Los Angeles Rams Baker was selected by the
Los Angeles Rams in the eleventh round (133rd overall) of the
1952 NFL draft with a future draft pick, which allowed the team to draft him before his college eligibility was over. On July 6,
1953, his draft rights were sold to the
Washington Redskins.
Washington Redskins In
1953, he played sparingly in his first season with the
Washington Redskins, under coach
Curly Lambeau, before spending two years out of professional football, while serving his military service at
Fort Ord. He scored a 58-yard touchdown on a fake punt for Fort Ord in the 1955
Shrimp Bowl. In
1956, although he was initially being considered for the right halfback position, he was asked to become the team's kicker after
Vic Janowicz suffered a serious brain injury in an automobile accident that ended his athletic career. That same year he also became the punter after
Eddie LeBaron was sidelined with an injury. He was given the nickname "Sugarfoot", after leading the
NFL in field goals (17), starting an 11-year streak of averaging at least 40 yards per
punt attempt In
1957, he tied with
Lou Groza with a league-high 77 points (including an 11-yard or 20-yard touchdown run off of a fake kick against the
Pittsburgh Steelers on December 15, to go along with 14
field goals and 29
extra points made on the year). In
1958, his 45.4-yard punting average was the best in the league, while he still managed to convert 25 extra points in 25 attempts.
Cleveland Browns In
1960, he relinquished his
fullback duties with the
Cleveland Browns and would replace the retired Groza, who left after the 1959 season because of a back injury. He led the
NFL in extra points made (44) and extra points attempted (46). He posted a 42-yard punting average. He was the league's eighth ranked punter with an average of 43.3-yards per punt. On December 30, he was traded to the
Dallas Cowboys in exchange for
cornerback Tom Franckhauser.
Dallas Cowboys In
1962, he set the team record of 45.4 yards-per-punt that was not broken until
2006 by
Mat McBriar with a 48.2-yard average. He also set club records for most points scored in a season (92), longest field goal (53 yards) and longest punt (72 yards). He was the
NFL leader in extra points made (50), extra points attempted (51), ranked third in punting average (45.4) and sixth in scoring (92). In
1963, he became the first Cowboys punter to make the
Pro Bowl, after registering a 44.2-yard average. His 40.6-yard net average per punt still ranks third in team history. Baker played two seasons as a punter and kicker for the
Dallas Cowboys,
Philadelphia Eagles Baker remained with the
Philadelphia Eagles for the last six seasons of his career. He played in the
1964 and
1968 Pro Bowls. He was waived on September 2, 1970, just ahead of the
coming season. As of the 2025 season, he is fourth on the all-time Eagles scoring list.
Career Upon retiring he was the number two scorer in
NFL history (977 points) He played for 15 seasons, with more than 700 punts and making 179 field goals. == Honors ==