Cincinnati Bengals After going undrafted in the
1987 NFL draft, Carney was signed by the
Cincinnati Bengals as an
undrafted free agent. He was released prior to the regular season and spent the year out of football.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers Carney played five games for the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers between 1988 and 1989. He converted two of five field goal attempts and all six extra point attempts. At the time of his retirement, he was the last active player to wear the Buccaneers orange uniform scheme.
San Diego Chargers (first stint) Carney attended training camp with the
San Diego Chargers in 1990, but did not make the final roster.
Los Angeles Rams Carney played one game for the Los Angeles Rams in 1990, but did not attempt a field goal or extra point. He was the last remaining active Los Angeles Ram, until the team moved back to Los Angeles from St. Louis in 2016.
San Diego Chargers (second stint) Carney was re-signed by the Chargers during the 1990 season, appearing in 12 games for the team and converting 19 of 21 field goal attempts. He played 11 seasons with the Chargers through the 2000 season, earning his first
Pro Bowl selection in
1994 after going 34-for-38 (89.5 percent) on field goal attempts as the Chargers made it to the Super Bowl. To this day, he remains the Chargers' all-time leading scorer.
New Orleans Saints (first stint) Carney signed with the
New Orleans Saints as a free agent prior to the 2001 season. On December 21, 2003, the Saints were trailing the Jaguars 20–13 with 7 seconds left in regulation. Quarterback
Aaron Brooks threw the ball in a hurry to
Donte Stallworth. As time expired, the Saints continued to lateral the ball around until wide receiver
Jerome Pathon eventually scored a touchdown in what became known as the
River City Relay. Carney was sent out to kick the extra point to tie the game up and force overtime. Instead, Carney pushed the ball wide right and the Saints lost 19–20. The loss would eliminate the Saints from playoff contention. Carney kicked a game-winning field goal against the
Carolina Panthers following
Hurricane Katrina. He then appeared on the cover of
Sports Illustrated with quarterback Aaron Brooks on September 19, 2005, as the city celebrated this victory. On April 5, 2007, Carney asked and was given permission to leave the Saints after their acquisition of kicker
Olindo Mare.
Jacksonville Jaguars Following Week 1 of the
2007 NFL season, Carney signed with the
Jacksonville Jaguars replacing injured placekicker
Josh Scobee. Carney appeared in eight games for the Jaguars in Scobee's absence, converting nine of 11 field goal attempts and 20 of 21 extra point attempts. He was released on November 19 upon Scobee's return.
Kansas City Chiefs On November 26, 2007, the
Kansas City Star reported that the
Kansas City Chiefs would sign Carney after holding tryouts to replace
Dave Rayner – making Carney the fourth placekicker to play for the Chiefs within a one-year period, following
Lawrence Tynes,
Justin Medlock and Rayner. Carney appeared in five games for the Chiefs, going 3-for-3 on field goal attempts and 7-for-7 on extra point attempts.
New York Giants in 2008; in their 40s both were kickers for the
New York Giants. On August 30, 2008, Carney signed with the
New York Giants to fill in while Tynes recovered from a knee injury sustained in
training camp. Although Tynes would eventually recover from his injury Carney continued to hold on to the starting position and Tynes was relegated to kickoff duties. At age 44, Carney was the oldest active NFL player during the 2008 season. After a near perfect season (35-for-38 on field goal attempts with two blocked), Carney was chosen as the starting kicker for the NFC for the
2009 Pro Bowl. Carney was not re-signed after his contract expired, leaving him a free agent entering the 2009 season.
New Orleans Saints (second stint) Following the announcement that
New Orleans Saints placekicker
Garrett Hartley would be suspended for the first four games of the 2009 season, Carney returned to New Orleans on August 15 on a one-year contract. With his start on November 30, he became the sixth player in NFL history to reach 300 career games. Carney was waived on December 22, two weeks after Hartley regained the starting job. Carney remained with the Saints in this capacity through the playoffs, and received credit for his role in preparing the comparatively inexperienced Hartley to make a number of critical kicks that helped the Saints win their first
Super Bowl. Carney started the 2010 season without a team. However, after Hartley missed 3 out of 7 field goal attempts during the Saints' first 3 games, including a short kick in overtime that would have won a game against the
Atlanta Falcons, the Saints re-signed Carney (while also retaining Hartley) on September 28, 2010. The signing made him the oldest active player in the NFL at the age of 46. On October 3, 2010, he kicked three field goals in a Saints win against the
Carolina Panthers, and became the third oldest player to play in an NFL game (behind only
George Blanda and
Morten Andersen). On October 12, the Saints released Carney for the third time. Carney would not sign with another NFL team. He became the third NFL player after George Blanda and
Jeff Feagles to play across four different decades. ==NFL career statistics==