TD's) and there were safety concerns with the posts in the field of play.
What actually happened is less FG attempts AND TD's stayed the same - scoring dropped to 18.2 in 1974. That all led to the offensive rule changes in 1978 and since to increase scoring to compensate.
Still doesn't change the fact that for most of the modern history of football (since 1945), XP's have been at or above 90% and averaged around 95% throughout most of the game's history.
The rules changes to the goal posts, location and width have had a lot more to do with FG% and safety than thoughts on XP percentage.
And the 2-point conversion discussion is really only a "modern" discussion anyhow since that rule was first implemented in the NFL in 1994 and has settled into a fairly consistent pattern of around 28 made out of 60 attempts per season.
40 made in 1995
35 made in 2000
27 made in 2005
26 made in 2010
28 made in 2014