Los Angeles Rams Villanueva was signed as an
undrafted free agent by the
Los Angeles Rams after the
1960 NFL draft, becoming one of the earliest players of Mexican descent in the
NFL, and one of the last straight-away style placekickers. Villanueva was both a placekicker and a punter, so he kept two different pairs of shoes on game day. During his time with the Rams he was nicknamed "El Kickador" and "El Toe-reador", with bullfighting music being played whenever he walked onto the field at the
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. In 1962, he led the NFL in punting, set the Rams' record for the longest
field goal (51 yards) and the single-season record for punting average (45.5), which lasted for 45 years until it was broken in 2007 by Donnie Jones. In 1963, he ranked third in the NFL in punting with a 45.4-yard average. He led the team in scoring from 1960 to 1963, until
Bruce Gossett won the
placekicker starting job in 1964. On May 14, 1966, the Rams traded him to the
Dallas Cowboys, in exchange for
wide receiver and future hall of famer
Tommy McDonald. He left as the Rams career gross average punting leader with 44.3 yards, a record that was broken by
Donnie Jones in
2009.
Dallas Cowboys In 1965, he had an instant impact improving the
special teams unit, eventually setting the franchise record with 100 consecutive
extra point conversions (1965–1967). In 1966, he ranked second in the league in scoring, with a career-high 107 points, while setting the Cowboys record for most extra points made without a miss in a season with 56. Villanueva retired after the
1967 NFL Championship Game famously known as "The Ice Bowl". He finished with a 42.8 career punting average without a block and 491 career points. ==Major League Soccer==