Icing the kicker
In the sports of American football or Canadian football, the act of icing the kicker or freezing the kicker is the act of calling a timeout immediately prior to the Snap (American and [Canadian football)|snap] before a field goal attempt in order to disrupt the process of kicking a field goal. The intent is to throw the kicker off of their routine and force them to feel pressure for a longer amount of time. The tactic is used at the collegiate and professional levels, although its effectiveness has not been proven.
Overview
In order to ice a kicker, either a player or a coach on the defending team will call a timeout just as the kicker is about to attempt field goal. This is intended to either stop the kick immediately as the kicker is mentally prepared, or allow for the kicker to kick immediately after the timeout so that the initial kick does not count, in an attempt to mentally disrupt the kicker for the actual kick. If the tactic is successful, the kicker will miss the kick due to choking. Should the kicker make the subsequent kick, then the attempt to ice the kicker is considered unsuccessful.In the NFL, each team can only call one timeout between the same two plays, in other words, during the same dead-ball period. In contrast, repeated icing in college football is legal provided a team has multiple timeouts remaining.
One variant of this tactic, attributed to former Denver Broncos head coach Mike Shanahan, is to call time out from the sidelines just before the ball is snapped. This prevents the kicking team from realizing the kick will not count until after the play is over. However, this has the potential to provide the reverse of the intended result: the invalid first kick could miss or be blocked, only to be followed by a successful second kick, or—if the kick is particularly risky—it could give the kicker a "practice kick" that, if successful, could give the kicker even more confidence, as was the case with a 64-yard Jake Bates field goal that the St. Louis Battlehawks unsuccessfully tried to ice in 2024.