Matt Prater sets NFL record with 64-yard field goal

Matt Prater Record 64-yard Field GoalBut first, let’s give credit where credit is due: the NFL field goal record has been held for 43 years by Tom Dempsey, a kicker for the New Orleans Saints.  Dempsey is best known for his NFL record 63-yard field goal (kicked in the final two seconds) to give the Saints a 19–17 win over the Detroit Lions on November 8, 1970.

Tom Dempsey KickA great quote from Wikipedia:

“Dempsey was born without toes on his right foot and no fingers on his right hand. He wore a modified shoe with a flattened and enlarged toe surface. This generated controversy about whether such a shoe gave a player an unfair advantage. When reporters would ask him if he thought it was unfair, he said “Unfair eh? How ’bout you try kickin’ a 63 yard field goal to win it with 2 seconds left an’ yer wearin’ a square shoe, oh, yeah and no toes either.”

You read that correctly.  Tom Dempsey’s shoe looked like this:

Tom Dempsey's Kicking ShoeThen, this past Sunday the 8th, Matt Prater, kicker with the Denver Broncos, set the new NFL field goal record with a smash of 64 yards, as illustrated below:

Records were meant to be broken, but Tom Dempsey’s record stood the time test of 43 years — an amazing “feet” if you will.

BZ

 

 

Detroit Lion tackle Alex Karras: passes at age 77

Detroit Lions defensive tackle Alex Karras, who hated quarterbacks, passed away on Wednesday at age 77.

I am sufficiently old to have watched Alex Karras not only play on television but play live.  Compared to today’s defensive linemen he wasn’t particularly large but, at the time, he was 6’3″ and 250 pounds — and offensive linemen completely, absolutely, feared him.  As did not only opposing quarterbacks but Lions QB Bobby Layne.

Following retirement (he played for the Lions from 1958 to 1970, with a two-year gap), he appeared on Monday Night Football with Howard Cosell and Frank Gifford.

To me, he was # 71.  Period.

To others, he was George in Webster.  That didn’t play to me.  What played to me was this: Mongo, from Mel Brooks’s Blazing Saddles:

After that, many years later, Karras suffered dementia, heart disease and cancer.  He most recently suffered kidney failure.

He passed away at home in Los Angeles, Wednesday, surrounded by family.  God bless him.

Another portion of my life, my history, my surroundings — dies.

I guess that doesn’t bode quite very well for me.

BZ

P.S.
Alex Karras in action: