Age: 25
4th
season in pro football & with Saints
College: Michigan
State
Height: 6’2” Weight: 205
Prelude:
The Danish,
left-footed Andersen learned the art of placekicking as an exchange student in
high school and went on to excel at Michigan State, where he once connected on
a 63-yard field goal against Ohio State. Chosen by the Saints in the fourth
round of the 1982 NFL draft, his pro career got off to a rough start when he
missed most of his rookie year due to injury. However, he came back strong in
’83, hitting on 18 of 24 field goal attempts (75.0 %) and added another 20
field goals in 27 tries in 1984 (74.1 %). He also connected on 71 of 72 extra
point attempts over the span of those two seasons.
1985 Season Summary
Appeared in
all 16 games
[Bracketed
numbers indicate league rank in Top 20]
Kicking
Field goals –
31 [2, tied with Kevin Butler, 1st in NFC]
Most field
goals, game – 5 vs. LA Rams 12/1
Field goal
attempts – 35 [4]
Most field
goal attempts, game – 5 vs. LA Rams 12/1
Field goal
percentage – 88.6 [2]
PATs – 27
PAT attempts
– 29
Longest field
goal – 55 yards at Denver 9/15
Scoring
Field Goals –
31
PATs – 27
Points – 120
[5, tied with Jim Breech]
Awards & Honors:
1st
team All-NFL: Sporting News
2nd
team All-NFL: AP
1st
team All-NFC: UPI
Pro Bowl
Saints went 5-11
to finish third in the NFC West.
Aftermath:
Andersen was
selected to the Pro Bowl in each of the next three seasons and was a consensus
first-team All-NFL selection in 1986 and ’87. During 13 years in New Orleans,
he kicked 302 field goals in 389 attempts (77.6 %), with 22 of those successful
kicks coming from 50 yards or more, and added 412 extra points (missing six
times) to become the franchise’s all-time scoring leader with 1318 points. He
was chosen for the Pro Bowl twice more. In a surprising move, Andersen left the
Saints for the rival Falcons as a free agent in 1995 and tied his career high
with 31 field goals, out of 37 attempts, again achieving consensus first-team
All-NFL and Pro Bowl recognition. He went on to play five more seasons in
Atlanta, which included a NFC Championship in 1998 after he kicked the winning
field goal against the Vikings in overtime of the conference title game.
Andersen moved on to the Giants for a year, spent 2002 and ’03 with the Chiefs,
was with Minnesota in 2004, and then, after sitting out a year, returned to
Atlanta in 2006 and ’07, finishing out his 25-season career at age 47. His 89.3
field goal percentage in 2007 (25 of 28) was his career best. He ended up as
the NFL career leader in scoring (2544 points) and field goals (565), as well
as having appeared in the most games (382) and scored in the most consecutive
contests (360). Andersen was three times a consensus first-team All-NFL
selection, received at least second-team or All-NFC honors on three other
occasions, and was chosen to the Pro Bowl seven times. In addition to the
Saints, he is also the career scoring leader for the Falcons (806 points),
making him the only player to hold that distinction with two different NFL
teams.
--
Highlighted Years features players who were consensus
first-team All-League* selections or league* or conference** leaders in the
following statistical categories:
Rushing:
Yards, TDs (min. 10)
Passing:
Yards, Completion Pct., Yards per Attempt, TDs, Rating
Receiving:
Catches, Yards, TDs (min. 10)
Scoring: TDs,
Points, Field Goals (min. 5)
All-Purpose:
Total Yards
Defense:
Interceptions, Sacks
Kickoff
Returns: Average
Punt Returns:
Average
Punting:
Average
*Leagues
include NFL (1920 to date), AFL (1926), AFL (1936-37), AAFC (1946-49), AFL
(1960-69), WFL (1974-75), USFL (1983-85)
**NFC/AFC
since 1970
The greatest kicker of the 80's/90's. Will always be beloved in Atlanta for making the kick (which probably would've been good from 50+ yards out) that won the dramatic 1998 NFC Championship Game against Minnesota.
ReplyDelete