Man, I'm glad I got this done before the NSFL season started. But yes, this is the second half of my gigantic NSFL scorigami article. If you missed the first part, click this sentence. And if you're already up to speed, let's mosey on over to Season 10.
Season 10:
In Season 10, we haven’t hit that big dropoff yet, but it’s coming. We’re holding steady at 27 scorigami again. We’re seeing a lot of action in the single-digit for the loser range again, but those rows are filling up fast, and it won’t be able to sustain lots of scorigami for much longer. We’re also seeing a lot of scorigami on the far right; seven scorigami were achieved by one team scoring at least 45 points. We also saw the lowest-scoring game of all-time (to this point), a 10-3 win for the Second Line over the Otters in the NSFC Championship game. But the game that followed that would have a very interesting tale of its own.
Ultimus X: New Orleans vs. Baltimore. New Orleans is looking for its second straight title, while Baltimore wants their first one ever. This is the game that probably ensured Turk Turkleton’s place in the Hall of Fame. New Orleans was leading 17-7 in the second quarter and Baltimore needed a spark. Turkelton gave them three points in the early second, and then two more field goals near the end of the half, 17-16 at the break. Turkleton got his fourth field goal as the second half began, and after the two teams traded touchdowns, Turk got #5 in the fourth, and that was enough to hold off the Second Line and earn the Hawks the title, 29-23.
Season 11:
The decline hasn’t been abrupt, but it’s unmistakeable. We’re down to just 22 scorigami, and the good majority of them are at the bottom of the board. We’ve got nine scorigami this season where the losing team scored at least 30 points. Through the first ten seasons of the league, there were only 18 scorigami total where the losing team scored at least 30 points, and no season had more than four. Aside from that though, there wasn’t any discernible pattern. When you only have 13 scorigami to look at (not counting the ones I just mentioned), it’s not easy to find a commonality between them. But going back to the high-scoring games for a second, we’ve got the big one here. We’ve got the highest-scoring game in NSFL history.
Week 6: Yellowknife vs. Colorado. I swear, the Yeti always manage to find their way into these posts. So unlike a lot of score-fests, this game didn’t have insane passing numbers. Of the eleven touchdowns scored in this game, only two of them were of the passing variety. Eight were rushing, and one was defensive, and four of those scores came from Colorado rookie Devo Cansino in a career performance. After Yellowknife opened the scoring with a touchdown, the Yeti responded with 37 unanswered points. After that, the Wraiths fought back with gusto in the second half to cut the lead down to 37-31, but the Yeti put the nails in the coffin with a touchdown, a pick, and another touchdown in 33 seconds to take a 51-31 lead. Some garbage time points by the Yeti later, including a pick-six by Thad Pennington from Brad Pennington, and we’re left with the highest-scoring NSFL game ever, 51-41. And just for funsies, two more S11 games are relatively close to this game’s 92 total points: A 51-34 Second Line win over the Outlaws in Week 5, and a 44-41 win for the Outlaws over the Otters in Week 13. This means that Season 11 had three of the top five highest-scoring games ever (to that point).
Season 12:
As I started counting up Season 12, the first three games of the season were scorigami, and it made me think we were heading for another big scorigami resurgence. And these were high scoring ones too: Otters over Yeti, 51-24; Hawks over Liberty 57-28; and Sabercats over Second Line 45-16. Hopes were high, dreams were running wild, it’s a new day, yes it is. There were only 18 scorigami on the season, nearly ten fewer then there were just two seasons ago, and down almost half from four seasons ago. My hopes were slightly premature. This season continues a couple of trends. While not as huge as last season’s nine games where the loser scored 30 points or more, this season had four of them, which matched the previous high. This also marked the fourth straight year where a scorigami happened with the winner scoring less than 13 points, after just one in the first eight seasons of the league. And oddly enough, we saw a return to the classic 10-24 block, with three scorigami happening there. This is after we saw just two scorigami happen in that square in the last five seasons.
For the featured game, let’s find something close and exciting: Week 11, New Orleans vs. Colorado. Oi, these guys again, I swear this is not on purpose. This game is a dogfight from start to finish. Colorado’s Peg Leg kicks two field goals to take an early 6-0 lead, but Borkus Maximus runs one in and gives New Orleans a 7-6 lead. New Orleans’s Borro Gore tacks on two more rushing scores, to give New Orleans a 21-6 lead, but Colorado comes clawing back. A field goal to end the half followed by two TDs, a Devo Cansino run and a James Bishop catch, gives Colorado the lead, and they even add another field goal to boot, 26-21 Colorado. But New Orleans responds with a touchdown to Thjalfi Halvorsen. They go for two to make it a three-point lead and they fail. After a Colorado three-and-out, New Orleans tried to put the game away with a 39-yard field goal, but it was no good. That gave Colorado one final chance, with under two minutes to play. They got to the New Orleans 40, and with no timeouts left, they had to settle for a 57-yard field goal attempt. The kick was good, Peg Leg was a hero, and the game ended in a 29-27 scorigami.
Week 13:
A late surge in scorigami prevented another decline, and we’re holding strong at 19 scorigami this season, and there’s a pretty easy pattern to spot here. Every single scorigami this season came from the winner scoring at least 26 points. This was a high-scoring, high-octane season. We also saw three games where a team scored at least 56 points, which was a new high, including a 59-0 victory for the Yeti over the Liberty, the highest-scoring shutout since Season 2. Also, the 17 row is getting pretty crowded as we saw five scorigami where the loser scored 17. That probably isn’t anything we can analyze or anything, but that row is pretty much off-limits for scorigami now, barring the other team scoring a ton of points.
Most interesting scorigami of the season? Week 2: New Orleans vs. San Jose. This was a kicker’s duel. By the end of this game, both Beat Meoff of the Second Line, and Neo Donaldson of the Sabercats would hit four field goals each. New Orleans was hot in the first half, scoring on a Tyler Swift rushing score, three Meoff field goals, and a pick-six by Tana Keita as time expired in the first half. They led 23-7 at the break, but Neo Donaldson would single-footedly bring them back into the game with 12 unanswered points from four second-half field goals. Another field goal by Beat Meoff gave New Orleans a seven-point lead with under five minutes to play, 26-19 (this would be scorigami if the game ended here). But San Jose marched down the field quickly in response. After a good return by Kazimir Oles, they hit Ty Justice for 12, Chris Orosz for 20, Oles for 26, and after an incompletion, a touchdown pass to Chris Orosz, we’re heading to overtime, bonus football for all… except Donaldson missed the extra point. This time a New Orleans football team benefited from a potentially-game-tying missed extra point, and the Second Line ran out the clock, giving them a 26-25 scorigami win.
Week 14:
If you know anything about crazy scores from Season 14, you already know the game I’m going to mention (but if you don’t, look for the pale blue squares on the board and try to guess which one it is). Once again, we had 19 scorigami and once again, they tended to go toward the right side of the board. Only two scorigami saw the winner score less than 28 points. And a lot of them preside in the mid-to-late 30s. We’re also seeing some scores in the mid-40s with low losing scores, so we’re seeing more blowouts. But nothing comes close this season’s featured game. Not only did we see the highest margin of victory in one game, but also the most points scored by a single team in NSFL history.
Week 12: Orange County vs. Arizona. I remember covering this game in my first season of doing MVP Rankings, and this game made Gus T.T. Showbiz a contender for that honor pretty much overnight. Let’s start by just listing the results of the first ten drives of the game: punt by Arizona, Ricky Adams rushing touchdown for OC, fumble by Arizona, Ricky Adams rushing touchdown for OC again, interception by Arizona that was returned for six by OC’s Danny Grithead, turnover on downs by Arizona, Django Anao’i receiving touchdown by OC, three-and-out by Arizona, Carlito Crush receiving touchdown, three-and-out by Arizona. By this point, it was 34-0 with 20 minutes elapsed in the game and Orange County never took their foot off of the throat. Showbiz would throw five more touchdowns in the second half while the defense stifled the Arizona offense, holding them to less than 230 total yards and three turnovers. This was carnage, and a lone touchdown pass from Andrew Reese to Sam Hardwick was the only thing keeping this from being a total shutout. Final score: 76-7 and a huge scorigami.
Season 15:
Having not written about the two most recent seasons yet, I’m fairly certain this’ll be the low point of scorigami. We’re down to a scant 15 scorigami, but there’s still interesting stories to be found. This is the first season since Season 3 with multiple shutout scorigami, a 20-0 and a 49-0, which had its own weird story but suffice to say, those 49 points didn’t just come from seven touchdowns. We’ve had five scorigami where both teams combined for more than 70 points, the most since Season 7. And somehow, we started and ended the season with scorigami, 63-13 Hawks over Yeti in the first game of the season, and 49-0 Hawks over Sabercats in the Ultimus. So congrats to Baltimore there, I guess.
Now then, there were two scorigami that I wanted to choose from that were directly next to each other on the board, and I went with this one, just because the game was a bit more interesting to look at. Week 11, Philadelphia vs. Arizona. Philly started this game strong with 10 points from their first two possessions. Arizona responded quickly with two passing touchdowns from Andrew Reese to take a 14-10 lead, but Philly answered back emphatically with a 108-yard kickoff return TD by Lennox Garnett, which is still tied for the longest play in NSFL history. Philly had the lead back 17-14, but unfortunately for them, this would be the last time they’d hold the lead in this game. Arizona kicker Dean Jackson would get really useful, scoring four field goals on four consecutive drives that didn’t include the end of a half. On their next drive, they’d finally crack the end zone to take a 33-17 lead. To start the fourth quarter, the Liberty would march down the field and score a touchdown with the two added to make it a one-score game, but Arizona wasn’t playing around that night. Brock Landers would catch Andrew Reese’s fourth TD of the night, and Ricky Adams would run one in as time was expiring to give Arizona the win, 47-25.
Season 16:
I was expecting a bit more scorigami here, but maybe that was misguided. There were two more teams added to the league and a wild card round added to the playoffs, so that’s a bunch more games. However, there was a week taken off the schedule, so the increase in games wasn’t as pronounced as you might think. But, we did go up slightly to 17, 18 if you include the 1-4 match in the wildcard round, but since that game was predetermined, I do not, deal with it. Aside from that, they were just all over the place. Almost none of them were next to each other, so there wasn’t a real pattern to spot. Let’s pick out a game here.
NSFC Championship Match, Chicago vs. Philadelphia. The match started fast and furious as Adriana Falconi was picked off on the first drive of the game, and Lightsout Lewis ran it back for six points. Philly came back strong though with 13 unanswered to give them the lead. After the two teams traded field goals, the Butchers put ten on the board to take a 20-16 lead into the half. But then Philly went off for 21 points in the third quarter to take a lead, 37-20, and they’d never relinquish that lead. Chicago would fight back and bring it down to 40-34, but they’d never get a chance to close that lead, as Philly would successfully run out the clock, score one final touchdown, and even pick off Rose Jenkins on the last play of the game to throw the dirt on the coffin. Final score, 47-34.
Season 17:
The bottom has finally dropped. We are down to eight scorigami. Maybe this is just an apparition, maybe they’ll bounce back this season, but still, what a drop. All eight games lie in the 30s or 40s for the winners, so there’s plenty of scoring this season at least, but looking at the 30s columns, they’re getting filled up, so maybe the serious decline in scorigami is here to stay. In fact, given the lack of scorigami, I couldn’t even find one that had an interesting tale to tell attached to it, or at least one that wasn’t nearly identical to other matches I’ve talked about. I really hope things turn around soon or scorigami might become a dying art.
So where do we stand now? Well, as you might expect, the 1, 2, 4, 8, and 11 rows have seen no action whatsoever, with 5 only getting that one game from Season 7. We’ve still never seen a team win with single-digit points. We’ve only seen two ties ever, 21-21 in Season 3 and 27-27 in Season 6. We’ve got a surprising number of openings in the 0 row, as it’s still really hard to shutout a team. 42 is a good number to score for a winning team, as that has a lot of openings, as does just about any score where both teams combine for at least 75 points. And somehow, through 17 seasons, we’ve still never gotten a 21-17 game. I shit you not. That’s like the most basic football score ever, what the actual heck?
One last thing before we end this thing off. I want to see if there’s any scorigami that the NSFL has hit in their relatively short existence that the NFL hasn’t got in their 100 years of action. So we’re going to take the NFL scorigami board, drop the opacity on it, and overlay in on our board. If you see numbers that don’t have a green tinge to them, that’s one for us that they don’t have.
For starters, the NFL has so much action in the 0 and 2 lines. My guess is football was just like that in the 20s and 30s. But, we do have our first one, the 65-0 game from Season 2. To the far right of the board, we see a couple of stragglers that would just be ridiculously hard to replicate. There’re some scores in the middle of the board that would require both teams to score bizarre point totals like 32-22, 26-25, and 25-18 that the NSFL has hit. But other than that, I think that’s the history of NSFL scoring in its entirety. Now can someone please score a defensive one-point safety? I wanna make a follow-up with that in it.
2917 words .
Season 10:
In Season 10, we haven’t hit that big dropoff yet, but it’s coming. We’re holding steady at 27 scorigami again. We’re seeing a lot of action in the single-digit for the loser range again, but those rows are filling up fast, and it won’t be able to sustain lots of scorigami for much longer. We’re also seeing a lot of scorigami on the far right; seven scorigami were achieved by one team scoring at least 45 points. We also saw the lowest-scoring game of all-time (to this point), a 10-3 win for the Second Line over the Otters in the NSFC Championship game. But the game that followed that would have a very interesting tale of its own.
Ultimus X: New Orleans vs. Baltimore. New Orleans is looking for its second straight title, while Baltimore wants their first one ever. This is the game that probably ensured Turk Turkleton’s place in the Hall of Fame. New Orleans was leading 17-7 in the second quarter and Baltimore needed a spark. Turkelton gave them three points in the early second, and then two more field goals near the end of the half, 17-16 at the break. Turkleton got his fourth field goal as the second half began, and after the two teams traded touchdowns, Turk got #5 in the fourth, and that was enough to hold off the Second Line and earn the Hawks the title, 29-23.
Season 11:
The decline hasn’t been abrupt, but it’s unmistakeable. We’re down to just 22 scorigami, and the good majority of them are at the bottom of the board. We’ve got nine scorigami this season where the losing team scored at least 30 points. Through the first ten seasons of the league, there were only 18 scorigami total where the losing team scored at least 30 points, and no season had more than four. Aside from that though, there wasn’t any discernible pattern. When you only have 13 scorigami to look at (not counting the ones I just mentioned), it’s not easy to find a commonality between them. But going back to the high-scoring games for a second, we’ve got the big one here. We’ve got the highest-scoring game in NSFL history.
Week 6: Yellowknife vs. Colorado. I swear, the Yeti always manage to find their way into these posts. So unlike a lot of score-fests, this game didn’t have insane passing numbers. Of the eleven touchdowns scored in this game, only two of them were of the passing variety. Eight were rushing, and one was defensive, and four of those scores came from Colorado rookie Devo Cansino in a career performance. After Yellowknife opened the scoring with a touchdown, the Yeti responded with 37 unanswered points. After that, the Wraiths fought back with gusto in the second half to cut the lead down to 37-31, but the Yeti put the nails in the coffin with a touchdown, a pick, and another touchdown in 33 seconds to take a 51-31 lead. Some garbage time points by the Yeti later, including a pick-six by Thad Pennington from Brad Pennington, and we’re left with the highest-scoring NSFL game ever, 51-41. And just for funsies, two more S11 games are relatively close to this game’s 92 total points: A 51-34 Second Line win over the Outlaws in Week 5, and a 44-41 win for the Outlaws over the Otters in Week 13. This means that Season 11 had three of the top five highest-scoring games ever (to that point).
Season 12:
As I started counting up Season 12, the first three games of the season were scorigami, and it made me think we were heading for another big scorigami resurgence. And these were high scoring ones too: Otters over Yeti, 51-24; Hawks over Liberty 57-28; and Sabercats over Second Line 45-16. Hopes were high, dreams were running wild, it’s a new day, yes it is. There were only 18 scorigami on the season, nearly ten fewer then there were just two seasons ago, and down almost half from four seasons ago. My hopes were slightly premature. This season continues a couple of trends. While not as huge as last season’s nine games where the loser scored 30 points or more, this season had four of them, which matched the previous high. This also marked the fourth straight year where a scorigami happened with the winner scoring less than 13 points, after just one in the first eight seasons of the league. And oddly enough, we saw a return to the classic 10-24 block, with three scorigami happening there. This is after we saw just two scorigami happen in that square in the last five seasons.
For the featured game, let’s find something close and exciting: Week 11, New Orleans vs. Colorado. Oi, these guys again, I swear this is not on purpose. This game is a dogfight from start to finish. Colorado’s Peg Leg kicks two field goals to take an early 6-0 lead, but Borkus Maximus runs one in and gives New Orleans a 7-6 lead. New Orleans’s Borro Gore tacks on two more rushing scores, to give New Orleans a 21-6 lead, but Colorado comes clawing back. A field goal to end the half followed by two TDs, a Devo Cansino run and a James Bishop catch, gives Colorado the lead, and they even add another field goal to boot, 26-21 Colorado. But New Orleans responds with a touchdown to Thjalfi Halvorsen. They go for two to make it a three-point lead and they fail. After a Colorado three-and-out, New Orleans tried to put the game away with a 39-yard field goal, but it was no good. That gave Colorado one final chance, with under two minutes to play. They got to the New Orleans 40, and with no timeouts left, they had to settle for a 57-yard field goal attempt. The kick was good, Peg Leg was a hero, and the game ended in a 29-27 scorigami.
Week 13:
A late surge in scorigami prevented another decline, and we’re holding strong at 19 scorigami this season, and there’s a pretty easy pattern to spot here. Every single scorigami this season came from the winner scoring at least 26 points. This was a high-scoring, high-octane season. We also saw three games where a team scored at least 56 points, which was a new high, including a 59-0 victory for the Yeti over the Liberty, the highest-scoring shutout since Season 2. Also, the 17 row is getting pretty crowded as we saw five scorigami where the loser scored 17. That probably isn’t anything we can analyze or anything, but that row is pretty much off-limits for scorigami now, barring the other team scoring a ton of points.
Most interesting scorigami of the season? Week 2: New Orleans vs. San Jose. This was a kicker’s duel. By the end of this game, both Beat Meoff of the Second Line, and Neo Donaldson of the Sabercats would hit four field goals each. New Orleans was hot in the first half, scoring on a Tyler Swift rushing score, three Meoff field goals, and a pick-six by Tana Keita as time expired in the first half. They led 23-7 at the break, but Neo Donaldson would single-footedly bring them back into the game with 12 unanswered points from four second-half field goals. Another field goal by Beat Meoff gave New Orleans a seven-point lead with under five minutes to play, 26-19 (this would be scorigami if the game ended here). But San Jose marched down the field quickly in response. After a good return by Kazimir Oles, they hit Ty Justice for 12, Chris Orosz for 20, Oles for 26, and after an incompletion, a touchdown pass to Chris Orosz, we’re heading to overtime, bonus football for all… except Donaldson missed the extra point. This time a New Orleans football team benefited from a potentially-game-tying missed extra point, and the Second Line ran out the clock, giving them a 26-25 scorigami win.
Week 14:
If you know anything about crazy scores from Season 14, you already know the game I’m going to mention (but if you don’t, look for the pale blue squares on the board and try to guess which one it is). Once again, we had 19 scorigami and once again, they tended to go toward the right side of the board. Only two scorigami saw the winner score less than 28 points. And a lot of them preside in the mid-to-late 30s. We’re also seeing some scores in the mid-40s with low losing scores, so we’re seeing more blowouts. But nothing comes close this season’s featured game. Not only did we see the highest margin of victory in one game, but also the most points scored by a single team in NSFL history.
Week 12: Orange County vs. Arizona. I remember covering this game in my first season of doing MVP Rankings, and this game made Gus T.T. Showbiz a contender for that honor pretty much overnight. Let’s start by just listing the results of the first ten drives of the game: punt by Arizona, Ricky Adams rushing touchdown for OC, fumble by Arizona, Ricky Adams rushing touchdown for OC again, interception by Arizona that was returned for six by OC’s Danny Grithead, turnover on downs by Arizona, Django Anao’i receiving touchdown by OC, three-and-out by Arizona, Carlito Crush receiving touchdown, three-and-out by Arizona. By this point, it was 34-0 with 20 minutes elapsed in the game and Orange County never took their foot off of the throat. Showbiz would throw five more touchdowns in the second half while the defense stifled the Arizona offense, holding them to less than 230 total yards and three turnovers. This was carnage, and a lone touchdown pass from Andrew Reese to Sam Hardwick was the only thing keeping this from being a total shutout. Final score: 76-7 and a huge scorigami.
Season 15:
Having not written about the two most recent seasons yet, I’m fairly certain this’ll be the low point of scorigami. We’re down to a scant 15 scorigami, but there’s still interesting stories to be found. This is the first season since Season 3 with multiple shutout scorigami, a 20-0 and a 49-0, which had its own weird story but suffice to say, those 49 points didn’t just come from seven touchdowns. We’ve had five scorigami where both teams combined for more than 70 points, the most since Season 7. And somehow, we started and ended the season with scorigami, 63-13 Hawks over Yeti in the first game of the season, and 49-0 Hawks over Sabercats in the Ultimus. So congrats to Baltimore there, I guess.
Now then, there were two scorigami that I wanted to choose from that were directly next to each other on the board, and I went with this one, just because the game was a bit more interesting to look at. Week 11, Philadelphia vs. Arizona. Philly started this game strong with 10 points from their first two possessions. Arizona responded quickly with two passing touchdowns from Andrew Reese to take a 14-10 lead, but Philly answered back emphatically with a 108-yard kickoff return TD by Lennox Garnett, which is still tied for the longest play in NSFL history. Philly had the lead back 17-14, but unfortunately for them, this would be the last time they’d hold the lead in this game. Arizona kicker Dean Jackson would get really useful, scoring four field goals on four consecutive drives that didn’t include the end of a half. On their next drive, they’d finally crack the end zone to take a 33-17 lead. To start the fourth quarter, the Liberty would march down the field and score a touchdown with the two added to make it a one-score game, but Arizona wasn’t playing around that night. Brock Landers would catch Andrew Reese’s fourth TD of the night, and Ricky Adams would run one in as time was expiring to give Arizona the win, 47-25.
Season 16:
I was expecting a bit more scorigami here, but maybe that was misguided. There were two more teams added to the league and a wild card round added to the playoffs, so that’s a bunch more games. However, there was a week taken off the schedule, so the increase in games wasn’t as pronounced as you might think. But, we did go up slightly to 17, 18 if you include the 1-4 match in the wildcard round, but since that game was predetermined, I do not, deal with it. Aside from that, they were just all over the place. Almost none of them were next to each other, so there wasn’t a real pattern to spot. Let’s pick out a game here.
NSFC Championship Match, Chicago vs. Philadelphia. The match started fast and furious as Adriana Falconi was picked off on the first drive of the game, and Lightsout Lewis ran it back for six points. Philly came back strong though with 13 unanswered to give them the lead. After the two teams traded field goals, the Butchers put ten on the board to take a 20-16 lead into the half. But then Philly went off for 21 points in the third quarter to take a lead, 37-20, and they’d never relinquish that lead. Chicago would fight back and bring it down to 40-34, but they’d never get a chance to close that lead, as Philly would successfully run out the clock, score one final touchdown, and even pick off Rose Jenkins on the last play of the game to throw the dirt on the coffin. Final score, 47-34.
Season 17:
The bottom has finally dropped. We are down to eight scorigami. Maybe this is just an apparition, maybe they’ll bounce back this season, but still, what a drop. All eight games lie in the 30s or 40s for the winners, so there’s plenty of scoring this season at least, but looking at the 30s columns, they’re getting filled up, so maybe the serious decline in scorigami is here to stay. In fact, given the lack of scorigami, I couldn’t even find one that had an interesting tale to tell attached to it, or at least one that wasn’t nearly identical to other matches I’ve talked about. I really hope things turn around soon or scorigami might become a dying art.
So where do we stand now? Well, as you might expect, the 1, 2, 4, 8, and 11 rows have seen no action whatsoever, with 5 only getting that one game from Season 7. We’ve still never seen a team win with single-digit points. We’ve only seen two ties ever, 21-21 in Season 3 and 27-27 in Season 6. We’ve got a surprising number of openings in the 0 row, as it’s still really hard to shutout a team. 42 is a good number to score for a winning team, as that has a lot of openings, as does just about any score where both teams combine for at least 75 points. And somehow, through 17 seasons, we’ve still never gotten a 21-17 game. I shit you not. That’s like the most basic football score ever, what the actual heck?
One last thing before we end this thing off. I want to see if there’s any scorigami that the NSFL has hit in their relatively short existence that the NFL hasn’t got in their 100 years of action. So we’re going to take the NFL scorigami board, drop the opacity on it, and overlay in on our board. If you see numbers that don’t have a green tinge to them, that’s one for us that they don’t have.
For starters, the NFL has so much action in the 0 and 2 lines. My guess is football was just like that in the 20s and 30s. But, we do have our first one, the 65-0 game from Season 2. To the far right of the board, we see a couple of stragglers that would just be ridiculously hard to replicate. There’re some scores in the middle of the board that would require both teams to score bizarre point totals like 32-22, 26-25, and 25-18 that the NSFL has hit. But other than that, I think that’s the history of NSFL scoring in its entirety. Now can someone please score a defensive one-point safety? I wanna make a follow-up with that in it.
2917 words .