In Week 1 last year, Tom Brady connected with Wes Welker for a 99-yard touchdown against the Dolphins. In an effort to determine whether teams actually protect the ball better as they approach the goal line, we recently looked at 1-play fumble and interception probabilities (also known as transition probabilities from our Markov model). Out of all our absorption probabilities, only fumble, interception and touchdown really make sense to examine on a 1-play basis across downs. Punts and field goals almost always occur on 4th down (turnover on downs always occur on 4th down) and while a safety can occur on any down, they occur extremely infrequently.In 2011, 37.7% of all offensive touchdowns occurred on 1st down, 33.0% on 2nd down, 25.0% on 3rd down and 4.3% on 4th down. This makes logical sense as there will be more 1st downs than 2nd downs, more 2nd downs than 3rd downs, and so on. But, how does down affect the probability of scoring a touchdown on the next play? Do teams take (and successfully convert) more shots downfield on 1st down than later in the drive?


