Winslow Townson/AP
In the offseason, NFL owners voted to move the extra-point kick point line further back after teams had made 99% of extra-point kicks the year before. Moving the kick to the 15-yard line turned it from a 17-yard kick to a 33-yard kick.
In doing so, the NFL hoped there would be less guarantee of making the extra point and more incentive go to for two.
The results have been positive so far. In Week 1, there were four missed extra-point attempts, putting the NFL on pace to have 70 during the season compared to eight all of last year.
Early in Week 2, we've already seen the NFL adapt to the new rule. The Pittsburgh Steelers perhaps best exemplified this by going for two on their first two touchdowns of the game, both in the first half.
The timing of the two-point attempts were surprising, too, as the Steelers are the first team this season to go for two while leading the game. In Week 1, the only teams to go for two were teams trailing by two.
In general, the Steelers broke about every rule in the game regarding two-point conversions:
Move over, Ken Dilger: http://t.co/imSKYTEJh9Antonio Brown the first player to score on a 2pt conversion in the 1st quarter since '98.
- Football Perspective (@fbgchase) September 20, 2015