was a punter and fullback for
Wisconsin. Before Guy's arrival in Oakland, many teams trained a position player to double as a punter (the
placekicker was likewise expected to "double-up" at another position), even after the
one-platoon system (which effectively required a punter to play offensive and defensive positions on top of their duties) was abolished in the 1940s. The
Green Bay Packers won
Super Bowl I and
Super Bowl II using running back
Donny Anderson as their punter. The Packers' regular placekicker,
Don Chandler, was an All-Pro punter with the
New York Giants, but
Vince Lombardi brought Chandler in from his old team to serve exclusively as a kicker after
Paul Hornung, who set the NFL single-season scoring record with 176 points in 12 games in 1960, was suspended for gambling in 1963 and suffered a sharp decline in accuracy in 1964. Linebacker
Paul Maguire served as a punter for the AFL-champion
San Diego Chargers and
Buffalo Bills in the 1960s. The
Kansas City Chiefs, who played in Super Bowl I and won
Super Bowl IV, bucked the trend at the time by signing
Jerrel Wilson as a punting specialist in 1966. Wilson punted for the Chiefs for 13 seasons, and combined with placekicker
Jan Stenerud to give the team one of the best kicking combinations in the league. Backup quarterbacks were often used to punt well into the 1970s.
Steve Spurrier, who was stuck behind
John Brodie at quarterback for the
San Francisco 49ers, served as the team's main punter for the first four years of his career.
Bob Lee took on the same role for the
Minnesota Vikings in the late 1960s and early 1970s, punting for the club in
Super Bowl IV.
Danny White played little as a backup quarterback to
Roger Staubach with the
Dallas Cowboys from 1976 through 1979, but was the team's main punter from 1975 through 1984, when he gave up the kicking duties to
Mike Saxon. punting for the
Michigan Wolverines in 2008 One of the last examples of a punting quarterback was
Tom Tupa. A quarterback and punter in college, Tupa started his career in the NFL as a quarterback, but eventually settled into a role as a full-time punter and emergency quarterback. Starting in the 1990s, some NFL teams turned to retired
Australian rules football players to punt for them, as punting is a basic skill in that game.
Darren Bennett, who played for the
San Diego Chargers and
Minnesota Vikings in his career, was one of the first successful Australian rules football players to make the jump from that sport's top professional competition, the
Australian Football League (AFL), to the NFL, doing so in 1994.
Ben Graham, who entered the league with the
New York Jets, became the first AFL player to play in a Super Bowl when he played in
Super Bowl XLIII with the
Arizona Cardinals. Other former AFL players who made the transition to NFL punters include former NFL punter
Mat McBriar and
Sav Rocca, formerly of the
Washington Redskins. In recent years, an increasing number of Australians have been making the transition to gridiron football at earlier ages, with a significant number now playing for
U.S. college teams. Between 2013 and 2017, all five
Ray Guy Awards, presented to the top punter in
NCAA Division I football, were won by Australians:
Tom Hornsey (
Memphis, 2013),
Tom Hackett (
Utah, 2014 and 2015),
Mitch Wishnowsky (Utah, 2016) and
Michael Dickson (
Texas, 2017). All three finalists for the 2016 award were Australians. In the
2018 season, nearly one-fourth of the schools in college football's top level,
Division I FBS, had at least one Australian punter on their roster.
Sam Koch revolutionized punting by developing many variations, due to his flexible hips in an effort to increase net punting average by giving the ball variable trajectories and bounce, making it more difficult for returners to catch and return. The
New England Patriots were noted for almost exclusively employing
left-footed punters
during the coaching tenure of
Bill Belichick, who claimed it was unintentional. Left-footed punters have been increasingly used at the NFL level. At the start of the
2001 NFL season, there were 26 right-footed punters, four left-footed ones and one (
Chris Hanson) who was
dual-footed. By the
2017 NFL season, there were 22 right-footed punters and 10 left-footed ones. By the late 2010s and early 2020s, punters were highly specialized players on an NFL roster. Louis Bien of
SB Nation wrote: A punter's job is no longer simply to kick the ball high and far while fans hold their collective breath that this time isn't the time when the ball flies sideways into the stands. No, punters are now neutralizing and terrorizing the most electric return men in the NFL with kicks that spin and move and bounce and flip in all sorts of unpredictable, terror-inducing ways. ==Notes==