In both
American and
Canadian football, one method of scoring a
field goal,
fair-catch kick (American only), or
extra point is by drop-kicking the football through the goal, although the technique is virtually never used in modern play. drop kicking It contrasts with the
punt, wherein the player kicks the ball without letting it hit the ground first, and the
place kick, wherein the player kicks a stationary ball off the ground: "from placement". A drop kick is significantly more difficult; as
Jim Thorpe explained in 1926 when both kick types were common, "I regard the place kick as almost two to one safer than the drop kick in attempting a goal from the field." 's drop kick, the sole score as
Harvard defeats
Dartmouth 3–0 in
1912 The drop kick was often used in early football as a
surprise tactic. The ball was "hiked" or
lateraled to a back, who faked a run or pass, then drop-kicked a field goal attempt. This method of scoring worked well in the 1920s and early 1930s, when the ball was rounder at the ends, similar to a modern
rugby ball. Early football stars Thorpe,
Charles Brickley,
Frank Hudson,
Paddy Driscoll, and
Al Bloodgood were skilled drop-kickers; Driscoll in and Bloodgood in hold a tied NFL record of four drop kicked field goals in a single game. Driscoll's 55-yard drop kick in stood as the unofficial record for
field goal range until
Bert Rechichar kicked a 56-yard field goal (by placekick) in . The ball was made more pointed at the ends in ; this change is generally credited to
Shorty Ray, a college football official at the time, and later the NFL's head of officiating. This made passing the ball easier, as was its intent, but made the drop kick almost immediately obsolete because the more pointed ball did not bounce up from the ground reliably. The drop kick was supplanted by the place kick, which cannot be attempted out of a formation generally used as a running or passing set. While it remains in the rules, the drop kick is seldom seen, and as explained below, is rarely effective when attempted. In Canadian football, there are no formal restrictions on the circumstances under which a drop or a place kick can be attempted.
NFL preparing to drop kick Since 1941, the only successful drop kick for points in the NFL was by
Doug Flutie, the backup
quarterback of the
New England Patriots, against the
Miami Dolphins on January 1, 2006, for an extra point after a touchdown. Flutie, 43 at the time, was given the opportunity to make a historic kick in what was his last play in the NFL. Flutie estimated he had "an 80 percent chance" of making the drop kick. The last successful drop kick before 2006 in the NFL was executed 64 years earlier in , on an
extra point by
Ray McLean of the
Chicago Bears, against the
New York Giants in the
NFL Championship Game at Chicago's
Wrigley Field on December 21. The last drop kick for a
field goal was a nine-yarder by player-coach
Dutch Clark of the
Detroit Lions in against the
Chicago Cardinals on September 19. The
All-America Football Conference (AAFC) saw its last successful drop kick in
1948, when
Joe Vetrano of the
San Francisco 49ers drop kicked an extra point after a muffed snap in a 31–28 home loss to the undefeated
Cleveland Browns on November 28. Still rarely but more commonly, kickers have attempted drop kicks from kick-offs or free kicks, especially in the case of onside kicks.
Patriots kicker
Stephen Gostkowski took an onside drop kick on a free kick against the
Pittsburgh Steelers on October 30, .
Seattle Seahawks punter
Michael Dickson, an Australian punter who considered himself more adept at drop kicking than place kicking, has drop kicked both kick-offs and onside kick-offs when called on to serve as back-up kicker. In 2019,
Baltimore Ravens' kicker
Justin Tucker drop-kicked a short, high kick-off against the
Kansas City Chiefs with 2:01 left in the fourth quarter to force a fair catch and prevent the Chiefs from
running out the clock; it was later confirmed that this kick was illegal, as Tucker had kicked the ball not immediately after it bounced, but rather after it had bounced and reached the apex of its rebound.
Collegiate The last successful drop kick extra point in collegiate football was by Jensen Laughlin of
Quincy University Sprint Football on November 1, 2025.
Arena football In the former
Arena Football League, a drop-kicked extra point was worth two points, rather than one point, while a drop-kicked field goal counted for four points rather than three, a rule that has survived into
Arena Football One. The last conversion of a drop kick in the AFL was by Geoff Boyer of the
Pittsburgh Power on June 16, 2012; it was the first successful conversion in the AFL since 1997. In 2022,
Salina Liberty kicker Jimmy Allen successfully converted three drop kick PAT attempts against the
Topeka Tropics in a
Champions Indoor Football game. Allen also converted a drop kick PAT playing for the Iowa Barnstormers in the
Indoor Football League during a game against the Colorado Crush during a 2016 game. In 2018,
Maine Mammoths kicker Henry Nell converted a drop kick as a PAT against the
Massachusetts Pirates in the
National Arena League. Nell went on to kick six drop-kicked PATs for AF1's
Albany Firebirds in
2025, against the
Corpus Christi Tritons; the Tritons, playing with a decimated roster of mostly
replacement players, were on the losing end of an exceptionally lopsided match, allowing Nell to experiment with the drop kick. Nell declined a seventh opportunity to drop kick a PAT, instead using a one-point placekick to round the Firebirds' point total to an even 100 points. Nell had learned the drop kick as a professional rugby union player in his native South Africa and came to the United States after having a vision of himself playing the American game, despite not knowing what the game was. Manny Higuera of the
Washington Wolfpack would be the first AF1 player to kick a field goal via drop kick that same year, scoring the only four points in a 71–4 loss to the Salina Liberty, a rare (if not
unprecedented) example of a professional gridiron football team finishing with a score of four points. == Australian rules football ==