It's been a long fall for Vanderjagt
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Mike Vanderjagt, as recently as 2005 the most accurate kicker in NFL history, is currently without a job, without very many suitors and -- apparently -- without the ability to kick the ball straight any longer.
Even the Giants, who have only untested rookies Josh Huston and Mark Hickok, and who seem to be turning over every stone to find a veteran kicker to compete with the kids, have thus far passed on Vanderjagt.
To show you how far Vanderjagt has fallen, he reportedly attended the same tryout for the Giants that Hickok did a couple of months back.
As we know, the Giants signed Hickok, who kicked at the University of Connecticut a few years back and most recently in Arena Football League 2. Vanderjagt is still on the street looking for work.
How did this seemingly sudden fall from grace happen to one of the premier kickers in NFL history?
During 9 years with the Colts, Vanderjagt was pretty close to automatic. In 2003 he was perfect, becoming only the 4th NFL kicker to make all his field-goal attempts (37-for-37) and also making all 46 of his extra points.
He also owns the longest streak of consecutive field goals in NFL history (41) and has a career percentage of 86.5 on field-goal attempts.
You have to wonder if one horrible kick derailed what had been a brilliant career. With the Colts trailing the Steelers, 21-18, in the waning seconds of the 2005 AFC Championship Game, Vanderjagt badly shanked a 46-yard attempt, missing it way right.
It seems nothing has gone right for him since. First, the Colts signed Adam Vinatieri to take his place. Then, after signing a three-year contract with Dallas, Vanderjagt kicked horribly.
He went just 13-for-18 and the 72.2% ratio was the worst of his career. After only 10 games, the Cowboys cut him.
Amazingly, in a league where mediocre kickers seem to turn up with team after team, Vanderjagt has not kicked for anyone since.
Maybe the lack of opportunity for Vanderjagt also has something to do with his well-known propensity for shooting his mouth off. A kicker can probably get away with that when he is successful, but when he is struggling nobody wants to hear from him.
I can't believe, however, that no one has yet been willing to take a chance on this guy.
I will be stunned if Vanderjagt isn't on someone's roster to open the season. In the end, it wouldn't even surprise me if that team ends up being the Giants.
Your thoughts?
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11 comments
Comments
Another loud mouth
by potroast on May 17, 2007 12:25 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Maybe he wasn't that good in the first place
by JasonB on May 17, 2007 3:27 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
But
by potroast on May 17, 2007 4:35 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
Maybe he wasn't that good in the first place..but
by bk0831 on May 17, 2007 4:29 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
It wasn't half the games
by JasonB on May 17, 2007 5:59 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
sure it was half the games
by bk0831 on May 18, 2007 12:08 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
i would believe
by SBakerTheTouchdownMaker on May 18, 2007 5:30 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Vandy
The one thing I'll shoot down right now is the whole "He only kicks well in domes" thing. That's bunk. Like SBakerTheTouchdownMaker said, I saw him win a huge game in Denver kicking a 50 yard FG in the final seconds to win back in 2002. It was a blizzard out. Vandy also spent much of his early career in Canada, kicking in weather so cold that would make Bart Starr piss his pants. So no, it's not kicking FGs in domes or outdoors that has teams avoiding Vandy like the plague.
It's the fact that you, myself, or maybe even your grandmother can kick-off longer, farther, and with better accuracy than Vandy can.
Vanderjagt is TERRIBLE at kicking off. He can't directional kick. He can't get touchbacks. He doesn't kick the ball high enough. He sucks, sucks, SUCKS at kickoffs. Often, he'll complain he has to do it, and then turn right around and complain that your GM brought in another kicker to kick-off because Vandy complains about having to kick-off.
That, and he'll call your franchise QB a loser on television, and then wonder what all the hub-bub is about. Idiot kicker, indeed.
The only thing that kept Vandy employed was the fact that he was automatic... somewhat. While his accuracy numbers can't be denied, the guy has choked BIG TIME in big money games. He was paid, and paid well, to do one thing: Make the fking kick. And while he would make the kicks that seem to boggle the mind (50-yarder in blizzard to beat Denver; 58-yarder in Miami that made Jimmy Johnson retire, again) he is notorious for missing the "easy" kicks in the big games that count the most. Here are some examples:
- 2001 playoffs against Miami: It's over-time. Manning drives the Colts down into FG range. It's about a 41 yarder. Vandy makes the kick, the Colts win. That simple. This is routine. 41 yards in Miami is a gimme. It is what vanderjadt is paid to make. Result: wide left. Dolphins take the ball, drive it all the way back down the field and score a TD. Colts lose.
- 2002 playoffs against the NY Jets: The Colts lost 41-0 to that Jets team in 2002. However, before NY unloaded on the Colts in the second and third quarters, the Colts had some chances to get some points on the board and drastically change the momentum of the game. Manning drove the team, on a sloppy, muddy field, into FG range. 40 yarder. Vandy shanked it. The missed FG took all the momentum out of Indy. Jets took the ball and scored a TD.
- 2005 playoffs against the Steelers: This playoff game nearly killed me and every other Indy and Pittsburgh fan. We all know the circumstances. Colts get the ball back on a choke job fumble by Jerome Bettis, who was trying to score in the wanning seconds rather than fall down and eat clock. Colts get the ball into FG range. It is a 46-yarder in Vandy's home dome. This kick is what he is paid to make. Result: We all know.
So, while Mike is often very accurate, he will also often cost you big games by missing gimme FGs he should make. Sometimes, his confidence transforms into cockiness, and his antics wear on a team very quickly. Bottom line: There's a very good reason Vanderjagt is unemployed, and he should take the hint. Retire Mike. You've made a lot of money and you should be well off.
The Giants are wise to avoid Mike.
by bigblueshoe on May 19, 2007 11:52 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Thanks, Shoe!
by Ed Valentine on May 19, 2007 12:05 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
well said
by SBakerTheTouchdownMaker on May 19, 2007 6:37 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs

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