If the teams are tied after 9 innings, they have as many innings as they need until the other team scores a run. However, if the visitor team (the team that bats first in the inning) scores a run in an extra inning, the home team still gets to bat to try and score a run. Example: 8-8 in the tenth inning. The visitor team scores. The score is 9-8. The home team still gets to bat and if they score a run and tie again, the process is repeated. But if they get two runs and win, no more innings are needed.
Yes, the NFL has a rule for overtime where if the game is tied after the first overtime period, a second overtime period is played, which is known as double overtime.
No, the NFL overtime rule is not based on the first team to score. The current rule allows both teams to possess the ball unless the team that receives the kickoff scores a touchdown on their first possession.
Yes, the NFL can go into double overtime if the score is tied at the end of the first overtime period.
Yes, there is double overtime in the NFL. If a regular season game is tied at the end of the first overtime period, a second overtime period is played to determine the winner.
As of December 2010, it is a tie: the Chicago Bears, the Denver Broncos and the Washington Redskins have each won 22 regular season overtime games since the overtime rule was introduced in 1974.
That question was asked in many rule changing portions on the offseason, they ARE however thinking of changing the overtime rules to the college type overtime, in that overtime, each team gets a chance to score from the opponents side of the field, if they score, the opponent must score the same amount of points (touchdown or field goal) to still have a chance, but if they don't score, they lose. There's no news on IF they're going to make the change, but the teams in the NFL who have lost in overtime a lot certainly want the change soon.
yes there can be a triple overtime but it never happened yet maybe quad overtime
1 per 16
15
yes it is the same as the regular season
Overtime in the NFL is 15 minutes.
NO