Actual Football Play Time During Super Bowl XLIV

In mid-January, the Wall Street Journal analyzed the actual amount of play time of the average football game. They added up the amount of time the ball was actually alive and in play in four different games, and it averaged out to about 11 minutes. They concluded that the average game broadcast on TV shows 17 minutes of replays and 67 minutes of players standing around. With the biggest game of the year coming up, I decided to do my own analysis of the actual play time. Here are the results:
| Item | Total Time | Average Time | Total Plays |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total time in play | 12 minutes 38 seconds | 5 seconds | 147 plays |
| During 1st quarter | 3 minutes 10 seconds | 5 seconds | 38 plays |
| During 2nd quarter | 3 minutes | 5 seconds | 36 plays |
| During 3rd quarter | 3 minutes 7 seconds | 5 seconds | 33 plays |
| During 4th quarter | 3 minutes 22 seconds | 5 seconds | 40 plays |
| Kickoffs | 1 minute 34 seconds | 10 seconds | 10 kickoffs |
| Punts | 32 seconds | 8 seconds | 4 punts |
| Run plays | 2 minutes 40 seconds | 4 seconds | 37 plays |
| Pass plays | 7 minutes 18 seconds | 5 seconds | 85 plays |
| Colts plays | 5 minutes 54 seconds | 5 seconds | 71 plays |
| Saints plays | 5 minutes 9 seconds | 5 seconds | 66 plays |
| Colts pass plays | 4 minutes 3 seconds | 5 seconds | 46 plays |
| Colts run plays | 1 minute 22 seconds | 4 seconds | 19 plays |
| Saints pass plays | 3 minutes 15 seconds | 5 seconds | 39 plays |
| Saints run plays | 1 minute 18 seconds | 4 seconds | 18 plays |
The longest play of the game was an 11 second Saints kickoff, and subsequent Colts run back, after the Saints first field goal in the second quarter.
The longest play from scrimmage was a 10+ second Colts pass that was intercepted by the Saints and run back for a touchdown late in the fourth quarter.
Additionally, the National Anthem took 1 minute 48 seconds.
Notes
- The time in the picture above does not match the total result time because there were two Colts plays in the fourth quarter where the ball was hiked, but the play was whistled dead before the snap actually took place. The first was a false start by the Colts, and the second was a Saints time-out before the snap. They were removed from the after-game analysis.
- This was not scientific, it was simply me hitting the start/stop button on the stopwatch you see above. The most obvious timing issue was my reaction to the snap of the ball, especially on the three or four plays where CBS’s coverage did not show the snap of the ball, but rather was focused on a single player who was not the center or quarterback. Additionally, on some plays, most notably the onside kick, it was impossible for me to tell when the play ended visually, and CBS really didn’t pick up the sound of the whistles well, so I had to rely on the referee waving his arms to indicate the play was over. However, I tend to think that being fractions of a second late to start on some plays, and being a little long on others probably canceled each other out.
- I didn’t know exactly when to stop timing field goals and extra points. I went with whichever came first out of the following: 1) the ball hit the netting behind the goal posts; 2) the ball hit the ground; 3) the refs made a call.
- All times have been rounded to the nearest second because…well…is sub-second accuracy really necessary here?
i too have commented on the simmilar circumstances in the cfl some years ago when discussing the merits/demerits of soccer vs football with several collegues;since i was mainly a fan of the round ballsport. it appears that north americans have engendered in their psyche an all encompassing attention span as dictated by the various commercial media over the past half century; which appears to me to becomming proportionally ever shorter and more verbose per second as time goes on.
the other observation i would like to make is the need for radio announcer descriptions of the play by play speakers which seem to drivel on without end despite being displayed on a visual medium ie. tv. a good look at the english broadcasters of the eighties (i stress this time frame because even their more recent efforts boggle the mind with more and more obvious verbose descriptions of the goings on that none but a blind person could miss if watching the game)
i have on occasion contemplated wheather the network announcers do this in order to help the martha stewarts of the world to continue in the kitchen or the craftsroom not miss any of the occasional sporatic disjointed action occurring on the screen; but have come to the conclusion that the networks figue they have dumbed us down so far that we no longer recognise whats on the screen so we need the aural aid so profusely provided.
i hope i’m not too cynical in my old age but is there any hope of stopping this dumbing down? are newspapers doomed as well?
thank-you for your excellent arbitrage of the facts on ball-in-motion statisics. they
tend to make you wonder why its not called a broadcast of commercials interspersed with football.
kind regards
i remain
gert rutters
I think football is the perfect “American” sport for precisely those reasons. You get 5 seconds of excitement followed by a breather period which is about four to five times longer.
Basketball has a slow period as the offense brings the ball up the court since most teams play a half-court defense for most of the game.
One reason I believe that soccer is not bigger in America is because there are no pauses in the game—no time for people to go to the bathroom, go get food/drink from the kitchen, and when watching in a bar, no time to converse with friends. It takes entirely too much concentration, for too long, for most Americans to enjoy it.
I watch a lot of football. But apparently not as much as I thought. HA!
I wondered why you tweeted the length of the National anthem.
Maybe this 12-14 minute play time is what makes the game so popular. Not only does it pack all the action into 5-8 second segments but it also I leaves oodles of time for diagnosis and opinion making… and everyone likes to give their opinion.
Basketball and Ice Hockey (in particular) are such fast games it they leave less time for diagnosis.
Thanks for the break down!
