Aikman: Can Romo blame the K-Ball?
Posted: January 16, 2007
It's funny how some things go unnoticed until disaster strikes. For instance, I don't think anyone would have been talking about the K-ball last week if Martin Gramatica had kicked a chip shot, go-ahead field goal late in the wild-card game against the Seahawks. But the ball slipped out of Tony Romo's hands as he lowered it to the ground, Gramatica never swung his leg, and the Cowboys made an ungraceful exit from the playoffs.
So, the K-ball was all the buzz. K-balls, unlike regular game balls, are used only by kickers and punters. They are taken straight from the package with only a brief rubdown before a game. A K-ball is shiny and slick, which must explain, many theorized, why Romo was unable to hold it securely.
Could be. Romo was in the same boat as any other holder, but the truth is: K-balls are hard and slippery. If you've taken a new football out of a box, you've felt that film of wax covering the ball. You've touched the stiff laces and the leather that doesn't soften until you've worked it for a couple of weeks. A new ball is hard to grip.
For much of my career, quarterbacks had to use balls like that, and I hated it. Actually, most guys would find ways to rough them up a bit before games -- a cycle or two in the dryer with some wet towels usually did the trick -- but whenever I found myself in possession of a fresh ball, it was a lot harder to throw. Late in my career, thank goodness, the league finally allowed teams to break in game balls, and now they can even use them in practice. That's a real plus for quarterbacks and other players who handle the ball.
Except for the kicking team. For some reason, special teams have to use the K-ball, and it puts everyone involved at risk.
I'm not saying Romo would have held onto a ball that had been broken in. We'll never know. But the process of converting a field goal attempt -- the snap, the catch, the placement (including spinning and tilting the ball), the kicker's approach and the kick itself -- requires a lot more precision and skill than people realize. Making these guys do it with a shiny new ball is pointless.
It's funny how some things go unnoticed until disaster strikes. For instance, I don't think anyone would have been talking about the K-ball last week if Martin Gramatica had kicked a chip shot, go-ahead field goal late in the wild-card game against the Seahawks. But the ball slipped out of Tony Romo's hands as he lowered it to the ground, Gramatica never swung his leg, and the Cowboys made an ungraceful exit from the playoffs.
So, the K-ball was all the buzz. K-balls, unlike regular game balls, are used only by kickers and punters. They are taken straight from the package with only a brief rubdown before a game. A K-ball is shiny and slick, which must explain, many theorized, why Romo was unable to hold it securely.
Could be. Romo was in the same boat as any other holder, but the truth is: K-balls are hard and slippery. If you've taken a new football out of a box, you've felt that film of wax covering the ball. You've touched the stiff laces and the leather that doesn't soften until you've worked it for a couple of weeks. A new ball is hard to grip.
For much of my career, quarterbacks had to use balls like that, and I hated it. Actually, most guys would find ways to rough them up a bit before games -- a cycle or two in the dryer with some wet towels usually did the trick -- but whenever I found myself in possession of a fresh ball, it was a lot harder to throw. Late in my career, thank goodness, the league finally allowed teams to break in game balls, and now they can even use them in practice. That's a real plus for quarterbacks and other players who handle the ball.
Except for the kicking team. For some reason, special teams have to use the K-ball, and it puts everyone involved at risk.
I'm not saying Romo would have held onto a ball that had been broken in. We'll never know. But the process of converting a field goal attempt -- the snap, the catch, the placement (including spinning and tilting the ball), the kicker's approach and the kick itself -- requires a lot more precision and skill than people realize. Making these guys do it with a shiny new ball is pointless.
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