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Kicking & Punting Tips
Ray Guy explains how to use onside kicks
An onside kick can be used at any time to create a big play, but usually these kicks are employed when the game is on the line and the kicking team desperately needs the ball in the hands of its offense.
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Proper contact with ball is important for the kicker
For a soccer-style kicker, the sweet spot of the ball is about 1 ½ to 2 ½ inches down from the ball’s widest segment.
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Techniques vary for punting a football
From punting to the corner, to out of the end zone, situations and objectives differ when punting a football.
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Visualization and imagery techniques key training for kickers and punters
Whether they realize it or not, kickers and punters are constantly preparing to succeed by first seeing the results of their efforts before they ever kick or punt the ball.
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Mark

Mark

Mark Maynard is an award-winning sportswriter from Ashland, Ky. He has covered University of Kentucky sports and Kentucky high school sports for 35 years. Maynard has won more than fifty writing and design awards from the Kentucky Press Association. He lives in Ashland with his wife, Beth. They have two grown children.

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The Pittsburgh Steelers tried out former Baltimore Ravens and New England Patriots long snapper Matt Katula, according to a league source.

Katula, 29, played in five games last season for the Minnesota Vikings, filling in when Cullen Loeffler broke a bone in his lower back.

A former Wisconsin player, Katula played with the Ravens from 2005 to 2009 and played eight games two years ago for the Patriots.

For his career, the 6-foot-6, 265-pounder has played in 93 games.

Monday was Jeremy Shelley Day in Raleigh, and the University of Alabama kicker had a surprise in store for the Raleigh City Council -- his championship rings.

Mayor Nancy McFarlane read a proclamation honoring him, recalling his years at Broughton High playing both soccer and football for the Caps.

Shelley decided to walk on at the University of Alabama and earned the starting job as a kicker as a junior in 2011. He made five field goals in the Tides' 21-0 victory over LSU in the BCS Championship Game in January.

It was Alabama's second national title with Shelley on campus -- the Tide also won the title after the 2009 season.

Shelley shared his championship rings with the City Council on Monday, which brought some gasps and comments like "Wow!" from the normally staid council. One council member joked that the rings might not make it back to him as they were passed around the table.

"Mayor, that's what you call serious bling," said another.

"You going to Tweet that?" another quipped to McFarlane.

"We're very, very proud of you and proud you are representing our community," McFarlane said to McFarlane. "I'm pretty sure [the rings] will make it back to you."

So Monday was Jeremy Shelley Day in Raleigh … but then again, when you've nailed five field goals for the Tide in the national title game, every day is your day in Alabama.

Monday, 14 May 2012 22:38

Arizona signs veteran kicker-punter

The Arizona Cardinals signed four players, including kicker/punter Ricky Schmitt, who has Prokicker.com connections. Schmitt, who is 6-2 and 217 pounds, has only attempted a few kicks in the league with the 49ers. He's spent much of his time in the league on practice squads on Pittsburgh and Oakland.

The Boston Globe

It crossed Taylor Allen's mind that he was going down the same road his father had many years ago.

Dan Allen played linebacker at tiny Hanover College in ­Indiana. He was not drafted, but he did earn an invitation to the rookie camp of the Atlanta Falcons. He didn't make the team, but it was an experience he never forgot.

Taylor Allen has finished his gridiron career at Endicott ­College, a Division 3 program in Beverly that is barely a ­decade old. But if you can play, the NFL will find you, even if you live in a cave, which is why the undrafted Allen spent four days in Florida last week at the Jacksonville Jaguars' rookie minicamp.

He is hoping to open some eyes and receive a contract offer, if not with the Jags then with another professional football team.

“I know my dad would be proud of me,’’ said the 22-year-old Allen, a 6-foot-4, 250-pound tight end and long snapper.

His father, the head coach at Boston University and then at Holy Cross, died in 2004 of multiple chemical sensitivity at age 48. He passed away at his Westborough home with his wife, Laura, and three children at his bedside.

Much of what Taylor Allen learned about life and football came from his father, who coached his youth baseball teams.

“I was more into baseball growing up,” Allen said.

When he played for the Westborough Red Devils in the youth football program, Allen said, “I stopped playing after a year. I didn't like the sport.’’

It was not until high school that he realized “football was in my blood.’’ Now he hopes to make it a career.

Now Allen hopes to make it a career.

His four-day stint at Everbank Stadium in Jacksonville was “awesome, a great experience,” he said. There were roughly 50 rookies.

In the first team meeting, he met Justin Blackmon, an All-America receiver from Oklahoma State who was the fifth pick in the entire draft. “It was amazing,’’ Allen said. “I was humbled.’’

“It was amazing,’’ Allen said. “I was humbled.’’

The Jags called Allen the day before the draft. “They wanted to know if any other team was interested in drafting me,” he said.

There had been no contact.

But an hour after the draft, a familiar voice was on the line: Mark Duffner, the Jags’ linebackers coach, who had Dan ­Allen on his Holy Cross staff in the 1980s. He asked Taylor whether he was interested in attending the rookie minicamp.

Taylor could not get to the airport fast enough.

His best bet to make the team is as a long snapper.

When Endicott head coach J.B. Wells received a call from the Jaguars regarding standout defensive end Kevin Eagan, he seized the moment to talk up Allen as well.

“I said I don't know if he can play tight end, but I know he's an NFL-quality long snapper,” Wells said.

Both Eagan, who signed as a free agent with the Indianapolis Colts, and Allen had tested well at Boston College's pro day.

“That was my biggest oppor­tunity up to that time,’’ Allen said.

The Jaguar rookies received playbooks upon arrival, and were expected to know the majority of plays the following day.

“The tight ends were asked to do more than anyone, except the quarterback,’’ said Allen, who hauled in a school-record 15 touchdown receptions for Endicott. “We had to shift on almost every play. Every rep was an opportunity.’’

Allen opened a few eyes at long snapper. “The punters and kickers said they liked the ­tempo and speed of my snaps,” he said. “Anything could change before training camp, but I know this is not the end of the road.”

He first delivered a long snap at age 12, while waiting for his father after a Holy Cross game. He went under the ­Fitton Field stands and gave it a try with an assistant coach.

His first big moment came as a ­Westborough High sophomore in a game at Marlborough's Kelleher Field. There was a lot of pressure: just seconds left in the game and a successful field goal would win it for the ­Rangers. “It was a huge play for me,’’ Allen said. Good snap, good hold, good kick. Westborough walked off with the win. “I was tall, gawky, and skinny back then,’’ Allen said.

“It was a huge play for me,’’ Allen said. Good snap, good hold, good kick. Westborough walked off with the win. “I was tall, gawky, and skinny back then,’’ he said.

“He was a phenomenal long snapper,’’ said Westborough High coach Mark Ellis. “He could really fire it back. You knew the snap was going to be there. That's one less thing the coach had to worry about. ­Taylor was a fun-loving guy, but he enjoyed working hard. He's one of the guys you love having around. He knows the game. I hope he makes it’’ with the Jaguars, Ellis said. “He has the body for it, that's for sure.’’

Allen’s older brother, 28-year-old Mark, was a standout wide receiver for Westborough.

“I think he still holds a couple of records,’’ said Taylor, who scored just one touchdown in high school, during a game against Milford. “I was streaking down the left sideline. It was about a 60-yard play. I ran right past Mark, who was on the sideline.’’

A few New England colleges showed interest in Allen in his senior year. “I was in cooking class, and there was an announce­ment for me to go to the front office because a Northeastern coach was there to see me.’’

His classmates applauded.

“But New Hampshire was my number one choice,” he said. “They showed a lot of ­interest. I wanted to be a ­Wildcat so bad. But my mother said not to put all my eggs in one basket. I didn't listen to her. But she was right.’’

A change on the coaching staff at UNH washed away his road to Durham.

It all worked out. “Endicott was the best fit for me,’’ he said.

The 22-year-old Allen is ­engaged to Becca Goss, 28. They have a 13-month-old son, Taylor Jr. She has two daughters, 8 and 6, from a previous marriage.

Allen will work out all summer. If it doesn't work in the NFL, he will coach as an assistant at Algonquin Regional High, Westborough’s archrival. Mark ­Allen is the Tomahawks’ defensive coordinator.

Thoughts of his father are constantly with Taylor Allen. The grace and courage he showed during his illness still resonates with the son.

“He coached my travel basketball team even when he got sick,” Taylor said. “That taught me about mental toughness.’’

He has run with it ever since.

St. Louis Post Dispatch

Rams special teams coordinator John Fassel piled up some frequent-flyer miles this spring in search of a punter.

The team's interest level in re-signing veteran Donnie Jones ranged somewhere between little and none. (Jones eventually signed with the Houston Texans as a free agent.)

So with the punting job wide open, Fassel worked out no fewer than eight college punters, some on more than one occasion. As the draft wore down and it was time to start working the phones for rookie free agents, the Rams pretty much had an open field.

California's Bryan Anger, the star of this year's punting class, went a surprising No. 70 overall (in the third round) to Jacksonville, making him the highest-drafted punter since Todd Sauerbrun in 1995. The only other punter drafted was Wisconsin's Brad Nortman, who went to Carolina on the final pick of the sixth round.

Several recognizable names remained available as the draft ended, including:

• Georgia's Drew Butler, a former Ray Guy award winner as college football's top punter.

• Florida State's Shawn Powell, who set a school record with a 47.0-yard average last season.

• Brian Stahovich of San Diego State, whom Fassel had worked out in March.

But when the Rams asked Fassel who he wanted, there was no hesitation: Johnny Hekker of Oregon State. And that's who the team signed as a rookie free agent shortly after the draft concluded on April 28.

"The first thing I liked about Johnny was what he put on game film," Fassel said. "He's got a big leg. He's a big, tall, long guy. I think the potential for him is unlimited."

Fassel knows what punting looks like at its highest level because for the last four years in Oakland — three as Raiders special teams coordinator — he has worked with Shane Lechler, one of the best punters in NFL history and a seven-time Pro Bowler.

That sets the bar pretty high for Hekker.

"His really good balls are pretty close to Lechler's good balls," Fassel said. "The difference is, Lechler hits eight of 10 'wow!' — Johnny will hit five out of 10 'wow!'"

It is Fassel's task to help build up Hekker's ratio of "wow" kicks.

"One thing we'll work on with him is his consistency," Fassel said.

Speaking of both Hekker and sixth-round draft pick Greg Zuerlein, a place-kicker from Missouri Western State, Fassel added: "One thing I don't want to do is over-think it and become mechanical about it. Both of them. Because one of their greatest strengths is they're natural and they're smooth. So I don't want them to become a machine."

Hekker played quarterback at Bothell (Wash.) High near Seattle and had a scholarship offer to play that position at Southern Utah. But his heart was set on playing Pacific 10 Conference football (now the Pac-12), and his only chance to do so was as a walk-on punter at Oregon Sate.

He was awarded a scholarship entering his sophomore season with the Beavers, and improved his numbers every year. For the most part those numbers weren't great, certainly not good enough to get noticed by the NFL: a 39.7-yard average in 2008; 40.1 yards in '09; and 41.7 yards in '10.

Hekker saved his best for last, with a 44.0-yard average last season. He had at least one punt of 60 yards-plus in six games in 2011, and established a single-game school record with a 52.5-yard average against Utah.

But he still had some clunkers, including a shanked punt last season against Wisconsin that went for minus-4 yards and was dubbed "Worst Punt Ever" on YouTube.

"I'm working on consistency," Hekker said. "At Oregon State, I just had some bad kicks. Bad kicks have always just kind of plagued me."

His punt for minus-4 yards was rugby style, rolling out to his right before striking the ball. That's a style used in college, because the coverage team gets to leave the line of scrimmage right after the snap. Rolling out gives the coverage unit an extra second or two to get down field.

"A lot of those college teams, they do that rollout rugby punt," Fassel said. "(Hekker) did that about half the time, which meant he never really got to focus on one craft, which is a professional pocket-style punt. ... His rugby days are over."

That's because coverage rules are different in the NFL: you have to wait until the ball is struck before running downfield, so there's no advantage gained by punting rugby style.

Even with his good numbers last season, Hekker didn't get invited to any college all-star games, or the NFL scouting combine.

"I got overlooked in that sense," he said.

But he made the most of his offseason. He trained with kicking guru Mike McCabe in Alabama. He also worked in Arizona at Gary Zauner's specialist combine; Zauner is a long-time college and professional special teams coach. That led to an invitation to an NFL regional combine in New York, kind of a satellite program to the big scouting combine in Indianapolis.

"I tried to make my rounds, get my name out there as best I could," Hekker said.

Fassel worked him out at Oregon State's pro day, and stayed in touch up through the draft.

"I wasn't quite sure of his interest level," Hekker said. "You hear stuff from coaches and you're not really sure which all of it's genuine."

Fassel's interest obviously proved genuine because Hekker basically has been handed the punter's job in St. Louis. It's his to lose.

"I'm just so blessed beyond belief to have this opportunity to work with this team," Hekker said.

By Joesph Person / Charlotte Observer

It was cloudy with a threat of rain Sunday morning for the start of rookie practice – a perfect day compared to the first time Brad Nortman punted for the Panthers.

Nortman used the word “turbulent” several times in referring to his April workout with Panthers special teams coordinator Brian Murphy on a windy, 30-degree day in Nortman’s hometown of Brookfield, Wis.

“The workout was in conditions equivalent to the Wizard of Oz. The wind was about 90 miles an hour,” Murphy said Sunday. “I knew one thing – that he could stand with a good base. Because if you didn’t have a good base, you probably were going to get blown over.”

Instead, Nortman won Murphy over with his handling of the conditions and his track record of success at Wisconsin, where Nortman finished third in school history with an average of 42.1 yards a punt.

Before Sunday’s last session of the rookie minicamp, Nortman banged several punts that traveled 60 to 70 yards in the air. Coach Ron Rivera noticed.

“I really like what we saw out of Brad. Brad boomed the ball,” said Rivera, adding Nortman’s hang time was between 4.8 and 5.2 seconds. “There’s some positives as far as that’s concerned.”

The Panthers drafted Nortman with the last pick of the sixth round after releasing punter Jason Baker in March. And while Carolina signed veteran Nick Harris last week to compete with Nortman, Rivera said Nortman could be a player who starts for the next eight or nine years.

Nortman said he welcomes the challenge from Harris, who has averaged 42.5 yards over 11 seasons while punting for three teams.

“It’s a competitive league. It’s rare that you go into a situation – any position – where they just give you a job,” Nortman said. “It means more when you can earn it. And I’m excited to go out there and compete and try to earn it.”

Murphy worked out five punters before the draft, including Georgia’s Drew Butler, the son of former Chicago Bears kicker Kevin Butler. Nortman was the only one who had to punt through a wind tunnel.

“Although it wasn’t ideal conditions, he gutted it out and you could see that he was efforting to do the right things to make the workout work,” Murphy said. “So you appreciate that.”

Murphy also appreciated the four years Nortman started in the Big Ten.

“The guy’s kicked at a high level of competition. He’s played in Rose Bowls. He’s played in big games,” Murphy added. “He’s played in (bad) conditions.”

Baker was last in the league in net punting with an average of 34.1 yards in 2011. Worse, the Panthers allowed three returns for touchdowns.

Nortman has a big leg and had two punts longer than 70 yards for the Badgers. But he said improving his hang time will be critical.

“Everyone is good in the NFL as far as returning. To do what I can do to try to limit that and to hang it up there and really harness my power upward instead of outward, I think it can go a really long way,” Nortman said. “Guys that can get really good hang time are successful in this league, and I want to be one of those guys.”

Nortman, 22, likes to play guitar and golf in his down time. He is the owner of an acoustic and electric guitar – as well as a 15 handicap.

He would like to work on lowering that number in Charlotte, in nicer conditions than he’s accustomed to at home.

“Hopefully, next spring I’ll still be around here,” Nortman said.


Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2012/05/13/3238239/panthers-punter-is-comfortable.html#storylink=cpy

Kerry Eggers / The Portland Tribune

ROSEBURG — Few people have more reasons to be thankful than Josh Bidwell.

Financially secure after a dozen seasons as an NFL punter. Happily married with three young children. Deep in faith as a Christian. And, at 36, healthy and a dozen years removed from a debilitating bout with cancer.

It’s essential to Bidwell’s spirit, then, that he give back after having gotten so much.

The most public example was Bidwell’s seventh annual Celebrity Golf Classic Friday at Roseburg Country Club.

Together with a Thursday night dinner and auction, Bidwell, a graduate of Douglas High in nearby Winston, raised more than $50,000 for three charities to which he has provided $250,000 since the event’s inception.

This year’s recipients are the Roseburg Community Cancer Center, Young Life and the region’s youth sports programs.

“I’m so thankful to the people who have participated over the years,” Bidwell says. “It’s a massive amount of money in this community, especially in the poor economic times. It says a lot about the community.”

People from all areas of the state, though, took part in this year’s festivities. Among the celebrities on hand were actor Gregory Harrison, former Blazers Jerome Kersey and Darrall Imhoff, bowling’s Marshall Holman, ex-Oregon football coach Mike Bellotti, ex-major leaguer Kory Casto and former and current UO and Oregon State athletes such as Joey Harrington, Wes Mallard, Luke Jackson, Jordan Kent, Dino Philyaw, Alexis Serna, Sean Mannion and Cody Vaz.

Bidwell is one of the really good guys I’ve met in a lot of years in the sports writing business. I’m pretty sure he would be doing some charitable work even without his experience battling cancer.

That experience, though, crystallized Bidwell’s inner drive to spend the rest of his life helping others.

I hadn’t spoken with Bidwell since 2000, when he was in comeback mode after missing his rookie season with Green Bay following a bout with testicular cancer.

Bidwell had won the regular punting job and was preparing for the Packers’ final preseason game in 1999 when he noticed a lump on a testicle.

“I had no idea about testicular cancer,” Bidwell says. “I maybe had heard about Lance Armstrong’s situation, but didn’t know anything about it.”

Bidwell waited a couple of days before consulting one of Green Bay’s team physicians. That night, he was on the operating table for surgery to remove the tumor.

By that time, Bidwell’s girlfriend — now his wife, Bethany — was on a flight from Los Angeles.

“She was finishing training to serve with a church in Costa Rica, to work with orphanages there — a lifelong dream,” Bidwell says. “Her flight to Costa Rica was scheduled the next day. She canceled it and got a flight that night to be with me (in Wisconsin).

“We’ve been married for 12 years, and she hasn’t left my side since.”

They flew to Oregon, where Bidwell met with surgeon Bruce Lowe and Dr. Craig Nichols, the latter the supervisor of Armstrong’s post-surgery treatment at Oregon Health and Science University. The next day, Bidwell underwent surgery to remove 45 cancerous lymph nodes from his midsection. What followed were three months of intensive chemotherapy.

The timing couldn’t have been worse — and not just because he missed his chance to punt for the Packers as a rookie.

Bidwell was no longer on his father’s health insurance plan. In the NFL, a player is guaranteed insurance benefits on the first day of the regular season.

“I was days away from that,” he says, “so I had no insurance.”

Help came from everywhere, notably from teammates made aware of Bidwell’s situation by place-kicker Ryan Longwell, a Bend native and Bidwell’s best friend on the team.

“I didn’t know the players all that well,” Bidwell says. “About a month after the second surgery, Ryan called and said, ‘I went around the locker room and told everybody your story. That you don’t have insurance, you don’t have any money, this is going to cost over $100,000.’ He raised $60,000 just like that."

Monday, 14 May 2012 22:24

Bullock among early Texan signees

HOUSTON – Five of the eight members of the Houston Texans 2012 Draft class are under contract, including kicker Randy Bullock, the team announced.

The Texans signed fourth round picks, C Ben Jones, WR Keshawn Martin and DE Jared Crick, Bullock (fifth round) and T Nick Mondek (sixth round).

In addition, 21 undrafted college free agents have officially signed with team.

Bullock (5-9, 208) became the first kicker ever drafted by the Texans when he was taken with the 161st overall pick out of Texas A&M. Bullock left A&M as the school’s all-time leading scorer with 365 career points. His 142 points scored in 2011 set a Texas A&M record and ranked second all-time among Big XII kickers.

The winner of the 2011 Lou Groza Award, presented annually to the best placekicker in college football, Bullock also earned All-America first-team honors and was named to the All-Big XII Conference team. During his senior season, Bullock connected on 87.9 percent of his field goal attempts and set single-season school records for points scored (142), field goals made (29) and extra points (55).

Bullock is from Houston and attended Klein High School, where he earned All-Greater Houston, All-Texas and first-team All-District honors as a senior in 2007.

Monday, 14 May 2012 20:42

Long-snappers shine at Charlotte camp

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The Ray Guy Prokicker.com camp in Charlotte last weekend was a snap for talented long-snapper prospects.

Three long-snappers landed on Prokicker.com’s talent search – Tyler Gibson, Conrad Mueller and Caleb Fuller. Gibson and Fuller are in the 2013 class and Mueller is in 2014.

Mueller, is from North Carolina, had an impressive camp. He was 20 of 30 on the Prokicker.com scoring system and ranked No. 1 in the camp.

kicker-punter combo Joshua MacClaren (class of 2014), punter-kicker Shea Rodgers (2015) and kickoff specialist Rainer Whiteside (2013) were other top prospects at the camp.

The next Prokicker.com camp will be this coming weekend (May 19-20 at Ashley Ridge High School in Summerville, S.C. Visit Prokicker.com to register.

By Mark Maynard / Prokickernews.com

MISSION VIEJO, Calif. - Throughout Brendan Rowland’s four years of high school, there was only one punting camp he wanted to attend.

Rowland, who graduated from Mater Dei High School in Mission Viejo, Calif., in 2009, said he still “lives and dies” with what he learned at the Ray Guy Prokicker.com camps throughout his high school years. Being around some of the best in the business helped him hone his punting game.

After two years as the punter at Saddleback Community College, where he was one of the league’s best, Rowland visited Conference USA member East Carolina last weekend and signed a scholarship to play for the Pirates. Last year, 22 out of his 55 punts ended up inside the opponent’s 20-yard line with no going into the end zone for a touchback. He averaged 39.9 but mostly because of his penchant for pinning opponents on a short field.

Kirk Doll, who recruits the West Coast area, saw a find in Rowland and directed him to East Carolina. It turned out to be a perfect fit.

“It’s a beautiful part of the country and the town supports it,” Rowland said. “I’m excited to be going to East Carolina. They’ve had some good punters come out of there.”

Rowland (6-foot-2 and 170 pounds) figures to be the top candidate as the No. 1 punter for the Pirates. As a sophomore at Saddleback, he punted 55 times for a 39.7 average with a long of 52 yards. He averaged 42.4 per punt as a freshman when he was named all-conference and all-region.

“This year was an eye-opener for me,” he said. “It’s not always about the average although that’s what a lot of people tend to focus on. I tried to help the team with situational punting.”

Sometimes that meant shorter punts but it backed the opponent closer to the goal line and put the defense in a better position.

Rowland, who now works camps for Prokicker.com, said what he learned in high school has carried with him throughout his career. He said rubbing punting feet with the likes of Ray Guy and Rick Sang only further boosts his confidence. Sang’s passion for teaching punting through his camps especially caught Rowland’s attention.

“When you realize he’s driving around the country every year, you realize his heart’s in it,” Rowland said. “They’re 100 percent for it. It means a lot to me.”

Aside from the fundamentals, Rowland said Prokicker.com camps teach the mental side of punting. They also equip you with the tools to make improvements on your own – an important aspect for punters who sometimes return home to little or no coaching in that aspect.

“They teach you things that are going to stay with you,” he said. “That’s the reason I chose Prokicker – and only Prokicker – all the way through high school.”

Rowland said it’s also not only what the staff teaches campers on the field but also how to carry yourself off the field. Sang’s speech to campers before each session is filled with passion and advice not only to the players but parents.

“His speech is exactly how I was raised but it’s something kids don’t hear a lot at home these days,” Rowland said. “I love that speech. I always tell everybody about it. Everybody needs to hear it.”

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