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HarveyWallbangers
04-11-2006, 10:53 PM
I'm rooting for the guy. I hope he does well. It would be nice to have a good kickoff man. Really, he didn't do all that bad in Dallas. He struggled his rookie year (which is to be expected) and last year (he was injured), so I have some hope. He seems to have a strong leg. He seems pretty happy to be in Green Bay, but this article came out before the Packers claimed Dave Raynor. I actually have some hope that we'll be okay at PK.

Billy Cundiff Looks To Fill Longwell's Shoes
by Jeff Fedotin, Packers.com

When Ryan Longwell signed with the Minnesota Vikings on March 11, that acquisition meant the Packers would have a new kicker for the first time in nearly a decade.

And that burden now falls on Billy Cundiff, signed on March 27, to replace the Packers' all-time leading scorer with 1,054 points.

"I definitely take it as a challenge," Cundiff said. "I know what (Longwell) did, and his accomplishments are very significant. But now it's time to kind of show what I can do."

Cundiff can boom both kickoffs and field goals. He nailed more than 44 percent of his field goals beyond 50 yards during his career and helped the Dallas Cowboys lead the league in opponent's kickoff return average in 2004. Last year he nailed a 56-yard field goal in Texas Stadium in Week 11, farther than Longwell's career long of 54.

"My leg strength is an upside," Cundiff said.

Another strong point for Cundiff should be his ability to withstand Lambeau Field's wintry conditions. Dallas -- his team for the last four years -- does not typically feature tundra-like environs. But while growing up in Iowa and playing collegiately at Division I-AA Drake (located in Des Moines, Iowa), he kicked through several snowstorms and temperatures that dropped below 20 degrees.

"It's something that just I grew up accustomed to," Cundiff said.

In some ways Lambeau actually could provide better kicking conditions. The grounds of his college's 18,000-seat Drake Stadium sometimes featured clumps and divots.

"We were kicking off a field that was kind of beat up," Cundiff said. "They didn't really have a lot of money. So the field that I played on wasn't really the best field, and conditions weren't always ideal."

Not far from his Iowa home and his Midwestern roots, Green Bay's location was a major reason why Cundiff signed with the Packers. Green Bay is only a seven-to-eight hour drive away from his hometown of Harlan. (For the record the town did not name itself after Packers president and CEO Bob Harlan.) Cundiff also has friends in Chicago and a brother in Minneapolis.

"I wanted to get back to the Midwest," Cundiff said. "It's closer to my family."

Cundiff chose the Midwestern team over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Other clubs expressed interest in Cundiff, but the free agent derby came down to a battle of the Bays -- only Green Bay and Tampa Bay made contract offers. Viewing Cundiff as a more cost efficient replacement for their incumbent kicker and unrestricted free agent Matt Bryant, the Buccaneers signed Cundiff before the NFL established a new collective bargaining agreement.

"It was a money thing," Cundiff said.

When the NFL owners agreed to a new deal on March 8, each team received more 2006 salary cap space, and the Buccaneers could afford to retain Bryant. Cundiff, however, remains content with the way things worked out.

"I ended up coming here where they were happy to have me," he said.

Cundiff was not a hot name during the offseason, but his stock may have been down following his injury-shortened 2005 season. He tore his right quadriceps in training camp and missed all but six of the last seven weeks of the season. During those games Cundiff only hit five-of-eight field goal attempts, and the Cowboys released him before the last game of the 2005 season.

Now completely healthy, Cundiff, however, could represent a strong investment in the future for the Packers. He is only 26-years-old but has five years of game experience. Cundiff never redshirted in college and started for the Cowboys immediately after leaving Drake, winning a training camp competition as an undrafted rookie free agent in 2002.

To have such experience at a young age is rare. Kickers often take a circuitous route before finding their niche in the NFL. Consider Mike Vanderjagt, the kicker the Cowboys signed to replace Cundiff. The owner of the NFL's longest consecutive field goals streak, Vanderjagt is one of the best kickers to ever play the game. But the 36 year-old bounced around the CFL for five years before entering the NFL.

"Sometimes it just takes the right combination ... whatever that combination is, you never really know until you find it, and things just click," Cundiff said. "I happened to make it right away."

As a result the Packers likely will start a kicker with the unique combination of experience and potential.

"I'm going to continue to get better," Cundiff said. "I definitely don't think I've reached my prime. I still think that I'm a little ways off. I've got a lot of room to grow."

KYPack
04-12-2006, 02:43 PM
I'm rooting for the guy, too.

PK's mature later and I think Billy's got a good grasp of the league and the job. He was pretty green when Dallas gave him that job, I think he knows what it takes to kick in the NFL now.

The guy's got a strong leg and will give us some decent kick-offs for a change.

it was also a good move to bring in Raynor for the competition between the two kickers.

BENZITO
04-12-2006, 02:57 PM
Did we sign another kicker from the colts? I thought i heard something about that i am not really sure if it is true. Would be good for bill to have some competition, instead of just handing him the job. Who ever the PK is as long as they make around 80% of their kicks and can get some touchbacks on the kickoffs i will be pleased.

Rastak
04-12-2006, 03:00 PM
It takes Kickers a couple of years for some reason...he may turn out just fine......it's just that with time running out and the young kicker trots out to try and give you the win it can be the stuff of ulcers.

HarveyWallbangers
04-12-2006, 03:57 PM
Did we sign another kicker from the colts? I thought i heard something about that i am not really sure if it is true. Would be good for bill to have some competition, instead of just handing him the job. Who ever the PK is as long as they make around 80% of their kicks and can get some touchbacks on the kickoffs i will be pleased.

Yeah, they also claimed former Michigan State PK Dave Raynor off waivers. He has a strong leg, but isn't very accurate.

Kiwon
04-13-2006, 02:35 AM
I hope that one of the three new kickers is a hit, but I'm not sure if Billy Cundiff and Dave Rayner and Rhys Lloyd all together equal the significance of Longwell's consistent accuracy and ability to make clutch kicks. His kickoffs....well, that's another story.

I have to agree with the minority view here that Longwell's biggest problem last year were the holds. You don't become the Packers all-time leading scorer without talent. Kickers lose something with age, but I think Longwell will be missed more and more as next season progresses.

I absolutely hate the fact that he's in the NFC North. He'll get trashed during the weeks we play the Vikings, but deep down even many of the trashers would still like to have him as our kicker.