In College Football overtime, possesions start at the opponents 25 yard line. Their is no time limit and each team gets a possesion in each overtime.
The ball is spotted at the 2 yard line in the NFL and 3 yard line in College.
This question depends on the level of play. In the NFL, double overtime can only occur in the playoffs, as games which go scoreless through one overtime in the regular season end in a tie. In college, the second overtime rules are identical to the first, with each team getting a chance to score from the 25-yard line. However, the order in which the teams has the ball is reversed from the first overtime.
According to Wikipedia: "When a game goes to overtime, each team is given one possession from its opponent's twenty-five yard line. The team leading after both possessions is declared the winner. If the teams remain tied, overtime periods continue, switching the order of possessions for each overtime, until one team leads the other at the end of the overtime."
The ball is placed at the 2 yard line in the NFL and the 3 yard line in college football.
In the NFL, the ball is placed at the two yard line for the PAT. In college, the ball is placed at the three yard line for the PAT.
I was at a game last night and there was overtime (Homestead vs Wis Rapids) Not sure if this rule applies to all games (conf vs non-conf), but they played from 25 yd line (same format as college). Additional.... Teams alternate possessions, visitors get the ball first. Both teams are guaranteed the same number of possessions.
"40 yd line." Wrong - it is the 30 yard line now. HS still uses the 40 but college went to the 30 in 2007.
A seat on the 50 yard line.
The kickoff is from the kicking team's 30 yard line making the kickoff travel 70 yards to reach the end zone.
In high school and college, the ball is placed at the 3-yard line for the try (i.e., the PAT or conversion). In the NFL, it is placed at the 2-yard line.
depends if the field is a high school of pro or college field
they mean a closed yard