Vikings release kicker Blair Walsh/Signed by the Seahawks

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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2016/11/15/vikings-release-blair-walsh/

Vikings release Blair Walsh
Posted by Josh Alper on November 15, 2016

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Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said that the team would take a look at kickers again this week after opting to stick with Blair Walsh after visiting with members of the free agent kicking caravan last week.

We don’t know which kickers will be coming in this time around, but the Vikings will be hiring someone else to take over for Walsh. The Vikings announced Tuesday that they have released Walsh.

Walsh missed an extra point in last Sunday’s loss to the Redskins, which made it four missed extra points on the year for a kicker who has also missed four field goals this year. Walsh also missed a short field goal that would have won a playoff game for the Vikings last season and it’s hard not to see the line running from that miss through this year’s struggles all the way through Walsh’s reported departure.

Walsh had been the Vikings’ kicker since 2012 and was named a first-team All-Pro by the Associated Press in his rookie season. That past success will likely earn him future looks from teams assessing their kicking options, but Minnesota decided that they’d waited long enough for Walsh to find consistent success this season.
 

Faceplant

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Crazy how far he has fallen. He was one of the best in the game just recently. Wow.
 

A55VA6

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Saw it coming. He was money at the start of his career.. but just too many misses recently.
 

lordbannon

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I thought baseball was 90% mental?

You've got it wrong. 90% is half mental. Which I believe makes the level of mentality slightly less than the effectiveness of sex panther?
 
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Ramhusker

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He might be a great pickup for somebody. GZ had that miss bug from close from that range a couple of years ago. He has rebounded astoundingly.
 

HE WITH HORNS

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I wouldn't have waited that long, this guy was a complete disaster after missing that chip shot last year. Any decent kicker off the street, and the Vikings will be a much more competitive team.
 

Mackeyser

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Why would they release this person?

2000a-selma-blair-400_0.jpg
 

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Just goes to show how much the mental game affects kickers. Walsh was a great kicker at UGA until his senior year. Completely fell apart. Same thing seems to have happened in the NFL.
 

Corbin

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:rolllaugh::rolllaugh::rolllaugh:
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Mackeyser

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That's kicking a guy when he's down. Which is especially messed up...cuz he's a kicker...
 

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  • #17
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/b...h-syndrome-why-nfl-kickers-are-playing-afraid

Blair Walsh Syndrome: why NFL kickers are playing afraid
Players across the league are missing kicks they should make with ease. Has an infamous blooper from last season got into their heads?
Les Carpenter

The number must be an anomaly, one of those statistical improbabilities that will forever glare strange in the record books, because what other explanation can there be? Why else would NFL kickers suddenly miss a collective 12 extra-points on a single day as they did last Sunday? Never before had something like this happened, not even after the league moved the ball back from the two- to the 15-yard line in 2015. What made this weekend different from al the others before it?

“It was a coincidence,” former NFL kicker Michael Husted told the Guardian on Tuesday.

Then he laughed.

“Now for a better answer,” he said. “Blair Walsh.”

For four seasons until 10 January 2016, Walsh was a dependable kicker for the Minnesota Vikings. In fact, he was more than dependable, hitting 85% of his field goals and all but five of his extra-points. But that was before the wildcard game against Seattle when, in sub-zero cold, he missed a simple 27-yard game-winning field goal that was shorter than an extra-point.

The explanation for his miss was simple: his foot caught the laces and the ball skipped off to the left. And yet in the days after the loss, nobody much wanted to hear about laces or cold. Walsh had choked.


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mb_eXyhlHaA


He hasn’t recovered. In this season’s first 10 games he missed four field goals and four extra-points. Finally, the Vikings had enough. Last Wednesday, they released him. When they did, you could almost feel the shiver sliding through the NFL’s most insecure fraternity.

“I’m sure that was in the back of every kicker’s head this weekend,” Husted said.

If I miss this extra-point, will I become Blair Walsh too?

Will I be cut next?

No position in football requires less thinking than place kicker and yet it is the position where players think too much. Since kickers have no plays to memorize, they are not issued playbooks. They do little more in practice than mingle with the punter on the other side of the field, until the coach calls for a special teams drill.

On game days, they stand alone with nothing more to think about than how challenging it is to kick a ball through two metal poles in front of 80,000 people in the stadium and millions more watching on television. And since they are not issued playbooks and therefore possess no secret institutional knowledge, they are – as Blair Walsh learned last week – dispensable.

“You are definitely seeing choking,” said Michael Lardon, a San Diego sports psychologist who has worked with NFL kickers. “They are getting tight.”

When the NFL moved the extra-point back, they hoped to introduce more excitement by challenging the ceremonial adding of a point to a touchdown. The problem is that even with the additional yardage everybody perceives the extra-point to still be routine. Fans, celebrating the touchdown, barely watch the extra-point. The telecasts sometimes forget to show them. They assume the kick will be made. Until it isn’t.

“It’s like a two-foot putt in the PGA has now become a four-foot putt,” Lardon said. “You shouldn’t miss it but it’s a tougher putt.”

This is when the kicker begins to think. He knows the extra-point is harder to make than before, but he also knows that few understand or care. Doubt hits. He gets anxious. He panics.

“The pressure gets you out of your rhythm,” Lardon said.

Husted, who runs an academy called Husted Kicking, works with several pro kickers including Jacksonville’s Jason Myers, an accurate long kicker who nonetheless missed seven extra-points last season. At an especially low point Husted called him and asked: “Are you approaching them like 33-yard field goals or are you kicking not to miss an extra-point?”

“I think I’m kicking not to miss,” Myers told Husted.

“You need to think you are kicking a field goal,” Husted said,

If only it was that simple. The 24 men who kicked for NFL teams on Sunday should have been able to walk on the field without a thought about their football mortality. The name Blair Walsh shouldn’t have entered their minds. But chances are it probably did, only adding to the fragility of an already tenuous occupation.

“As I’m lining up for a kick am I thinking: ‘I don’t want to miss like Blair Walsh did?’” asked Husted, who kicked for four teams over nine seasons. “No. But I’m sure it is rattling around somewhere in the back of the kickers’ minds.”

Sure, Sunday was likely an odd coincidence. It was windy in several NFL stadiums, though that doesn’t explain the misses that came indoors. And since most of the botched kicks came in the early games that day, it negates the idea that the league’s kickers were letting everyone else’s failure creep into their heads.

They wouldn’t have known about all the misses until after their games. It’s not like the new extra-point line has had that bad an impact on kickers. They are still hitting 94% of their PATs since the start of last season.

What will be interesting to watch is how Sunday’s kicking disaster affects kickers this week, starting with Thursday’s Thanksgiving games. Will doubt slither under their helmets? Will they be kicking not to miss instead of looking at the extra-points as easy 33-yard field goals?

“If all of a sudden you start to think: ‘My brothers, my peers are missing extra-points,’ does that affect you? It can,” Lardon said. “The strong-minded that can distill that will say: ‘I’m just kicking an extra-point.’”

But who can be strong-minded, standing on the sideline knowing soon they will be alone in a giant stadium with everyone watching, wondering if they are watching the next Blair Walsh?
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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...5-for-25-on-clutch-kicks-i-dont-doubt-myself/

Matt Prater is 25-for-25 on clutch kicks: “I don’t doubt myself”
Posted by Michael David Smith on November 25, 2016

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Lions kicker Matt Prater hit a fourth-quarter field goal to tie the game against the Vikings yesterday, and another fourth-quarter field goal minutes later to win the game. That made him a perfect 25-for-25 in his career when attempting game-tying or go-ahead field goals in the fourth quarter or overtime.

Given that record, Prater was asked after the game if he has ice water in his veins.

“I don’t know if I would I’d say ice-cold veins, just, you know, I have a lot of confidence in what we’re doing as far as a unit with guys up front,” Prater said. “Mule [Don Muhlbach] snapping, Sam [Martin] holding and you know, I just have a lot of confidence where I don’t doubt myself.

Basically I have the same mind-set as an extra point in the first quarter where I don’t go out and ever expect that I’m not going to make the kick, so maybe, I don’t know, maybe I’ve been a little luckier maybe.”

The Lions didn’t doubt Prater, either. In fact, Lions coach Jim Caldwell made a curious decision to simply kneel on the ball and run 30 seconds off the clock before calling timeout and setting up Prater’s field goal on the final play, rather than trying to pick up some yardage.

Given that Prater missed an extra point last week, his 40-yard game-winner was no sure thing. But Prater said afterward that Caldwell made the right call in simply assuming that he’d make the kick.

“You know, from that spot, it’s still a short enough kick where you should be making that kick 100 percent of the time,” Prater said.

Prater has made game-tying and game-winning field goals 100 percent of the time in his career, and the Lions are thankful for that.
 

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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2017/02/09/seahawks-sign-former-vikings-kicker-blair-walsh/

Seahawks sign former Vikings kicker Blair Walsh
Posted by Darin Gantt on February 9, 2017

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Blair Walsh once did the Seahawks a favor, so they paid him back Thursday.

The Seahawks announced they have signed the former Vikings kicker, which is at least a move of basic human decency.

Walsh’s miss against the Seahawks in the 2015 playoffs (a 10-9 Seattle win) triggered a slide that ended when the Vikings released him in November.

Of course, the four missed extra points and four missed field goals last year had a part in it, but it’s easy to draw the line between that missed chip shot and this year’s struggles. He had previously been a good kicker, earning All Pro honors, so it’s worth seeing if the change of address helps.

Seahawks kicker Steven Hauschka is set to become an unrestricted free agent, and Walsh gives them a backup plan with some degree of experience.
 

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So many people hated GZ two years ago because he was missing stuff and Walsh was money for the first half of the season. How the tables have turned. Hope his misses continue, no offense Blair, in Seattle.