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The new kickoff formation preserves the onside kick, sort of. While the device for the kicking team to maintain possession can be used by a team trailing in the fourth quarter, the surprise onside kick is dead and gone.

Most donโ€™t have a problem with it, because it had become a rare aspect of modern football.

Still, the possibility always lingered. Now, itโ€™s been erased.

A coach whose who once deployed the tactic in a fairly big game isnโ€™t a fan of the change.

โ€œOne thing I donโ€™t like about it is that weโ€™re trying to take away the onside kick,โ€ former Steelers coach Bill Cowher recently told CBS Sports. โ€œAs a guy who used an onside kick in the Super Bowl, it made me very sad when I saw that happen. . . . I still think thatโ€™s an exciting play.โ€

The Steelers used a surprise onside kick in Super Bowl XXX against the Cowboys, and Pittsburgh recovered it.

While Cowher acknowledges that not many surprise onside kicks happened, he doesnโ€™t think it should have been eliminated from the game.

โ€œI understand the numbers are low,โ€ Cowher said. โ€œBut on an onside kick the numbers should be low. Itโ€™s a unique play. Itโ€™s a hard play. Itโ€™s a strategical part of the game. It slows down the front line. . . .

โ€œTo be able to do this in the third quarter, the front line starts to get back and loosen up a little bit. Or you can put one in that little dead area and it hits the ground. Those are the things that are exciting.

โ€œIs it gonna be successful? Probably not? Thatโ€™s the risk and reward. Sometimes you donโ€™t have to be successful to make a point. Donโ€™t leave early because weโ€™re gonna try it.โ€

The problem is that, even if an onside kick under the new formation could be used at any time in the game, it would have to be declared before it happens. Otherwise, the kicking team uses the new formation that has the kicker at his own 35 โ€” and the other 10 players 25 yards away, on the receiving teamโ€™s 40.

The change also wipes out the various other things that a team could do, such as setting up for an onside kick and pooching the ball into the โ€œdead areaโ€ (as Cowher described it) behind the receiving team. Under the new rules, any onside kick that goes untouched for 15 yards behind the receiving teamโ€™s setup zone results in a 15-yard penalty from the spot of the kick.

So if, for example, an onside kick from the kicking teamโ€™s 35 makes it past the receiving teamโ€™s 40 untouched, the receiving team gets the ball at the kicking teamโ€™s 20.

Yes, the onside kick has survived. But there will be no uncertainty or mystery to it. Everyone will know itโ€™s definitely coming. It will never be a surprise. Even if it was barely used before, it will now be used never.

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