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Sports Illustrated
Sports Illustrated
Sport
Richard Johnson

How Two Earlier Kicks Hinted at FSU’s Epic Extra-Point Block

The plays that make up the course of a football game sometimes do not occur in a vacuum, and the same can be said for Florida State’s incredible block of LSU’s game-tying extra point attempt to punctuate its wacky 24–23 Week 1 victory over the Tigers. One team’s playmaking ability is often another team’s gaffe exploited. The fact is, LSU had issues that led up to that point, which in retrospect made the blocked kick an unfortunate culmination of a night of protection woes.

The Tigers actually made their first kick when Damian Ramos connected on a 36-yarder on the first drive of the game, but if you look closely you can see that the short kick could have been an early disaster.

Tigers senior Cameron Wire (No. 61) actually does an admirable job of anchoring when two Florida State defenders drive him nearly all the way back into Ramos as he completes his kicking motion. LSU benefits from the fact that the operation time (a term for the time from the snap until the kick leaves Ramos’s foot) is good. Anything greater than the optimal 1.3 seconds and Ramos may have had to alter his stroke, causing an errant kick or the kick hitting Wire in the back.

But on Ramos’s second kick attempt, which FSU blocked, the fine margins bit the Tigers.

FSU again sends two defenders (No. 38 Shyheim Brown and No. 5 Jared Verse) at Wire, but this time in a slightly different fashion. On the first kick, both defenders take a piece of Wire to drive him backwards. On the second, Brown takes on Wire in a thicker fashion down the middle of his body, and Verse squeezes through to block the kick barely impeded.

“As it relates to the field goal, it came from the same left side,” Brian Kelly said after the game. “We made an adjustment after the [blocked] field goal and made a switch in personnel, and that didn't work either. That's on us. We have to do a better job coaching.”

The personnel change he’s talking about is Wire coming out for No. 50 Emery Jones. FSU doesn’t really attempt to fully rush LSU the next two times the field goal unit is on the field for the made PATs on LSU’s two touchdowns, but on the final PAT—as we’ve all seen—the Noles bring the heat and get the block.

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This time, the pressure comes one gap to the left between Jones and tight end Mason Taylor (No. 86), who’s playing the wing at the end of the line of scrimmage for the Tigers. Verse occupies Jones this time, but when Florida State’s Kevin Knowles II (No. 3) rushes around the edge, Taylor widens to try and get a hand on him. The combination of the two things let Brown get through scot free to win the game.

“It was the type of block [special teams coordinator John Papuchis] called that secured the block and was able to get it,” Brown said after the game. … “It’s all because of Jared Verse and [Knowles] on the edge, they bring the pressure so my hole opened right up. I was able to get through, shoot both hands and block the kick.”

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