Andy Norton

Department of Mathematics Education

University of Georgia


*see other examples


Game Day!

The football rules in college football were changed a few years ago have made the uprights 5 feet narrower than previously. Many game commentators have harped about how much harder it is to kick field goals from the hash marks.

Assume the field goal is attempted from the hash marks. At what yard marker does the kicker have maximum angle to the two uprights.

Is there any merit to some commentators argument to take a penalty in order to have a "better angle" on the field goal kick?


Our football delima is one of subtending angles. We turn to Dr. Math for a definition of this mathematical term:

If you think of the side opposite say angle A in a triangle, then that
side 'SUBTENDS' angle A. The word is most commonly used for the chord
of a circle, SUBTENDING an angle at the circumference or at the centre
of the circle. You can also think of the arc of a circle subtending an
angle at the centre or at the circumference. The angle subtended is
'opposite' the chord or arc.

 

-Doctor Anthony, The Math Forum
Check out our web site! http://forum.swarthmore.edu/dr.math/


You can create some subtending angles of a fixed segment by clicking on the following GSP script file: Subtend.gss

Now, let's look at a GSP file which illustrates the problem. Click on the picture below to see an animation of kicking angles at different points on the right hash-line.

In the animation, we have a measure of the "kicking angle." Here, when we use the term kicking angle, we refer to the angle that subtends the width of the field goal from any fixed point along the right hash-line. Notice where this angle is maximized...


In the subtend.gss script we see that the locus of verteces for a fixed angle subtending a fixed segment is a circle. In other words, if a segment defines a cord of a circle, then any point on the circle outside the arc formed by that cord subtends that cord (or segment) at a fixed angle. Realizing this statement is a little complicated, let's, once again, turn to an illustration...


By clicking this picture, you can go to a GSP file which will allow you to move point C and observe that the angles on the circle subtending AB remain constant. Also, notice that, for bigger circles, the angles are smaller and visa versa. So, in order to maximize the kicking angle, we want to minimize the size of the circle.

In order to understand this, consider the equilateral triangle ABC. We can form a right triangle ADC by dividing ABC in half, thus dividing the subtending angle of AB in half. We know that:


Clearly, this ratio is getting smaller as C moves further out. In fact, the limit as C moves away from AB is 0, and we know that the Tangent of an angle is zero when the angle is zero.


Moving on, let us return to our football problem...

At what distance on the right hash-line, is our angle maximized?

This point, as discussed, will be the point on the right hash-line which defines, with the segment formed by the field goal, the smallest circle. Since the circle bounded by the hash-marks will be smaller than those that extend beyond it, and since the circle must include a point on the hash-marks, the smallest cirlce will have the hash-line as a tangent line.

The following script finds the center of the previously described circle for any field goal and hash-mark width. By drawing a perpendicular form this center to the hash-line, we obtain and measure the maximal kicking angle...

Kicking Angle.gss

By using this script and the following College Football regulations:

a) The right hash mark is 5 yards (or 15 feet) from the center of the field.
b) The new regulation field goal width is 18.5 feet.

...we can now do a GSP construction to find this maximal kicking angle. We find that the maximal kicking vertex is about 3 yards from the back of the end zone and the maximal angle is about 26 degrees. Unfortunately, kickers cannot cannot kick within the endzone. In fact, they kick 7 yards behind the line of scrimage. So the best kicking angle, on the hash-marks, is at the 7 yard line.

Note, then, that there is no advantage of taking a penalty for a "better angle." The best angle is found in the closest spot.



Link to ESPN College Football