FIELD GOAL (FOOTBALL)


A 'field goal' (formerly "goal from the field") in American football and Canadian football (collectively called gridiron football) is a goal that may be scored during general play ("from the field").

A field goal may be scored by a placekick or the very rare drop kick. The ball must pass "through the uprights", that is, over a crossbar that is 10 feet off the ground and between upright posts that are 18' 6" (5.55 m) apart, to count, and the kick must not be a kickoff or a free kick following a safety. A field goal can still be good even if the ball hits an upright or the crossbar. The rules of the particular sanctioning authority may impose additional requirements. A successful field goal scores three points.

Contents
Upright dimensions
Strategy
How field goals are kicked
Missed and blocked field goals
Kicking styles
Soccer style
Straight-ahead style
Drop kick
History
Field-goal records
Most field goals made
Longest field goals
NFL
Collegiate
AFL
High school
CFL
Famous field goals and missed attempts
Four-point field goals
External links

Upright dimensions


Field goals are measured with the height as distance from the crossbar to the ground and the width as the distance between the two upright poles.
The standard upright dimensions are:

★ NFL, CFL, and NCAA (since 1991): height - 10 feet (3.0 meters), width - 18 feet 6 inches (5.64 meters)

★ High School: height - 10 feet (3.0 meters), width - 23'4" (7.11 meters) (games may be played on fields with uprights by state adoption)

Arena Football: height - 15 feet (4.57 meters), width - 9 (2.74 meters)

Strategy


Because a field goal is worth only three points, while a touchdown scores six, teams will generally only attempt a field goal in the following situations:

★ It is fourth down (third down in Canadian rules), especially if the offense is more than a yard or two from a new first down and generally within the opponent's 40-yard line.

★ There are only a few seconds left in the first half.

★ There are only a few seconds left in the second half, and the team on offense needs three points to win or tie.

★ The game is in overtime, and scoring any points will end the game.
Except in desperate situations, a team will generally attempt a field goal only when keeping a drive alive is unlikely, and their kicker has a significant chance of success, as a missed field goal results in a turnover at the spot of the kick (in the NFL; in the NCAA it's at the spot of the snap). Even under ideal conditions, the best kickers in the NFL have difficulty making kicks longer than 50 yards consistently (the NFL record is 63 yards and the CFL record, 62 yards). If a team chooses not to attempt a field goal on fourth down (third in Canada), it can punt to the other team. A punt can't score any points in the American football (though it can result in a single in Canadian football), but it may push the other team back toward its own end.

How field goals are kicked


When a team decides to kick a field goal, it will generally line up in a very tight formation, with all but two players lined up on or near the line of scrimmage: the placekicker and the holder. The holder is usually the team's punter or backup quarterback. Instead of the regular center, a team may have a dedicated long snapper trained especially to snap the ball on placekick attempts and punts.
The defense will likewise line up all or nearly all of its players near the line of scrimmage to try to block the kick. The defense can only try to block the kick at the line; it cannot attempt to bat down a field-goal attempt at the uprights like a goalie.
The holder usually lines up 7 yards behind the line of scrimmage, with the kicker a few yards behind him. Upon receiving the snap, the holder holds the ball against the ground lengthwise, with the stitches away from the kicker. The kicker begins his approach during the snap, so the snapper and holder have little margin for error. A split-second mistake can throw everything off.

Missed and blocked field goals


In the NFL, missed field goals attempted from the 20-yard line or closer result in the opposing team taking possession at the 20-yard line. Missed field goals attempted from beyond the 20-yard line result in the opposing team taking possession at the spot of the kick. Until 1994, the opposing team would take position at the ''line of scrimmage'', unless the kick was made from inside the 20.
Prior to the 1974 season, missed field goals resulted in the opposing team gaining possession at the line of scrimmage or the 20-yard line, whichever was ''closer'' to the goalpost. (This rule is still in effect in high school football in most states.)
The opposing team may also catch a missed field goal and attempt to return it. This is only rarely performed, as on average the opposing team would not be able to return the ball to the spot of the kick. However, it is occasionally done, particularly when a very long kick is attempted at the end of the first half. Nathan Vasher of the Chicago Bears returned a 52-yard field-goal attempt 108 yards for a touchdown in this manner on November 13, 2005, against the San Francisco 49ers, the longest play in NFL history. Devin Hester, also of the Chicago Bears, would match this return on November 12, 2006 versus the New York Giants, also off of a 52-yard field-goal attempt.
In the NCAA, the opposing team takes possession at the line of scrimmage rather than at the spot of the kick.
In American football, a missed field goal is said to be "no good". If it misses to the kicker's left it may be called "wide left" and conversely "wide right" if it misses to the kicker's right. It may also be desribed as being "short" if it is aimed correctly but does not have the distance to go through the uprights.
In Canadian football, the opposing team must return the missed field goal. If they do not, or if the missed field goal goes through the end zone, then the kicking team scores a single point, also called a "rouge". This may occasionally lead to situations at the end of a close game where the team on defense stations a player behind the goal posts to kick the ball out of the end zone in case of a missed field-goal attempt to preserve a victory or tie.
Occasionally (about once in 40 field-goal attempts in the NFL), the defense will succeed in blocking a field goal. If a blocked field goal is behind the line of scrimmage, it is treated like a fumble and can be advanced by either team. Beyond the line of scrimmage, a blocked kick is treated like a punt or missed field goal and can only be advanced by the defense.

Kicking styles


There are several styles kickers have used for kicking field goals over the years. The soccer style is the most widely used kicking style in football today.
Soccer style

"Soccer style" gets its name from the game of soccer and the manner in which soccer players kick a ball. A soccer style field goal kicker kicks the ball with the instep of his foot and approach the ball from an angle. Typically a kicker will take 3 steps straight back and 2 side steps to the left (if right footed). This will put them in the proper position for approaching the ball. Some kickers, such as Adam Vinatieri, start farther to the side and facing away from the line, then proceed to "swing" their body around, almost in a semicircle motion, kicking the ball in with the same final motion.
Soccer style is the most widely used in American football today. In this style the ball is normally thrown backwards to a holder standing about 7 yards from the line of scrimmage. The length of the field goal recorded is thus normally around 17 yards more than the distance to the end zone, the last 10 yards being the end zone itself.
The adoption of soccer-style kicking has greatly improved placekickers' accuracy. Hall of Fame kicker Lou "The Toe" Groza made only 58% of his field-goal attempts; today's best kickers make nearly 90% of their attempts.
Straight-ahead style

In the "straight-ahead" or "straight-on" style, the kicker takes several steps back and kicks the ball with the toe of his shoe. This style was widely used until the soccer style took over beginning in the early 1960's.
Unlike the soccer-style, the straight-ahead style requires the use of a special shoe that has a flattened toe and is reinforced to be extremely rigid. Additionally, some kickers wore a kicking shoe that was one or even two sizes smaller than normal. Hall of Famer George Blanda, a straight-ahead kicker who also played quarterback, wore a modified shoe that allowed him to play both positions without changing shoes. However, many modern kickers (the "soccer-style" term has all but disappeared) use a shoe that features a smooth contact surface.
Steve Cox of the Washington Redskins kicked the last straight-ahead field goal in the NFL in 1987. Cox was a punter who also kicked off and occasionally kicked long field goals. Mark Moseley (also of the Redskins) was the last full-time straight-ahead place kicker in the NFL, and was also among the best kickers of any style, having been the only NFL kicker to ever be named league MVP.
Drop kick

A drop kick is made when the kicker drops the ball and then kicks it when it bounces off the ground. This kick was popular in the early 1900s. However, the modern American football is more pointed on both ends, making the bounce less reliable. The main advantages of the drop kick are that 1) the kicking team gains an additional blocker and 2) there is one less person (the holder) who has to do their job perfectly to succeed. Because the advantage of an extra blocker is minimal and professional teams practice their special teams so frequently (meaning the holds are usually good), drop kicks are rarely seen.
The last successful drop kick in the NFL was made on January 1, 2006 by New England Patriots quarterback Doug Flutie for an extra point. It was the first time in 64 years that a drop kick was converted for an extra point in the NFL.
The last successful drop-kick extra point in the NCAA was by Aaron Fitzgerald of the University of LaVerne on November 10, 1990 against Claremont-Mudd-Scripps. [1]

History


In the early days of football, kicking was highly emphasized.

★ In 1883 the scoring system was devised and field goals counted 5 points while touchdowns and conversions counted 3 each.

★ In 1897 the touchdown was raised to 5 points while the conversion was lowered to 1 point.

★ The field goal was changed to 4 points in 1904 and then to the modern 3 points in 1909.

★ The touchdown was changed to 6 points in 1912.

★ In 1924 the conversion was spotted at the 3 yard line.

★ In 1925-1928 it was moved to the 5 yard line.

★ In 1929 it was moved to the 2 yard line.

★ Finally, in 1968 it was moved back to the 3 yard line.

★ The goalposts were originally located on the goal line; this led to many injuries and sometimes interfered with play, and the NCAA moved the goal posts to the rear of the end zone in 1927. The NFL, however, had goalposts on the goal line until 1974.

★ In 1959 the NCAA goalposts were widened to 23'4".

★ In 1988 the NCAA banned the kicking tee, requiring kicks from the ground.

★ In 1991 the college goalposts were reduced in width to 18'6", the width of NFL goal posts. In 1991 and 1992, this meant severe angles for short field goal attempts, since the hashmarks were still located 53'4" apart. In 1993, the NCAA narrowed the distance between the hashmarks to 40' (which was the width of hashmarks in the NFL until 1972, when they were narrowed to 18'6").

★ Like the collegiate goalposts, the NFL goal posts were located on the goal line. They were moved to the rear of the end zone in 1974, as a result of the narrowed hashmark distance of 1972, which had made for easier field-goal angles.

★ In 1967, the NFL adopted the "slingshot" goalpost, with a single post curving to support the crossbar. The NCAA later adopted the same rule, but later allowed the use of "offset" goalposts, with two posts rather than one. Three schools in Division I-A currently use two posts instead of one for goalposts in their stadiums: Florida State, LSU, and Washington State.

Field-goal records


Most field goals made


★ 9 Field goals made in a high school game- Chad Blue In Colorado at Colorado High, the Mustangs.
Longest field goals

NFL


★ ''65 yards - Ola Kimrin, 'preseason'. Denver Broncos (W 31-0) vs. Seattle Seahawks, 8/25/2002. He was released after the game.''

★ 63 yards - Tom Dempsey, New Orleans Saints (W 19-17) vs. Detroit Lions, 11/8/1970

★ 63 yards - Jason Elam, Denver Broncos (W 37-24) vs. Jacksonville Jaguars, 10/25/1998

★ 62 yards - Matt Bryant, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (W 23-21) vs. Philadelphia Eagles, 10/22/2006

★ 60 yards - Steve Cox, Cleveland Browns (L 9-12) vs. Cincinnati Bengals, 10/21/1984

★ 60 yards - Morten Andersen, New Orleans Saints (L 17-20) vs. Chicago Bears, 10/27/1991

★ 60 yards - Rob Bironas, Tennessee Titans (W 20-17) vs. Indianapolis Colts, 12/03/2006
The progression of professional longest field goals:

★ 45 yards - Pete Henry, Canton Bulldogs vs. Toledo, Dec. 10, 1922 (drop kick)

★ 54 yards - Glenn Presnell, Detroit Lions vs. Green Bay Packers, Oct. 7, 1934

★ 56 yards - Bert Rechichar, Baltimore Colts vs. Chicago Bears, Sept. 27, 1953

★ 63 yards - Tom Dempsey, New Orleans Saints vs. Detroit Lions, Nov. 8, 1970
Collegiate


★ 69 yards - Ove Johansson, Abilene Christian (W 17-0) v East Texas State, 10/16/1976 (2" tee) Shotwell Stadium, Abilene. NAIA.

★ 67 yards - Russell Erxleben, Texas (W 72-15) v Rice, 10/1/1977 (2" tee)

★ 67 yards - Steve Little, Arkansas (L 9-13) v Texas, 10/15/1977 (2" tee)

★ 67 yards - Tom Odle, Fort Hays State (W 22-14) v Washburn, 11/5/1988 (2" tee), NCAA Division II.

★ 67 yards - Joe Williams, Wichita State (W 33-7) v Southern Illinois, 10/21/1978 (2" tee)

★ 65 yards - John Triplett Haxall, Princeton (L 1g,1s-2g,2t,1s) v Yale, 11/30/1882 (w/out tee) The Polo Grounds, 5th Avenue at 110th Street, New York City. [2]

★ 65 yards - J.P. Ross, Birmingham A.C. (W 5-4) v Alabama, 11/12/1892 (drop-kick)

★ 65 yards - Martin Gramatica, Kansas State (W 73-7) v Northern Illinois 9/12/1998 (longest in NCAA history without a tee)

★ 65 yards - Tony Franklin, Texas A&M (W 24-0) v Baylor, 10/16/1976 (2" tee) (after Johansson's 69-yarder)

★ 64 yards - Tony Franklin, Texas A&M (W 24-0) v Baylor, 10/16/1976 (2" tee) (before Johansson's 69-yarder).

★ 64 yards - Russell Erxleben, Texas (W 13-6) v Oklahoma (2" tee) 1977

★ 60 yards - Russell Erxleben, Texas (W 26-0) v Texas Tech 10/29/1977

★ 60 yards - Mason Crosby, Colorado v Iowa State, 2004

★ 58 yards - Mason Crosby, Colorado (L 23-3) @ Miami, 2005 (longest fieldgoal at sea level w/o tee in NCAA history)
Tony Franklin is the only kicker with 2 field goals over 60 yards in the same game.
Russell Erxleben kicked 3 field goals over 60 yards in 1977, an NCAA record.
AFL


★ 63 yards - Aaron Mills, San Jose SaberCats (W 43-26) v Florida Bobcats, 5/18/1996
High school


★ 68 yards - Dirk Borgognone, Reno High School (NV) (W 34-14) v Sparks HS (NV), 9/27/1985

★ 67 yards - Russell Cowsert, Dallas Christian HS (TX) (W 67-0) v Fort Worth Nolan HS (TX), 1987

★ 67 yards- Ed Nee 1985

★ 67 yards - Matthew Gerk, Fort Morgan HS(CO) (W 54-6) v Brush HS(CO), 2006
CFL


★ 62 yards - Paul McCallum, Saskatchewan Roughriders (W 12-3) v Edmonton Eskimos, 10/27/2001

★ 60 yards - Dave Ridgway, Saskatchewan Roughriders v Winnipeg Blue Bombers, 9/6/87

Famous field goals and missed attempts



★ November 8, 1970: Tom Dempsey - 63 yards New Orleans Saints (W 19-17) vs Detroit Lions with only 2 seconds left to give the Saints a much-needed win. Dempsey kicked the ball in the straight-ahead fashion. This kick is famous as the longest regular-season NFL kick in history and because Dempsey was born with a right club foot and no toes (this was his kicking foot).

★ January 17, 1971: Rookie kicker Jim O'Brien of the Baltimore Colts kicked a 32-yard field goal with 9 seconds remaining in Super Bowl V for the deciding margin in the Colts' 16-13 win over the Dallas Cowboys.

★ October 16, 1976: Tony Franklin kicked two 60+ yard field goals in one game. His first one of 64 yards broke the collegiate record. Later in the game he kicked a 65 yard field goal. On the same day however, Ove Johansson kicked a 69 yard field goal to break Franklin's record.

★ November 30, 1985: Van Tiffin - 52 yards Alabama Crimson Tide (W 25-23) vs Auburn Tigers on the final play of the Iron Bowl Article

★ January 27, 1991: Scott Norwood misses 47 yards Buffalo Bills ( L 20-19 ) vs New York Giants in the final seconds of Super Bowl XXV, allowing Giants to win, famously missing wide right. Article

★ October 25, 1998: Jason Elam - 63 yards Denver Broncos (W 37-24) vs Jacksonville Jaguars at the end of the first half. This tied Dempsey's record. Elam used the soccer-style kick.

★ January 17, 1999: After a perfect regular season with the Minnesota Vikings of 35-for-35 field goals and 59-for-59 points-after-touchdown, kicker Gary Anderson missed a potential game-winning field goal with less than two minutes to go in the NFC Championship game against the Atlanta Falcons which the Vikings led at the time, 27-20. After the miss, the Falcons drove 71 yards and tied the score on a Chris Chandler to Terence Mathis touchdown, sending the game into sudden-death overtime. Atlanta won 30-27 on a Morten Andersen field goal nearly 12 minutes into the extra period.

★ February 3, 2002: Adam Vinatieri - 48 yards New England Patriots (W 20-17) vs St. Louis Rams final play of Super Bowl XXXVI

★ November 10, 2002: In a CFL playoff game, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers partially blocked a field goal attempt by B.C. Lions kicker Matt Kellett. Winnipeg's Arland Bruce returned the missed kick 112 yards for a touchdown in a game the Bombers eventually won 30-3.[3] (Readers unfamiliar with Canadian football should note that the CFL field is 110 yards long between the end zones, thus allowing for the longer yardage.)

★ January 14, 2006: Mike Vanderjagt missed 46 yards, wide right. Indianapolis Colts ( L 18-21 ) vs Pittsburgh Steelers with 18 seconds remaining in AFC Divisional Playoffs. The NFL would later announce that a botched call earlier in the game should have not gone in favor of the Colts, which led to the field goal. Four days after the miss, Vanderjagt appeared on The Late Show, which is hosted by Indianapolis native and Colts fan David Letterman. In his appearance, he completed a 46-yard field goal on West 53rd Street, outside the Ed Sullivan Theater.

★ October 22, 2006: Matt Bryant - 62 yards (with 4 seconds remaining, to win the game) Tampa Bay Buccaneers (W 23-21) vs. Philadelphia Eagles

★ September 1, 2007: In the NCAAF, Div. I-AA Appalachian State's Julian Raunch kicked a 24-yard field goal with 26 seconds left in the season opener against Number 5 ranked Michigan (Div. I-A) to put them ahead 34-32. Just seconds later, with 0:06 left on the clock, Corey Lynch blocked a 37-yard attempt by Jason Gingell, and Appalachian State defeated Michigan.

Four-point field goals


In recent years, NFL Europe has experimented with a rule that awards four points for any field goal kicked 50 yards or more.
In Arena Football, a field goal scored by drop kick is worth four points.

External links



The Evolution of the NFL's Field Goal Record

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