Everything about Scott Norwood totally explained
Scott Allan Norwood (born
July 17,
1960 in
Alexandria, Virginia) is a former
American football placekicker in the
NFL who played predominately for the
Buffalo Bills. Norwood was an integral part of its offense during the late 1980s and early 1990s, and kicked in Buffalo's first two Super Bowl appearances.
Early career
Norwood grew up in
Alexandria,
Virginia and attended
Thomas Jefferson High School. He had been playing
soccer when he was approached by the school's football coach, who wondered if he might like to try kicking for him. After talking it over with his father, he decided to do so.
He attended
James Madison University in
Harrisonburg, Virginia. He was ranked as the nation's top Division I-AA placekicker in 1980 when he was successful on 15 of 21
field goal attempts, and still shares JMU's record for field goals in a season (15). In 1992, he was inducted into the JMU Athletics Hall of Fame.
Upon
graduating with a
degree in business, he wasn't drafted. However, the
Atlanta Falcons invited him to their camp to try out, but cut him. He continued practicing and later played for the
United States Football League's
Birmingham Stallions for two seasons, but was released after suffering an injury.
Again he was out of football, but continued to rehabilitate and stay in shape. In 1985 the Bills invited him to their camp, and this time he beat out nine other candidates for the starting job.
Buffalo Bills career
Norwood quickly became an invaluable asset to an offense that was going places as the Bills'
general manager,
Bill Polian, assembled talent like
Jim Kelly,
Thurman Thomas, and
Bruce Smith. Within two seasons of Norwood's arrival the Bills had
won the AFC East for the first time since 1980 and made it to the conference championship game. He soon overtook
O.J. Simpson as the team's all-time leading scorer. In 1990 the Bills returned to the playoffs and qualified for their first-ever
Super Bowl.
Super Bowl XXV
Super Bowl XXV would cement Norwood's name in football history when he missed a 47-yard field goal attempt at the end of the game, giving the
New York Giants the victory.
ABC sportscaster
Al Michaels had the call: "No good! Wide right!" as the Giants poured
Gatorade over head coach
Bill Parcells' head.
While Norwood always will be blamed by many for "choking" in the clutch, the other Bills had many opportunities during the course of the game to put it away on their own. Having reached the 30 yard line to set up a 47-yard kick, the Bills' offense didn't set the team up for a win, as 47 yards was longer than Norwood's best career kick on a grass field. On the opening drive of the third quarter, the Bills' defense allowed the Giants' offense to chew up 9:29 by converting three third-down conversions. One conversion was on a third-and-13 play where, after Giants quarterback
Jeff Hostetler completed a short pass to receiver
Mark Ingram, the Bills missed several easy tackles and allowed Ingram to pick up the first down. This play eventually would lead to a Giants touchdown. The problem that ultimately killed the Bills in the end was the amount of time their defense was on the field. The Giants controlled the ball for a total of 40:33.
Before the game started, Norwood was kicking balls at the right upright, and seeing them hook left and through. With the fourth-quarter kick, Norwood played it just like in warm-ups--only this time the ball didn't hook, it kept going straight.
Prior to Super Bowl XXV, Norwood that season was in fact just 1-for-5 from over 40 yards on grass. New York Giants placekicker
Matt Bahr -- who himself had hit the winning field goal on the last play of the game one week earlier in the NFC Championship Game against the
San Francisco 49ers -- informed New York Giants coach
Bill Parcells before the kick attempt that Norwood would miss. Bill Belichick, who was then the Giants' defensive coordinator, had banked on what he felt were the average game-management skills of Bills' QB
Jim Kelly to force Buffalo into kicking a long attempt because the wind conditions were not favorable to placekickers during the game.
Also, it must be noted that Norwood had successfully kicked a field goal in the first quarter of this game. Without that, Buffalo wouldn't have even been able to attempt a last second field goal on their final drive, as they'd have been down by 4 points at the time instead of 1.
His missed kick opportunity became part of a plot idea for the
1994 comedy film where the "Ray Finkle" character is loosely based on Norwood, although placed more in the context of the
Miami Dolphins losing a Super Bowl in the
1984 NFL season. The 1998 film
Buffalo '66, the main character seeks revenge on the man indirectly responsible for his imprisonment, Scott "Wood." The missed kick was also spoofed on an episode of
Robot Chicken.
Later career and retirement
Norwood lasted one more season with the Bills. He kicked three field goals in the Bills' 37-14 win over the
Kansas City Chiefs in the divisional playoffs, and made a crucial field goal in the Bills 10-7 victory over the
Denver Broncos in the AFC title game. He also kicked one field goal in Buffalo's 37-24 loss to the
Washington Redskins in
Super Bowl XXVI. However, his kicking became erratic, and before
the 1992 season he was cut, again, and replaced by the younger
Steve Christie, who surpassed Norwood as the team's all-time leading scorer in 1998. The stigma of having been the kicker who lost a Super Bowl kept other teams from showing any interest, and he left football for good.
Norwood finished his seven NFL seasons with 133 of 184 field goals (72%) and 271 of 278 extra point attempts, giving him a career total of 670 points.
Further Information
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